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Wedding Vows

  • Posted on October 2, 2009 at 1:06 pm

Sketching Your Own Marriage Vows

By Andromeda D. Miradji.


wedding-vows

wedding-vows

Deciding to write your own wedding vows is a main responsibility and one that has to be cautiously approached with an special amount of fore belief. In the final analysis, the influential aspect is perhaps truly based on your level of bravery.

When it comes to your wedding vows, couples are frequently unconfident of what to have. Countless opt to have the traditional vows, not realizing that they are able to propose their own!

People are often attracted to find out that the only official requirement to their marriage are the words “Do you … take … to be your lawfully wedded husband/wife”, to which they confidently answer “YES!”. Apart from this one statement, the rest of the marriage ceremony is utterly up to the couple, as well as their vows.

When designing your admit vows, start early on in your wedding planning. I have married one couple where the husband-to-be in the end presented his vows just before the marriage ceremony, having stayed up half the night trying to work out what to say! Your vows are just as important as other aspects of your wedding, and the promises you make carry on long after the ceremony. For this reason alone you want to dedicate quality time to preparing what you will verbalize!

Often the main effort in lettering your own vows is “where do I begin?”. Start with just writing. Don’t think too rigid about what you are writing. Take time to yourself in a quiet location where you can expose on your relationship, your coming marriage and why you want to use the rest of your life with this person. What makes them extraordinary? Why are they the one for you? Just get down into words all of the things you love about your spouse and what makes you energized to spend the rest of your life with them.

wedding vows ceremony

wedding-vows-ceremony

A good place to start is using the traditional vows as a template. The conventional vows are – “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 us do part.”

The idea behind these conventional vows is that of a covenant. A covenant is a obligation you make to another person with no prosecuting like in return. It is not a pact that says “I will love you only if you don’t leave your undies lying on the bedroom floor” – it is a promise based on unselfish love and making a promise to the other person in all times and seasons of your life, whatever may come.

Keeping the thought of a covenant in mind, be concerned about readings, poetry, lyrics or vows from a mixture of sources that you may want to contain. There are countless rich resources on the Internet dedicated to marriage vows which afford a rich resource of thoughts. Borrow from these to help you craft those single words that mirror your thoughts and commitments to the other person.

Be aware that some religious places and celebrant have borders on what you can have and do in a wedding ceremony and if you haven’t already discussed writing your own vows with your minister, you may want to do this first.

Checkout my other guide on Wedding Invitation