I'll just say that it was convenient that we got married in the sitting room of the inn that our room was in. And that is all.
Natter 43: I Love My Dead Gay Whale Crosspost.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
At a wedding I was at a few years ago, we had been talking about the no-sex thing beforehand, and so we all got to witness the moment when the new bride said, "Yeah, no. Not happening tonight." (She was ready to go to bed, he was ready to hang out with his family for another couple of hours.) Not that we followed up with her after.
Or, "Hey! I do know how to quit you!"
I really like this.
I think the making out thing is catching.
Statistically, a couple won't go have a rollicking time in bed, after the wedding?
Yeah, I've heard that, too. By the end of the reception, people are tired/drunk/cranky from deal with families/whatever.
I know at least 2 couples that had a quicky in the limo on the way to the reception, just in case this happened.
Also?
Allyson you can have an omelette with peppers and onions.
As someone who would kill anyone standing between me and the consumption of cheese, you are SO SO missing the point...
I know at least 2 couples that had a quicky in the limo on the way to the reception, just in case this happened.
Hee!
Even worse than the garter toss itself -- when he who catches the garter has to put it on she who catches the bouquet. IOW, follow up "The groom is removing the bride's underwear," which at least has the feeble justification that they're married to each other, with "And now a man is putting underwear on a woman who may be a complete stranger."
Though I did see one wedding where it was handled -- well, not tastefully, because that's not possible -- but not as bad as it could have been. The girlfriend of the bride's brother caught the bouquet. Only two other men got on the floor for the garter throw, and for all the competition brother got, groom might as well just have handed him the garter.
When my grandpa came over from Sweden back in 1921, he decided to keep the spelling of the last name Astrom (except for taking away the two dots above the "o"), but changed the pronunciation to something he thought would be easier for Americans to say ("AH-strohm"). He didn't figure on the first syllable being mangled ("ASS-struhm") because he thought that A=AH in English as well as Romance languages. His uncle (who came over a few years earlier) knew differently, so he changed his spelling and pronounciation to Ostrom.
I'm thinking that their hometown was on a riverbank, because "strom" (with the two dots over the o) means "swift-running water," so when last names were acquired in the 19th century, their family apparently decided to use the river/stream for their name.
I just dislike how it smacks of "Catch the bouquet and YOU WIN!!! Your grand prize for elbowing the other single women in the face to catch the flowers? A HUSBAND!!!!"
I was at a wedding once where the bride did the bouquet toss. A space wide enough to drive a humvee through opened along its trajectory. One of the guys swore he could hear, "Not until I finish grad school!" going through every woman's mind at that moment.
Yeah, usually when I've seen the whole garter thing, it was all a total setup for the next couple actually planning to get married.
I think the key might be to drink early (if you drink at all), then switch to soda.
Yup. This is key. At the afterparty at one wedding I went to, the bride walked up to me at the bar, said "I don't feel so good," and then passed out. I managed to catch her before she hit the floor, and then waved the groom over to haul her away to their room at the hotel. He tucked her in, and then came back to the party.