Tuesday, October 25, 2011

How to plan a wedding for older adults

plan a wedding for older adults


It's interesting:
"You know, I’ve been to lots of great weddings, but today may have been the best. The small, ornate chapel – the beautiful music – the sincere words that Paul and Linda wrote themselves. Ladies and gentlemen, we all witnessed something very special."

Older adults who are planning to marry often have to sift through a barrage of wedding-planning tips and marketing geared toward starry-eyed, twenty-something brides and grooms who want a fairy-tale wedding. Most older adults are past that stage, and while they may love each other no less than younger couples, their ideas of what constitutes a perfect wedding day are usually quite different. Simplicity and sophistication will likely trump silly and frilly. Some older adults have put off marrying while they concentrated on a career, and some simply waited to say "I do" to the right person. Other couples have been though a divorce or experienced the death of a spouse. Regardless of the reason you are marrying at an older age, your wedding day should be beautiful and memorable and, above all else, make you happy.

Instructions

    • 1

      Avoid any invitation wording that refers to your parents announcing the union. You and your partner are adults who likely have been on your own for many years. Opt for something such as "John Doe and Jane Smith cordially invite you..."

    • 2

      Tell friends and family to skip the bridal shower. You and your partner will either be incorporating your two homes into one, or you have been living together and accumulating household things over the years. Friends and family will have the opportunity to wish you well with gifts at the wedding.

    • 3

      Tone down decorations if you are marrying in a church. A church wedding is appropriate for adults of any age, but the decorations should reflect the sophisticated style that comes with age. If you've already had a first wedding in a church, consider holding the ceremony in your home, a park, the beach or a lovely historic location in your town.

    • 4

      Choose apparel that is appropriate for the place you will hold the ceremony. If you choose to marry in a church, do not wear a Cinderella-style white dress. You will look like an older woman trying to pass yourself off as a young girl. A man looks elegant in a tuxedo at any age, but an older woman's dress should have simple, classic lines and be appropriate for her age.

    • 5

      Incorporate your children, whether they are kids or adults, into the ceremony. You will be blending two families into one, and you should make all family members feel that they are a part of this union, too. Although you might not be having a flower girl or ring bearer, consider having immediate family members stand around you when you say your vows to help them feel that they are involved in this important step in your life.


Source: www.ehow.com

Tags: have been, older adults, family members, feel that, feel that they, older woman