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EMILIA MILLICENT

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‘If only I had said no to bridesmaid slavery’

In the middle of wedding season, love columnist Emilia Millicent shares why even mild-tempered bridezillas can be b*'**es, and why she wishes she'd told one particular bride to buzz off when asked to be bridesmaid.

'If only I had said no to bridesmaid slavery'

I wish I’d said no. There were two incidents, and a general sense of foreboding, that put me ill at ease about this particular wedding. The first incident happened to unearth something I’d never known about myself – I’m partially colour blind. I can’t tell the difference between certain purples and brown. Unfortunately, this seemingly mild eyesight problem was nowhere near a “mild problem” with the bride-to-be.

We were somewhere near Pigalle, having visited the Musée de la Vie Romantique (oh, the irony), when I told the Bride that I liked my bridesmaid dress, that it was a lovely deep purple.

Ooops!

I must credit her for not being overly mean, but I could see her idea of a perfect wedding crumble before her eyes. It was like all the little details she planned for months were flashing before her eyes, like the last moment alive in perfect-wedding-life, that my purple dress was obliterating, wiping off the face of the planet. I was the wedding annihilator.

“Purple! It’s supposed to be brown, it’s an autumn wedding!”

Being ever accommodating (I need to stop, but more on that later), I didn’t get angry when she said I must have read her bridesmaid dress instructions wrong in her email. I instead dutifully called my dad back home in Scotland and asked him to check the cupboard by the stairs where I’d hung up the frilly monstrosity of a halter-neck dress (viscose!).

“Oh what a lovely chocolate brown,” my father said down the phone.

Crisis averted.

I was spending the summer in Paris on an internship, so once Lynne had flown home after a hen weekend she seemed to endure rather than enjoy, I went back to my life, living with a Franco-Ontarien astrophysicist, and mixing late night curries with visits to swingers clubs. My life obviously had nothing to do with Lynne’s cozy domestic existence with Stephen.

Claude and I had just finished a rather complicated set of acrobatics on the sofa when I checked my email. “I’m trying not to be a bridezilla,” the first line read… and to be truthful, Lynne wasn’t being a bridezilla, she was just showing proof of the same kind of insensitivity she’d sometimes excel at when we lived together at uni. Especially as she is American, and just like many Americans who grew up in a patriot bubble, not very good at understanding that American culture is not universal.

“Emilia, the maid of honour has visa problems and can’t come to the wedding, the second bridesmaid’s mother has cancer, which means you have to be maid of honour.”

Claude rolled his eyes. I wrote that it would be an honour…. For the past seven years, I have regretted those words. I wish I had written:

“While I appreciate the dilemma, I am unused to this American tradition of weddings, and while I am pleased to be a bridesmaid despite the costs it entails in terms of the dress, travel and accommodation when I am still a student and short of cash, I do not feel comfortable being maid of honour when you have made clear that I am your third-choice default.”

But I didn’t write that. Some might say I was just being dutiful, and that’s true, I was being dutiful. But I also feared Lynne’s cultural ignorance, and her at times mercurial moods. So I shut up, even though I was quite hurt.

The general sense of foreboding that I mentioned before about the wedding in general had its root in Lynne’s past. She was marrying the first guy who was nice to her after she found out her long-term boyfriend was an adulterous coke fiend. And while my general sense of foreboding – I felt I was taking out a mortgage on a condemned house with the dress/flight/hotel – has thankfully been proven to be wrong, as they are still seven years later happily married with two children, I do still at times wish I had said no – frankly to being bridesmaid all together.

And because nowadays, when I have become better at standing up to Lynne and she has become less of an angry person, we are as close as sisters, I choose to put that episode seven years ago in the past, where it belongs.

It all came back to the surface, however, when a Spanish friend in Stockholm laid bare her frustrations over a friend’s wedding. The list was long. 1) The bridesmaid dress was ugly, 2) Having to be toast mistress and take part in the photo shoot at the same time (“Should I clone myself?!”), 3) The bride trying to get the bridesmaids to share her horse-drawn carriage to the ceremony to cut costs.

“I am not going to wash my hair and I am taking public transport,” Annalisa said, furious, as we shared a fag at work.

“I did that,” I reminisced. “Lynne tried to get me to have my hair done in the salon, but I said I’d do it myself.”

But then the other things from the wedding resurfaced – that I never got a thank you card, neither for my participation or for my wedding gift , or for calming her down when her equally mercurial father snapped at her on the way to the church.

And I realized, as all this resurfaced, that being a bridesmaid is basically being violated. It’s like being culturally raped by the hysteria surrounding weddings. You’re the bride’s bitch.

I often think of that scene from Sex and the City when prude soon-to-be-married Charlotte tells slutty Samantha “It’s my week”. And Samantha snaps back “You get one day, it’s your day, you don’t get a week.”

Hear, hear to that.

And any brides out there. It’s not really your god damn day either, it’s your friends’ and your family’s day as much as it is yours. Chill the you-know-what out.

Emilia Millicent works in finance in Stockholm and has lived in Sweden for the past two and a half years.

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LOVE

Getting married in Norway in the age of coronavirus

On Friday Lorelou Desjardins, the Frenchwoman who writes the Frog in the Fjord blog, will get married. But even with the worst coronavirus restrictions now gone in Norway, it will be very different from expected.

Getting married in Norway in the age of coronavirus
Lorelou Desjardins and her fiancé Ionut. Photo: Lorelou Desjardins
Here's her article on dating in the age of coronavirus for her Frog in the Fjord blog (although obviously she is not actually dating herself. 
 
No party 
 
“We were supposed to have a big party, which had to be postponed because we could not ensure the one-metre distance, even though we were ready to downsize the number of guests,” she says. 
 
Neither Lorelou nor her fiancé have been able to get any of their families and friends over for the ceremony (perhaps fittingly for someone who blogs about the differences between Norwegian and 'Latin' dating culture, she's ended up with Ionut, a Romanian). 
 
Only 12 people are allowed into Oslo's Rådhuset (City Hall) for the main event (which is nonetheless good news for the happy couple, as in March it closed for weddings completely). 
 
Lorelou said Norwegian friends were wary when she said she planned to hold the party at a rented venue, asking whether she planned to invite more than the permitted 20 people. 
 
“I had people saying they weren't coming to my wedding because I wasn't able to respect the one-metre rule,” she said. “Many Norwegians respect government regulations to the letter, usually to protect their loved-ones who are at high risk due to current sickness or old age.”
 
To reassure them, she has decided to hold the party in an Indian restaurant, which follows the guidelines agreed between the government and the restaurant industry. 
 
 
The restaurant has asked them to split the 12 or so guests into three tables and to sign a paper confirming that each group of four lives in the same household. 
 
The waiting staff will wear masks and each set of cutlery is reserved for different groups of guests.  
 
The couple had wanted to bring in a special cake from a French patisserie, but could not get permission. 
 
“Because of contamination risks they cannot accept that I take a cake from outside into the restaurant,” she explains. 
 
Desjardins, however, is at least in the fortunate position of having a fiancé in Norway.
 
Also, because she and Ionut have a four-month-old baby, their wedding planning has been very last minute, so they didn't have any major bookings to cancel. 
 
For them the big party will probably happen next year. 
 
For many other foreigners, however, lavishly planned weddings have been cancelled completely. 
 
Adeel Zahid hopes to marry his fiancé at a Muslim ceremony at the Dream Selskapslokal in Oslo. Photo: Dream Selskapslokaler. 
 
No parents 
 
Adeel Zahid, a German citizen with a Pakistani background, hopes to marry his Norwegian fiancé, who has a similar background, on July 18th. 
 
As an EEA citizen, he is allowed to enter Norway, and with gatherings of 200 people now possible, the wedding is technically feasible. 
 
However, under the UDI's new rules, his parents will not be able to enter, which he says makes an Islamic marriage impossible. 
 
“We want our parents to participate along with me as I am the only child of my parents and we live in the same household,” he says. “Marriage is a once in a lifetime event and without parents the marriage is not possible.” 
 
 
He says his parents are willing to go into quarantine for ten days on arrival in Norway, or to come only for two days around the ceremony. 
 
But the Norwegian authorities are replying to his emails by simply sending a link to the Q&A section on the UDI's website. 
 
“Why is it allowed for the bride or groom to arrive in Norway alone and not for his or her parents?” he asks. 
 
Ida Marie Rygg and her American fiancé Luke DeBoer. Photo: Private
 
No groom 
 
Ida Marie Rygg has been planning to marry her American fiancé Luke DeBoer for two years, with the date set for June 27th, and Luke already well-prepared to move to Norway to live with her. 
 
But on May 15th, they decided to postpone it, after the hoped-for relaxation of border rules left those overseas who are engaged to marry Norwegian citizens out. 
 
“We had hoped for good news that day, but there was no news for us,” Rygg complains. 
 
Today, she is still waiting for a change in the rulies that will  open the way for Luke to join her. “It is an emotional Rollercoaster,” she says. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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