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Mrs. Turtle, Central California Age and Occupation: 21, Art Student/Teacher Fiance's Age and Occupation: 22, English Student Engagement Date: August 16, 2008 Wedding Date: July 2010 Venue: Mr. Turtle's Grandparents' backyard, Arroyo Grande, CA About Me: I am a California girl who loves the beach and the mountains, but is quite satisfied living right in the middle where I can enjoy the best of both worlds. I am happiest when traveling to faraway places, wandering through museums, watching old movies, or baking up a storm. Mr. Turtle and I are high school sweethearts and fellow book nerds who both drive Mini Coopers and are most likely to be found browsing in antique stores. We're having so much fun planning our European garden wedding with a vintage twist and can't wait to share more of life's adventures together!
About Mrs. Turtle

Around the time we hit the six-months-before-the-wedding mark, I hit a total stumbling block with wedding planning. Wedding related tasks turned from a joy to a burden, from a happy distraction to a tiresome chore. All of the items on my to-do list suddenly seemed totally trivial, unnecessary, and even selfish. Whenever I started working on wedding stuff, I found myself thinking about all of the people in the world who don’t have food to eat or a roof over their heads, all of the people in my own town who have recently lost their jobs and are struggling to make ends meet. And then I would look at my to-do list and see things like: “Choose chairs and linen colors. Find cute shoes. Look for veil/hairpiece. Book bakery. etc., etc., etc.” These things just seemed so frivolous to me all of a sudden. I felt terribly guilty for not spending all of the hours I was devoting to wedding planning focusing my energy on things that are, I don’t know, more real.

We’ve been engaged for a long time, so that could have been part of it. But I finally realized that most of my hesitations, guilt, fears, and general burn-out related to planning this wedding were related to the desire that I have to be unique and original. One of my biggest pet peeves has always been copying.

It’s always bothered me when people follow trends just because they are trends. I feel like when you truly like something, it is part of your personality. You like it before it’s a trend and you continue to like it after the trend has passed. Discovering the things that you like and identify with in life is a big part of growing into your adult self and knowing what makes you who you are. When you drift from trend to trend, instead of identifying your own, unique personal style, you are so much more likely to look back on things and consider them outdated and foreign to you.

Okay, I admit that I’m probably an overly analytic person to begin with… I even analyze whether this annoyance with copying is a character flaw within myself that I need to work on. I really don’t want to come across as stuck up or elitist. However, I’ve decided that it doesn’t stem from a desire to be better than or more unique than others. It is truly a disappointment in the lack of authenticity in the world.

What I dislike more than other people copying me is when I realize that I’m copying someone else. Whenever I catch myself jumping on the bandwagon of something I’m uninformed about, I try to stop and ask myself: am I doing this/wearing this/watching this/talking about this/listening to this because I like it or because I know of other people who like it and I have a desire to be more like them? Honestly, half the time it’s the first answer, and half the time it’s the other. As cliche as it sounds, pausing points like these have really helped me understand who I really am.

And how does all of this relate to wedding planning? Well, planning a wedding is essentially copying. I don’t know much about weddings, except for the fact that I’m making a commitment to marry Mr. Turtle. So planning this wedding has mainly entailed studying up on weddings that have come before mine: those of relatives, friends, acquaintances, and people featured in movies, books, blogs, and magazines. I’ve been saving pictures of things I like for over a year now. And I guess I’ve been collecting images in my mind my whole life. Now that it’s time to stop brainstorming and start creating, I step back and look at all of these images and don’t know what to think. I’m crazy about all of them. Of course none of them are me, but some of them reflect me and some of them reflect people whose lives I think it would be fun to live.

As an art major, I’ve spent a lot of time creating in the last four years. This period of my life has really challenged me to question what I have to create that is truly original. I’ve often struggled with the idea that all of the words I write have been written before and all of the objects I create are in some way or another interpretations of what someone else has previously created. Yet at the same time, these years have helped me to begin to grasp what I have to offer as an artist and as a human being. A big key to understanding myself and having peace with my ideas and creations has been the acceptance that everything has been done before.

Struggles with Wedding Planning and a Search for Authenticity :  wedding central ca emotional Jarmusc Photobucket

I’m realizing that I need to apply this idea to wedding planning. Everything is copying. Unfortunately, all of my ideas were originally stolen from somewhere. Mr. Turtle and I are not the first ones to play the songs we will play on our wedding day, but we’re probably the first to play the combination we’ve chosen. We may not be the first the say the vows we’ll say, but what matters is that it will be the first time we’ve said them. So in the same way, my bouquet might be similar to one in a magazine, and my hair and makeup may be reminiscent of an actresses look in a movie, but if within this combination of things lies me and Mr. Turtle, it will feel so wonderful!

So in conclusion, I’m moving the following to the top of my wedding planning to-do list: take a step back and look at this day we’ve been planning. Weed out the parts that don’t feel like us. It would be awesome to be the couple having the trendy loft wedding, the carefree beach wedding, the rustic elegant ranch wedding, or the glamorous ballroom wedding, but that’s not us! Once I realize that we’re the ones having the Mr. and Mrs. Turtle wedding (the one in the backyard that’s a little tight on space, with the crazy to-do list, but with the most supportive family and friends and some awesome vendors who I know will throw it all together), I feel so much better about all of this.

More than anything, I want to reconcile who Mr. Turtle and I are as a couple with the image in my head of an ideal wedding. With each wedding-related decision that I make, my goal is to ask myself not, “Is this too expensive? Will this look bad? Is this the best ____ out there?”, but “Is this choice an honest and authentic representation of who I am, who my family is, and who Mr. Turtle and I are as a couple in our everyday lives?”

Does this sound at all familiar to you? Have any of you found yourself struggling with being authentic in your wedding planning choices?

Tags: central-ca, emotional |
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25 Responses to “Struggles with Wedding Planning and a Search for Authenticity”

1 2 

1.
gill84
Member
gill84 (message)  725 posts, Busy bee

YES. Thank you for posting this. This has probably been one of the biggest struggles I’ve had - from wondering if I should be spending so much time/money on something much of the world can’t afford, to catching myself doing stuff that has been done before and feeling badly about it. Thank you for the reminder that we should be doing what feels authentic for US.

 
2.
dancergmu3
Member
dancergmu3 (message)  289 posts, Helper bee

I really appreciate you posting this. I often find myself saying let’s do this or this because your mom/my mom/my MOH, etc. suggested/liked/created it. My FI is very good about having me sit back, relax, breath and repeat “this is our wedding. OURS.” Once I remember that, I’m good to go. Thank you for posting this!

 
3.
teaadntoast
Member
teaadntoast (message)  2,595 posts, Sugar bee

This is a great post. I have some of the same impulses, and have found it really helpful to remember during the process that sometimes a better word for “imitation” is “tradition.” Helps me remember that doing it the way someone else did can be more about carrying on a significant idea from the past than lacking originality.

 
4.
SabrinaR424
Member
SabrinaR424 (message)  266 posts, Helper bee

I know what you mean, but truthfully this has been very easy for me. I sort of the threw out the rulebook for what’s “normally” done at weddings and am doing what I like (both parents walking me down the aisle, guests seated at dinner tables - rather than in rows of chairs - for the ceremony, etc). But at the same time, there are many aspects I’m using that I’ve pulled directly from other weddings or events I’ve enjoyed. It’s never bothered me to do this. I feel like if I love it, who cares if somebody else loved it too? It just means they have great taste! =) Good luck with the rest of your planning, and like you said, if it’s an authentic representation of who you two are, go for it!

 
5.
Guest Icon
Guest
Rosanna

Hear hear hear!!!

Like you, I have an absolute disgust for copying. But maybe in a different way, I hate when some brides start wearing birdcage veils because THEY like it and all of a sudden everybody else (and their dogs) wear birdcage veils. I could have said whiskers or vintage brooches the specific item really doesn’t matter.

I think there are essentially two ways to look at weddings. I call them the “external control” and the “internal control” (too many psychology classes I guess LOL). Anyway, the external control is where the bride-to-be and the groom look outside (at parents, wedding planning professionals, friends, other brides) to decide what napkin ring or the color of the BMs dresses to choose. I think this way is the most stressful because it’s impossible to please everybody. However this is also the easiest, just copy and paste, then ask for feedback, then tweak it, and so forth.

The internal control is where the bride-to-be and the groom look INSIDE themselves and start asking questions like “who am I?”, “who are you?”, “where do we come from?”, “where are we going?” and they choose their color palette, wedding theme and wedding venue accordingly. Granted, it’s extremely frustrating, because the industry is full of boilerplate solutions (and resistant to individual ones!!!), parents and friends kind of expect the norm (nothing too challenging, like pomegranate cocktails, peacock feathers, shellfish bonanzas, etc) and - especially - those questions force you to take a hard look inside yourself. However it can be EXTREMELY rewarding, and make you grow as a couple.

All of this that I’m writing probably stems from the fact that a) I too analyse a lot (there is NO overanalyze — I sound like Yoda here LOL), b) I too come from an art background (lyrical singing) and c) I like to be REAL.

So in short mine will be a small wedding (because we have few and very close friends, who are the only one to be invited), a destination wedding (Ireland is special to both of us), a civil ceremony (although we are both Christians we also are both allergic to nonsensical rules), Edwardian-themed (we just LOVE that era, it’s fashion, eclecticism, with hope for the future and interest for innovations) and with DIY stuff (because we both are artsy folks who love to create).

Granted not many would like it, starting with wedding industry professionals (either disappointed that it’s not modern enough or vintage enough, that it’s too eclectic and for God’s sake you don’t use moss terrariums as centerpieces, nor do you use a tone-on-tone palette, ya know LOL).

If you feel like chatting more, you’re welcome to send me a PM.

 
6.
alivoo01
Member
alivoo01 (message)  2,625 posts, Sugar bee

I think all brides start out with the mentality of “this wedding will be about us and nobody else’s suggestions/opinions on what they want matters”. Once planning begins, that mentality gets dinged, then bent, then broken, then ultimately shattered when some brides try to please everyone in order to make their wedding “memorable”. More power to you for sticking by your guns and holding ground!

 
7.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Turtle (message)  782 posts, Busy bee

Wow, your feedback is so good! I struggled writing this post and it kind of felt like a mess to me, so I’m really thankful that some of you were able to understand it and even identify with it. Thanks for taking the time to read!

@Rosanna: LOVE what you wrote. A lot of people think that wedding planning is shallow and all about trivial things, when really, it can be such a period of growth for a couple. This stage of my life has really challenged me to give some serious thought to who Mr. Turtle and I are as a couple and what we are going to value in our life together.

 
8.
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Bee
Miss Ribbons (message)  2,018 posts, Buzzing bee

I think this is an easier issue to deal with if you have a strong personal aesthetic. I look at mason jars and say they’re cute, but it doesn’t fit my style at all. So being aware of who you are makes it pretty easy to decide!

 
9.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Turtle (message)  782 posts, Busy bee

@Miss Ribbons: Another great point. (And I totally feel the same way about mason jars!)

 
10.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Scissors (message)  7,343 posts, Bee Keeper

@Miss Ribbons: Get out of my brain. I agree with you 100%. :p

 
11.
jmc
Member
jmc (message)  882 posts, Busy bee

Totally. The comments that made me happiest were when people said “it was so YOU,” which was mostly in reference to our venue. Of course, lots of other people got married there, but we made it ours for the day. So just whatever your wedding is/has, even if you’ve seen it done, make it yours for the day.

 
12.
Miss Short Dress
Member
Miss Short Dress (message)  169 posts, Blushing bee

Thank you so much for posting this. I have been struggling with these emotions for about a month now and it is good to know it isn’t just me. I spent most of my early twenties figuring out who I was and now it is like I am having to do it all over again. Which is resulting in second guessing every decision I am making. I never thought that planning my wedding would be so emotionally draining. Thanks again for your post it has inspired me to keep with it and not just run off to Vegas and elope.

 
13.
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Guest
Annette

Oh Miss Turtle…I could write 10 pages about how much I agree with all the points in those post but I shall keep it brief: I don’t think I’ve ever resonated with any weddingbee as much as I resonate with you in particular.

Like everything you say - from the type of wedding you want (LOVE the pink!), to even your own interests and pursuits (art) I myself am into.

Keep up the fantastic blogs - I cant wait to read more!

 
14.
Guest Icon
Guest
Rosanna

@jmc: @jmc: whenever my friends see the pictures of my gown, shoes and venue they all say “it’s so you”. And I agree it’s the most flattering compliment I’ve heard :)

 
15.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Turtle (message)  782 posts, Busy bee

@jmc: @Rosanna: That is definitely the best compliment to get!

@Annette: I’m so glad to hear that! Keep commenting! :)

 
16.
krissybee
Member
krissybee (message)  3,921 posts, Honey bee

such a great post!! and i totally agree!!!!

 
17.
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Bee
Mrs. Swan (message)  1,046 posts, Bumble bee

I hear you, Turtle. Many people would say that parts of my wedding were trendy (birdcage veil, cupcakes, etc.), but they were actually me being me/us being us. While I think long veils were pretty, it’s not me. I’ve never really liked wedding cake either, so we got cupcakes from a local baker that we love. We just did it our ways, and that’s all that you can ask for.

 
18.
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Member
fudge88 (message)  58 posts, Worker bee

What an amazingly well thought-out post. I don’t think you are over-analyzing at all! What will make the wedding most meaningful to you is if you really decide what works for you and your fiance and go with it. This way the wedding day will be a complete reflection of you as a couple and when you look back at it, it will feel completely real.
We are trying to do this as well! It is challenging not to get caught up in worrying about what others will think, but I’m sure that it will be worth it.

 
19.
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Member
peachybride (message)  124 posts, Blushing bee

This was a very thought-provoking post for me! The funny thing about authenticity is that you can only have a style thats “so YOU” if you have an authentic interest in/sense of style anyway. For me to try to pare down my wedding to an authentic style for me would be totally unauthentic because I don’t identify with style in that way - nothing about style feels like it represents who I truly am, so I suppose I am a bit of a copier in the style elements of my wedding. But our wedding will be authentic because we are crafting our own menu and writing our own vows… and adding authenticity to the elements that we can authentically say help express who we are. I can’t say that about a dress or flowers, but food is another story!

 
20.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Perfume (message)  2,253 posts, Buzzing bee

I’ve gotten this vibe from you a little bit with each post. I agree with this whole-heartedly and feel the same way! I do not like trends and anything too popular or with mass appeal. Two words I fear are ‘contrived’ and ‘cliche’. Not only does it feel inauthentic, but not special! I call it my “special snowflake” syndrome. I think it’s natural to want to stand out (not in a ‘look at me’ way, but a ‘hey, i’m different and i’m not copying’ sort of way). I think it’s special to want to be novel. It takes a level of confidence. So, GO TURTLE! I’ve loved reading about your ideas and think they’re great (and not contrived).

 
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Mrs. Turtle
Mrs. Turtle

Mrs. Turtle, Central California Age and Occupation: 21, Art Student/Teacher Fiance's Age and Occupation: 22, English Student Engagement Date: August 16, 2008 Wedding Date: July 2010 Venue: Mr. Turtle's Grandparents' backyard, Arroyo Grande, CA About Me: I am a California girl who loves the beach and the mountains, but is quite satisfied living right in the middle where I can enjoy the best of both worlds. I am happiest when traveling to faraway places, wandering through museums, watching old movies, or baking up a storm. Mr. Turtle and I are high school sweethearts and fellow book nerds who both drive Mini Coopers and are most likely to be found browsing in antique stores. We're having so much fun planning our European garden wedding with a vintage twist and can't wait to share more of life's adventures together!

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