Anti Bridal Shower - Unnecessary Wedding Events
The first reaction I often receive when I announce, “Sorry, I’m busy that day — I have a bridal shower” is sympathy. “Ugh, that sucks,” or “Those are the worst,” or “I’m so sorry.” While drinking weeknight Champagne in my friend’s backyard earlier this summer, I took an informal poll: What did everyone there think of bridal showers? Choruses of “the worst” and “make them stop” and “dread” rang out over my question. Got it.
Years ago, one of my friends was treated to a surprise cringeworthy bridal shower, where her mom and all of her church friends gifted the young bride-to-be heaps of lingerie in a menagerie of sizes and styles she would never have picked out. She is now happily divorced.
Today’s brides are already treated to months, sometimes years, worth of pre-wedding celebrations: engagement parties, bachelorette parties, and the entire wedding weekend already attract gifts that, as we all know, are often exchanged for cash or store credit. Is yet another festivity, usually with the sole purpose of watching a woman open the presents she's already picked out for herself, really necessary?
Celebrating love is wonderful, but more so than any of the other wedding events, bridal showers are an excessive expression of our devotion to the Shrine of Stuff. We could be focusing on creating meaningful experiences and memories, but are rather too busy jotting down notes on who gave what and who to thank for the third consecutive baking sheet. Moreover, if the bride-to-be and many of the guests don’t even want to be in attendance (and are perhaps only making an appearance to please the hostess), this is all for naught.
American brides in 2016 don't need to say "I do" with a "dowry" straight from Bloomingdales.com. Their spouses are most likely not marrying them for their Cuisinarts, nor for their savvy culinary shortcuts. Moreover, the costs of participating in bachelorette parties and wedding weekends are often astronomical, and this is money women could be saving toward the purchase of a home or merely retirement. By throwing even more of our money at stuff — no one needs a new spiralizer or 17 sets of matching rose-gold silverware for May-through-September dinner parties — we’re halting our individual routes toward financial independence and success.
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