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Kill 'Zill

Posted Oct 08 2007, 05:37 PM by Donna Freedman
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That’s Zill as in “Bridezilla.” My daughter, Abby, who’s getting married in May, was raging over a newspaper article about the costs a bridesmaid can reasonably expect.

The thing is, some brides are no longer reasonable -- and they expect way too much.

Veteran bridesmaid (eight times!) Arica Colley, profiled in the article, said a recent wedding cost her $1,300. Yep, thirteen hundred dollars.

But here’s the scary part: “Experts” say that bridesmaids should expect to pony up $1,000 to $1,400 for the privilege of wearing the same dress as a bunch of other women.

It isn’t just the dress (average cost: $140), according to a Brides.com editor quoted in the story. Bridesmaids face multiple showers, brunches, spa visits, bachelorette parties and, if they live elsewhere, travel costs.

Oh, and they’re apparently supposed to work on invitations, favors, decorations and anything else the bride-to-be asks. They’re supposed to plan -- and pay for -- all the events noted above.

And they’re supposed to smile while they’re doing it. But that $1,300 experience was so tense that Colley and the bride didn’t speak for half a year.

But it’s my day!

“This is insane,” Abby said. “I can’t imagine asking any of my friends to do this.”

For example:

  • Colley was required to buy new shoes and jewelry. (Abby’s bridesmaids can use whatever they already own. And since they’ll wear the same color but not style of dress, they can shop post-Christmas sales.)
  • Colley had to attend 10 bridal showers for that one bride. (Abby will have one shower. She does not expect gifts from anyone.)
  • Colley lives in Texas. The bachelorette party was in Manhattan. (“An entire weekend of activities paid for the bridesmaids? If you want to go to New York, then pay for it yourself,” my daughter said.”)

Then again, Abby can’t afford to be a Bridezilla. She’s on an extremely limited budget that makes her extremely pragmatic. I’m helping where I can and Abby’s great-grandmother, bless her heart, just sent a contribution.

But this wedding will rely heavily on yard sales, Craigslist, dollar stores, MyPoints, and her abilities to prioritize and compromise. She’s posting tips for other budget-conscious brides on a blog called “Near Mrs.”

Bride on a budget

It’s not that she hasn’t had her share of wedding dreams. She bought a couple of bridal magazines, and dragged me to a trade fair called the “Wedding Expo.” But she’s appalled by the wretched excess noted in the newspaper article.

“I don’t expect my bridesmaids to be wedding planners or to break their budgets just so I can have the perfect day,” Abby said. “Why would they? And why would I ask them to?”

(That’s my girl!)

Seriously: I’m greatly disturbed by the way weddings have turned into floor shows. Aren’t people just as married if they don’t spend the $26,000 that the average wedding allegedly costs?

Ladies, please remember: It’s only one day -- the first day of your marriage. Marriage. That's the part after the wedding. Love, commitment, a lifetime together, all that.

Without a little perspective, Bridezillas and ordinary brides alike may may face “post-wedding blues.” This can happen once the storybook stuff is finished and it’s time for the very real, very hard work of learning to live with this person whose initials are mingled with yours on guest towels no one will ever use.

Or maybe the depression coincides with the arrival of the bills for all the wedding costs -- that is, the ones the bridesmaids didn’t pay.

Comments

 

i told my mother i didn't want a big wedding and instead with her blessing took the money,which  was  $30,000(this money saved on a janitor and school cafeteria worker salaries) and with other saved money, bought a house with my future husband in 1981..no mortgage and the house(recently sold) value quadrupled in 25 years of our marriage

I am soooo with you Abby.  I am a Wedding Consultant on the side for our church weddings and friends, etc.  I am appalled at what brides now EXPECT from their bridesmaids.  If the bride doesn't have the money to pay for all of the expenses SHE REQUIRES...what makes her think each individual person has that money?  Your thoughts and opinions are so my way of thinking and "advising" any brides who want my opinion and guidance.  The gifts that brides and grooms feel they are "obligated" to purchase for each person in their wedding party is absurd also.  Their gift should be the PRIVILEGE of being asked to be a SPECIAL PART of YOUR SPECIAL DAY!  What an honor that should be.  As for multiple showers...ONE-TWO are more than enough.  That is what wedding registry and wedding gifts are for.  The purpose of a "shower" is to HONOR the bride and/or groom.  You can have a beautiful,elegant, inexpensive wedding that costs around $5-7,000 and love it.  I could go on and on and on, but I will spare you all with the rest of my comments.  You get the idea, that we have so become involved in SELF that no one else matters and it is destroying families, relationships, commitments, and everything else because for some reason our society thinks that ourself is the ONLY person that matters and we will do whatever is necessary, no matter who we hurt along the way, and no matter the costs.  May God help us all at judgment for being into ourselves.  

Has anyone ever done a study on the amount of money spent verses the length of the marriage?  

Brides are seeing weddings and wedding planning on television and come away believing that what they see on TV is the way they must have things done too.  This illusion isn't limited to weddings, it's an isidious form of societal marketing that is impacting everything from the homes we buy t the foods we eat to cosmetic surgeries we come away believing that we must have.

We're do for  a big societal financial comeuppance with regard to the realistic fallout of our hunger for the televised greed we see day in and day out.

My goodness! 5-7K? I mean, I know it's possible, but really, I'd rather spend 2K and have another 5K left over for my mortgage. I wonder if it's possible to have a 2K wedding? Thanks goodness I'm a spinster.

My wife and I had a dilemma when we got married, have 300+ people and spend way too much money, or go smaller.

We opted to go smaller, we had a total of 27 people at the wedding.  The expenses were still around 3 to 4 thousand dollars.  The largest expense was the wedding dinner, followed by the wedding dress.  Since my best man was in the military, I paid for his flight.

A wedding is a sacred vow of committment to each other, a wedding reception is a party for friends and family, and a party can be put together for less than $75 per person.

My husband and I got married for $500.  We went to Hawaii on vacation (my husband won the vacation from his company) and we got hitched with the blessing of both our famalies.  We spent the $25,000 we had saved up on a down payment of our first house.  When we came back from Hawaii we had a party for our friends and my parents had a formal Chinese banquet for the relations.  Five and 1/2 years later I don't regret it for a minute.

"Ladies, please remember: It’s only one day -- the first day of your marriage."

Some men would do well to remember that, too.  There are plenty of groomzillas out there.  Perpetuating the stereotype that all women and no men freak out over weddings reinforces the notion that women are irrational and should be quiet and men can be assertive about the things they want.

Feminist rant being over, I agree that some brides and grooms expect way too much from their attendants.  If someone wants to spend thousands upon thousands of dollars on a wedding, that's their choice, but they have no right to insist that other people spend money to contribute to their vision.

the only thing i insisted on with my bridesmaids is to keep me informed of the shower and bachelorette party.  i did have to show up you know! i only had one of each b/c that's all you need! other then that, i requested they were the same dress (davids bridal and they weren't more then $100 b/c i was getting my dress there) show up to the wedding on time and keep me calm. the last part was the hardest job of all! the only other costs were absorbed by my dad, me and his parents. the BIGGEST cost: food. seriously, feeding 130 ppl cost SERIOUS money. i saved money by hiring a friend as photographer, having the wedding and reception at the same place, going through a big box store for my bridal wear (the groomsmen got a deal, too, b/c of where i got my dress and my dad's tux was free b/c my husband's military and wore his uniform), the cake was done by a family friend and the dj was my bikini waxer's boyfriend. he cut me a deal b/c i knew her and she even cut me a deal on my makeup. with weddings, to save money, it's definitly WHO you know! all told, it costs us $5K+. VERY CHEAPY considering what the average "small" wedding costs. and it'll all be paid off in a couple of mons. we got married in july. how many ppl do you know who paid off their wedding in 6+mons?! and who are still married, to boot!?

As one of Abby's bridesmaids, I'm plenty happy that she's keeping an eye on our budgets as well as her own. Thanks, Abby!

Looking back at my own wedding, I see plenty of places where I could have cut back - and others where I should have splurged a little more. I firmly believe that the photographer is the most important place to spend money. These are the memories that you will keep looking back to.

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