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Wedding Etiquette
StepmothersWedding
Etiquette: How Stepmothers Should Act
We have seen on movies and television shows, especially the
soap operas, the dagger look that the biological mother and the
stepmother cast at each other. And we laugh at them when they
spit out their sarcastic lines, with the episode ending up in a
slapping scene.
This matter is not laughable; not at all. This incident do
happen in real life: biological mother or father fighting up
for the first pew on the church against the stepmother or
stepfather of their child or who should do the father and
daughter dance.
Having a wicked stepmother for a stepmom most of the time
happens only in fairy tales. In real world, stepmothers do get
along with their stepdaughters and stepsons.
If you are among those brides who dearly love their stepmothers
and biological mothers too but the two just can't seem to meet
in the middle, don not let yourself be caught in the middle of
a cat fight. There are wedding etiquette for stepmothers in
case you are looking for one. Just try to know some of these
wedding etiquette for stepmothers and you will be assured that
you won't slight the two persons dear to your heart.
-- Wedding Etiquette for Stepmothers: Seating Arrangement
If your mother and stepmother have not spoken in ten years and
seating them three seats apart can already spark a friction and
eventually a heated argument, how should you seat the two of
them without hurting anyone's feelings?
For a start, take the time to have a heart-to-heart talk to
each of them during the planning stage of your wedding. Ask
your mother to be in her best manner possible, and when you
talk to your stepmother, include your father in the talk. Your
stepmother might get offended if you talk to her alone about
behaving herself on the wedding. She might interpret that you
are lecturing her.
Although your stepmother would have probably known wedding
etiquette for stepmothers, it is still for the best if you talk
out to her about some of the basics. But in doing so, avoid
sounding authoritative. Say that she is dear to you but wedding
etiquette dictates that she should be seated in this chair or
that chair or that she and your father should be seated on the
next pew at the church.
is with each of them ahead of time -- perhaps include your
father in the stepmother talk -- to solicit their "good
behavior." If you keep saying how important it is to you that
they make every effort to put animosity aside on this one
special day, it's hard to imagine that they would cause any
problems.
Some etiquette guidelines do exist to help you: In most cases,
when the bride's parents are divorced, the parent with whom she
lived after the divorce (or the one she's closer to) sits in
the first pew during the ceremony. This is often, but not
always, the mother, who is joined by her husband, if she is
remarried, and her immediate family. Either directly behind the
mother's contingent (which might fill the first two or three
pews) or a few rows away, come the bride's father, stepmother,
and his immediate family.
There are practical divorced-parent guidelines for the
reception, too. Use assigned seating, with the tables for your
mother and stepmother a safe distance apart. I'm sure that on
the big day, your sensitivity will be appreciated by
all.
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