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Mrs. Scissors, LaGrange, GA Age and Occupation: 25, Photography & Graphic Design Fiance's Age and Occupation: 24, Engineering Grad Student Engagement Date: January 1, 2009 Wedding Date: June 2010 Venue: Ceremony - First United Methodist Church; Reception - My parents' house! About Me: I’m a six-foot-three bride with a fifty-foot personality! I love great art, fabulous design, intense color, tons of music, indie photography, watching movies on repeat, and being really awesome. This super-tall, Southern, loud, quirky, neurotic artist is marrying a German, quiet, silly, super-amazing roboticist in an eclectic, funky, fun, snazzy, technicolored June wedding. Anything is game for this shindig, for it is all about us! We’re bringing giant paper cranes, six-foot-tall portraits, fortune cookies, a photo booth, a club-circuit DJ, handcuffs, and possibly a kidnapping to this small Southern town. Watch out, y’all, and try to keep up!
About Mrs. Scissors

Wedding Wows*

January 15th, 2010 @ 10:14 am by Mrs. Scissors

Wedding Wows* :  wedding vows Wedding0129 weddingvows

Photo by Matt Miller

Last week, we (finally) booked our officiant, so of course I’ve had wedding vows on the brain.

I’m on the more traditional wedding vow team for a few reasons:

  1. I’ve always liked the traditional ones. I find comfort in the fact that these words have been said over and over by so many couples throughout the years. It is familiar to most, and gives me comfort. (Even if the divorce rate is ridiculous in this country, leave me alone, I can still use this reasoning.)
  2. I think we would be extremely, extremely nervous saying our own vows. I’d feel like a turkey reading them, and I think that the “!!!!!!” of it all would make me forget or stumble over the vows. Mr. S and I both can get a little shy.
  3. I think that using these vows, rather than ones we wrote, might cut down on my waterworks. It is a fact that I will cry like a crazy person on our wedding day. In times of high-emotion, I just start bawling. Not bad crying, just EXTREME EMOTION AAAH crying. We’ll have to get a towel to lay across my chest, or a bucket to hold under my face.

Onwards I went to search for wedding vows. I thought that would be pretty simple. Hmm, what are the ones that I’ve heard a million times at weddings, and the ones they always use at the weddings I’ve been to. Let’s Google “traditional wedding vows.” I started clicking on results, and began to cringe. I’m the sort of type-A that gets really, really bent out of shape if one word is wrong, one phrase is out of place, one syllable is different from something I’m familiar with. Every time I read an “off” one, it was like I was being prodded with a poker.

This, to the best of my brain’s ability, is how I remember the vows going:

I, ______, take thee, _____, to be my lawfully wedded _____, to have and to hold from this day forward, for better or for worse, for richer or for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish, as long as we both shall live.

Still, somehow that sounds off. Or not quite right.

I found this one, that sounds… sort of right? I still think my brain version sounds more right, but I could be wrong. It’s happened a few times before.

I, ________, take thee _______, to be my wife/husband, to have and to hold,
from this day forward, for better – for worse, for richer – for poorer,
in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish, till death do us part,
and thereto I pledge thee my faith. (source)

Ehh.

Then I found this one. As I said before, I’m not a fan of us deviating from the traditional vows, but this is sort of a longer/different version of the traditional vows. I’m just not sure if they’re too cheesy-blaster.

I, (Bride’s Name), take you, (Groom’s Name),
to be my lawfully wedded husband,
secure in the knowledge that you will be
my constant friend,
my faithful partner in life,
and my one true love.
On this special day,
I (affirm/reaffirm/give) to you
in the presence of God and these witnesses
my pledge to stay by your side as your faithful wife
in sickness and in health,
in joy and in sorrow, as well as
through the good times and the bad.
I promise to love you without reservation,
comfort you in times of distress,
encourage you to achieve all of your goals,
laugh with you and cry with you,
grow with you in mind and spirit,
always be open and honest with you,
and cherish you for as long as we both shall live.

I, (Groom’s Name), take you, (Bride’s Name),
to be my lawfully wedded wife,
knowing in my heart that you will be
my constant friend,
my faithful partner in life,
and my one true love.
On this special day,
I (affirm/reaffirm/give) to you
in the presence of God and these witnesses
my pledge to stay by your side as your faithful husband
in sickness and in health,
in joy and in sorrow, as well as
through the good times and the bad.
I promise to love you without reservation,
honour and respect you,
provide for your needs as best I can,
protect you from harm,
comfort you in times of distress,
grow with you in mind and spirit,
always be open and honest with you,
and cherish you for as long as we both shall live. (source)

These longer vows might be a hop, skip, and a jump from writing our own vows, which is/was totally against my original thinking. I am more confused than ever!

What wording do you think of when you think of traditional vows? What did you do for your wedding vows—traditional, halfway-between-traditional-and-self-written, or just write them yourselves? Which one of these vows do you like the best? Or should we scrap them, suck it up, and write our own?

*The title of this post is in reference to a conversation with Mr. S in which he German-accentified “wedding vows” and pronounced them “wedding wows.” In my brain I still enjoy thinking of them as our “wows.” I’m sure he’s horrified that I’m telling this story.

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33 Responses to “Wedding Wows*”

1 2 

1.
Guest Icon
Guest
Elisabeth

I did the traditional vows, with a couple of small changes:

I [name] choose (instead of take - I liked the idea of choosing my husband, and him choosing me) you [name] to be my (took out lawfully wedded, maybe because we’re both lawyers) husband/wife; to have and to hold, from this day forward; for better, for worse; for richer, for poorer; in sickness and in health; to love and to cherish; as long as we both shall live (which, if I were to do it again, I would change to “all the days of our lives”.

I also remember a “forsaking all others” in the ‘traditional’ vows, but we didn’t think of it or use it. I don’t know whether I would have if I did think of it.

 
2.
suzanne1880
Member
suzanne1880 (message)  90 posts, Worker bee

Elisabeth - I love that you incorpoprated “choose” - I think I will use that verbage as well - great idea!!

 
3.
littlemissmoo
Member
littlemissmoo (message)  3,006 posts, Sugar bee

We’re totally going the traditional route. A) It’s really important to Papa Moo and B) It means I have less chance of freaking out and forgetting my lines because someone else will be prompting me. I’m terrible like that.

And the “wedding wows” story is just too cute! FH English-ifies German sayings and I love it.

 
4.
Navy_Baby
Member
Navy_Baby (message)  120 posts, Blushing bee

I definitely want to go with the traditional vows. I am extremely traditional, and when I think wedding, I think “I, ______, take thee, _____, to be my lawfully wedded _____, to have and to hold from this day forward, for better or for worse, for richer or for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish, as long as we both shall live.” FI and I plan to go this route, but instead of reciting the vows after the priest, we plan to have him read the whole thing and us just say the “I do.” That way, there’s no stumbling or messing up. Also, it’s been sort of an inside joke with us for the “I do” …and I have sentimental value for the traditional “I do” statement.

 
5.
Ms. Library
Member
Ms. Library (message)  1,250 posts, Bumble bee

I am doing something similar to Elisabeth. I am taking the traditional ones that I love and kind of rifting on them. When it talks about having and holding, I go off into a few lines about what that means to me and when I remember it happening in our life before. Mr. Library and I haven’t finalized our vow plans, but I certainly like the sounds of it!

 
6.
Miss French Fries
Bee
Miss French Fries (message)  2,217 posts, Buzzing bee

I like the longer vows, but since we’re getting married in the church, we don’t have really any say about what the vows are. I’m okay with that, since they’re the traditional ones that I love.

 
7.
Member Icon
Member
kvpoe (message)  82 posts, Worker bee

we’re going traditional all the way. But I have to say, the best part of this post is the title… that is my favorite Germanism — when I studied in Germany for a year, I lived in a “willage” outside of Freiburg. So awesome! (Maybe I like it so much because Germans’ English is always a thousand times better than Americans’ German, so it’s comforting to find a weakness ;))

 
8.
Miss Nachos
Bee
Miss Nachos (message)  1,733 posts, Bumble bee

I’m all for the traditional, but mostly for the same reason as you about the crying. I already know we both will have the waterworks going, don’t want to make it any worse!

 
9.
Member Icon
Member
Curlysue (message)  1,703 posts, Bumble bee

Oh I’m a bucket filler too! I really want to write my own vows, or my FH and I sit down and write what we want to say vs traditional—but I wonder if we should stick with something I’m pretty familiar with to avoid the “ugly cry” throughout my ceremony in photos! :o Considering my FH has been to two weddings in his entire life and never really paid attention to the vows much, all this is new to him! HAHA Men.

 
10.
Guest Icon
Guest
Stephaine

I like the last one too…but it’s always so romantic to write your own vows!

 
11.
catybarb
Member
catybarb (message)  50 posts, Worker bee

Too funny - my German Mr. mixes up his v’s and w’s when he’s really tired or well into his cups. I love it!
In regards to the vows - we’re having his Father recite them in German after our officiant so that we can include his family/traditions into our ceremony.

 
12.
Miss Pretzel
Bee
Miss Pretzel (message)  1,891 posts, Buzzing bee

I think you should say the “wows” that were originally in your head. Don’t let the interwebs confuse you! :)

 
13.
Miss Chicken Wing
Member
Miss Chicken Wing (message)  1,225 posts, Bumble bee

I love the wows. I think it’s adorable that Mr. S said that - no reason to be horrified! And besides, on that day (if not on EVERY day :) ) you will be really WOW!

 
14.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Scissors (message)  7,343 posts, Bee Keeper

@littlemissmoo: I know. We officially always refer to them as our wedding wows now. With that title, makes me feel like we should write them!!!
@Miss French Fries: We’re getting married in the church, but it’s Methodist, so we all koolz. My church doesn’t have rules on those, even if they are super anal about other rules. :)
@kvpoe: I talk to his grandmother in Germany that knows 0 english, and she said that my German was perfect– no accent at all. SCORE. He also says “sweater west” which kills me, and I pinch his cheeks.
@Miss Nachos: Amen. Nobody likes soggy nachos. Har har har. I crack myself up.
@Stephaine: I know. I wish I were a writer so that I wouldn’t fail at writing vows.
@catybarb: It is *so* adorable, isn’t it?
@Miss Pretzel: THOSE DAMNED INTERWEBS!

 
15.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Scissors (message)  7,343 posts, Bee Keeper

P.S. Just realized that I used crotch shots for our picture for this post. Wth was I thinking? Oh, Scissor madness. :p

 
16.
bunnylovesbear
Member
bunnylovesbear (message)  1,726 posts, Bumble bee

I love the longer version of the tradition vows. However, they absolutely brought tears to my eyes. When I get married, I too, will be a blubbering mess. However, I still say the third set of vows you listed!

 
17.
Mrs. Star
Bee
Mrs. Star (message)  2,057 posts, Buzzing bee

I like the longer version of the traditional vows, definitely. We wrote our own and it was incredible, but I definitely see the cool part of using the traditional ones!

 
18.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Scissors (message)  7,343 posts, Bee Keeper

@Mrs. Star: Maybe a combo of both?
@bunnylovesbear: I know, they are sooo romantic!

 
19.
Miss Pug
Bee
Miss Pug (message)  3,753 posts, Honey bee

i think mr. pug would have a heart attack if he had to speak for more than 30 seconds, even if it was scripted and traditional, so ours are pretty short.

 
20.
daniellemybelle
Member
daniellemybelle (message)  2,520 posts, Sugar bee

We are doing a combo of traditional and personally written vows. We’ll say our self written words first, then the officiant will ask, “In light of the promises you both have made, do you take…” and we’ll say “I do”! I really want to have that moment to say those two words!

 
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Mrs. Scissors
Mrs. Scissors

Mrs. Scissors, LaGrange, GA Age and Occupation: 25, Photography & Graphic Design Fiance's Age and Occupation: 24, Engineering Grad Student Engagement Date: January 1, 2009 Wedding Date: June 2010 Venue: Ceremony - First United Methodist Church; Reception - My parents' house! About Me: I’m a six-foot-three bride with a fifty-foot personality! I love great art, fabulous design, intense color, tons of music, indie photography, watching movies on repeat, and being really awesome. This super-tall, Southern, loud, quirky, neurotic artist is marrying a German, quiet, silly, super-amazing roboticist in an eclectic, funky, fun, snazzy, technicolored June wedding. Anything is game for this shindig, for it is all about us! We’re bringing giant paper cranes, six-foot-tall portraits, fortune cookies, a photo booth, a club-circuit DJ, handcuffs, and possibly a kidnapping to this small Southern town. Watch out, y’all, and try to keep up!

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