My academic department took me out to dinner (at a great place - the Montgomery Inn at the Boathouse) and bought me camping gear at Wal-mart when I got married. I think that was the extent of my "shower"ing.
But then, I did have the kind of wedding where the bride and groom drove the 3-tiered cake 45 miles to the ceremony location in the back of their aged Toyota Corolla hatchback. (Note to future marriers - while it ended well, this was not a good idea for stress reasons alone. I had to compulsively recount stories fron Herodotus to keep from flipping out with worry. Ask Nutty, she was there.)
If we make you a wedding dress out of toilet paper will you feel better?
It couldn't hurt to try!
I will also accept consolation in the form of chocolate and cash.
Thus have I spake, and I had a big ol' schmancy church wedding with a total wedding party (including myself and Hec) of 14, and we did it without the crazy drama and without sending all our attendants to the poorhouse.
JZ, your wedding is a total anomaly in my pantheon of Weddings I Have Known And Like To Tell Stories About. I think you should teach brides how to do a wedding right and proper. If I had ever been in a wedding like yours, I might not have such a dim view of The Lost Art of Bridesmaiding.
Thus have I spake, and I had a big ol' schmancy church wedding with a total wedding party (including myself and Hec) of 14, and we did it without the crazy drama and without sending all our attendants to the poorhouse.
Except that our wedding party was 8 (3 attendants each), and there was no church, this is me.
Okay, and now Jess. Clearly Buffista weddings are superior.
We had 1 attendant each, my MiL made the bouquets, my shower was a lingerie one, and it was "girl's night out" instead of a bachelorette (didn't stop me from getting drunk, but we didn't do any of the cringe-inducing things. Just dinner and dancing). The only stress involved was my mother being CRAXY, but that was induced by her less-than-stellar home life and the recent death of a friend. No one was expected to spend *anything* except gas to get to the two locations. I just wanted my peeps near me, and that I got. It was good.
I liked the two times I was a bridesmaid. Of course, it didn't cost me anything other than my plane ticket to Vancouver for the one (which, really, same cost as if I
wasn't
the chief bridesmaid). I'm still agog at the whole expense incurring thing. If it weren't for the interweb, I wouldn't know that it was standard for it to cost the maids money. At least the groomsmen get lapdances, you know?
I love this headline: Universe 'too queer' to grasp
Cool article too.
Professor Dawkins, the renowned Selfish Gene author from Oxford University, said we were living in a "middle world" reality that we have created.
...
Professor Dawkins' opening talk, in a session called Meme Power, explored the ways in which humans invent their own realities to make sense of the infinitely complex worlds they are in; worlds made more complex by ideas such as quantum physics which is beyond most human understanding.
"Are there things about the Universe that will be forever beyond our grasp, in principle, ungraspable in any mind, however superior?" he asked.
"Successive generations have come to terms with the increasing queerness of the Universe."
Each species, in fact, has a different "reality". They work with different "software" to make them feel comfortable, he suggested.
Because different species live in different models of the world, there was a discomfiting variety of real worlds, he suggested.
"Middle world is like the narrow range of the electromagnetic spectrum that we see," he said.
"Middle world is the narrow range of reality that we judge to be normal as opposed to the queerness that we judge to be very small or very large."
Electronic paper.
"Are there things about the Universe that will be forever beyond our grasp, in principle, ungraspable in any mind, however superior?"
I'm totally down with this idea.