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Calling Off The Wedding:
A Practical Guide
Calling off your wedding will be one of the most
difficult things you do in your life.
But if you must, here's what you might expect:
The high drama of telling your fiancé, family, and
friends will last a week or so. You'll be shocking everyone's systems,
and it will be a very emotional time for everyone involved. You must let everyone have their feelings
and just weather the storm.
After a week or so, everyone will incorporate the reality
that you're not getting married and eventually move back into their own
lives. In time, the drama will end.
Your fiancé will likely feel devastated,
enraged, betrayed, humiliated, ashamed, embarrassed, afraid, furious about the
money spent, and a thousand other high-intensity emotions. But in a few
days, weeks or months, he will be most likely be OK. He may also be
relieved.) Either way, this will be a painful life-lesson for him, as |

Allison Moir-Smith
Bridal Counselor and
Author of Emotionally Engaged
(Feb. 2006: Hudson St. Press)
Thinking of calling it
off? |
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it is for you, and will
shape him as a person. Keep in mind that continuing the relationship --
romantic or friendship -- will probably be asking too much, so deciding not to
marry usually results in the end of the relationship. In
There Goes The Bride
by Rachel Safier (see below) only 2 of the 62 Almost Brides married their
fiances at a later date.
Your family may
be shocked -- especially if you've hidden your ambivalent feelings from them as
most brides do. They might possibly be angry at the outlay of money for the
wedding itself. But eventually (or immediately), they will be relieved that you
made the best decision for yourself. Your long-term happiness is worth a
$20,000 reception. Really, it is. |
Let me help you through this heart-wrenching decision.
Call me for a FREE
consultation TODAY!
|
His family
may be angry, because
they'll think you've humiliated their son. There's not much you can do about
that in the short-term; all you can hope is that one day they'll realize that
you made the best decision for you, and for him. He should only marry someone
who really wants to marry him: and that's not you.
Your friends will likely support you.
They'll be fine with swallowing the cost of $400 plane tickets and $150 hotel
rooms, because all they want is for you to be happy. And they'll probably
make plans to be with you on what was to be your wedding weekend. Let them.
Your guests
will likely understand. A few days after you've spoken
with your fiancé, your family, his family, and your close friends, you should
call (or write, or email) each guest personally and inform them that the
wedding has been called off, you're sorry for the inconvenience, and you
appreciate their support -- of you and your fiance -- during this difficult
time.
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HELP! I Have
Cold Feet!
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You
may feel a combination of huge relief (that's how you know it's the right
decision) and horrible guilt, regret, and uncertainty. You'll also feel
like The Bad Guy. There's not much getting around that. Some
people will try to make you feel worse, but you'll probably be the expert at
that. This will be your challenge as you get through these days, weeks,
and months ahead: hanging onto your gut instinct and trusting that it is
right. Your other challenge will be to not beat up on yourself:
yes, you're causing a lot of pain in the short-term, but in the long-term
you're making the best decision for yourself and your fiancé. You are
not a bad person, even though you may feel like one. You must remember
that.
Run, don't
walk, to the bookstore
And pick up There Goes The Bride: Making Up Your Mind, Calling It Off &
Moving On by Rachel Safier with Wendy Roberts, LCSW ($14.95, Jossey-Bass
Publishers).
An invaluable resource for extremely cold-footed brides. In it, you'll read
intimate, thought-provoking, and detailed stories of 62 "Almost Brides"-- women
who called of their own weddings or who had their weddings called off. There
Goes The Bride addresses the wrenching emotional side of this decision,
as well as the practical aspects too. "How-to"s include: what to do about the
ring, how to get money back from vendors, telling the priest, informing the
newspapers, sending back gifts, selling bridesmaids' dresses on Ebay,
considering counseling and much, much more.
Family and friends who support your decision and its aftermath are essential
right now. Know who those people are, and ask them for their support. Ask
them to be on the emotional roller coaster with you, wherever you are.
Additional support: I help brides on both side of the equation -- in person
or on the phone if you're not in Boston -- through the aftermath of called-off
weddings. I help brides who have called off the wedding through the guilt,
fear, sadness, anger, and guilty relief. And I help brides who've had their
weddings called off move on in their lives.
It's an intense time for both members of the couple, and if either of you need
support, I'm here. I've helped brides understand what happened and move on in
their lives. Let me help you.
Short-term versus long-term
In the short-term, calling of your wedding
will be difficult and sometimes awful. The guilt, the money spent, the
looking for a new place to live, the loss of relationship with your fiancé,
the fear that there's no one else out there -- all this may at times overwhelm
you. But something deep within you knows that you're making the right
decision, and you must trust that.
Here's some perspective: in one to two years' time, you'll look back at the
week you called off the wedding, and it will be hazy. You will feel clear
that you made the right decision. You'll have grown immensely from this
challenge, you'll probably be in a new relationship, and you'll have learned
so much about yourself.
The short-term misery is tough; you're doing this for your long-term
happiness.
I wish you the best of luck, and remember that I'm here to support you in any
way I can. Call me TODAY for a FREE 15-minute phone consultation.
617-739-5353.
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