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| #Post#: 82150-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Why lie? | |
| By: oogyda Date: October 21, 2025, 3:08 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Here's the story: Sam is an enlisted person in the US military. | |
| Jazz is a civilian. They met and fell in love and were married | |
| in a very small (only her father, father's SO and two of her | |
| sisters were in attendance.) ceremony. The weekend was | |
| celebrated and posted to social media as an engagement. They | |
| got married specifically to make sure she is included in the | |
| future of his military career, mostly by being included in his | |
| transfer orders (so the military will pay for moving her stuff | |
| and other benefits) | |
| They are actively lying about their marital status to some | |
| family because they "want to have the Big White Wedding" later. | |
| I'm not sure I see the point of lying about it. They could | |
| still do the fake wedding and have the reception. | |
| Right? What am I missing? | |
| #Post#: 82151-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why lie? | |
| By: Aleko Date: October 22, 2025, 1:47 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| A lot of people don�t consider a delayed reception as equivalent | |
| to a wedding. My guess would be that they are afraid if they | |
| openly made known that they had got married with only four | |
| witnesses and would have a big white reception later, these | |
| people (a) would get in a huff that they hadn�t been invited to | |
| the wedding, and (b) would not consider that an invitation just | |
| to a reception calls for wedding presents. | |
| The four people who were at their real wedding must be complicit | |
| in the fiction they have put out on social media, otherwise the | |
| lie would certainly come out and cause major grief. They | |
| presumably know the family members concerned and agree that this | |
| is a reasonable worry, or they surely wouldn�t be going along | |
| with it? | |
| #Post#: 82153-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why lie? | |
| By: Gellchom Date: October 22, 2025, 4:52 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I know this kind of thing bothers many people, but not me. | |
| There is a big range of situations where there is more than one | |
| wedding, and they are just so different. | |
| - Couple can't decide whether to get married in her town or his, | |
| so they have two big "public" (not in the sense that all are | |
| invited, just as opposed to private and unannounced) weddings, | |
| but they hold themselves out as married after the first one. | |
| - Couple had a "public" wedding of some kind with guests and | |
| then decides that due to circumstances they were unable to have | |
| as big or as nice a wedding as they'd dreamed, so just a year or | |
| two later, they have another one (even if they call it a "vow | |
| renewal"). | |
| These and like situations strike me as way off. At best, | |
| another ceremony would seem silly, as if the first vows were | |
| meaningless. And that's whether or not the first or the second | |
| ceremony was the "official" one (i.e., recognized by the | |
| government). But they seem very different to me from situations | |
| like these: | |
| - Wedding is planned for later, but one or both are about to be | |
| deployed and in case of tragedy, they want to be sure the | |
| survivor gets rights (this is what my aunt and uncle did during | |
| WWII: secretly married before he was deployed and had the modest | |
| wedding they had planned anyway after he returned). | |
| - Wedding is planned for later, but a medical crisis suddenly | |
| arose, and for reasons such as insurance, survivor benefits, and | |
| establishment as status as Family for hospital visitation, etc., | |
| they marry privately immediately. | |
| - Wedding is planned for later, but a parent is about to die, so | |
| they have a private bedside ceremony and then continue with the | |
| wedding as planned later. (We have friends who did this; it was | |
| very touching. It was not a secret, and the dying mother did | |
| manage to make it to the BWW a couple of months later after all, | |
| and died shortly after. Everyone was very happy for them to | |
| have done it this way.) | |
| - There are still countries where same-sex (or sometimes | |
| different-religion couples) cannot officially marry, although | |
| their marriages performed elsewhere are recognized as valid. | |
| This was the case in the various US states for a few years, I'm | |
| sure you recall. So couples go to a jurisdiction where they can | |
| marry officially, either before or after a wedding with their | |
| family and friends back in their community, rather than dragging | |
| everyone to the other location. Surely no one begrudges them or | |
| their families that. | |
| And then there are situations such as my husband has run into | |
| several times as a clergyman. Say you want to get married in a | |
| state where the officiant you want is not licensed. You can pay | |
| a few hundred dollars for a one-time permit, or you can just go | |
| to City Hall a few days before or after the wedding and do a | |
| private civil ceremony. Or if you want to get married in some | |
| other country where it's complicated. This happens a LOT, | |
| believe me. We almost did it ourselves, when we learned that | |
| Wisconsin, where our wedding was to be, required both people | |
| showing up in person for the license three weeks in advance; we | |
| were all set to have a City Hall marriage in Boston, where we | |
| lived, first until we learned that for $30 Wisconsin would waive | |
| the three week requirement (WTF? Then why require it? But I | |
| digress). If you've been to many weddings, I bet you have been | |
| to at least one such, and you never knew it. And why would you | |
| care? | |
| We have seen several people saying that what makes the | |
| difference to them is whether the couple is open about it or | |
| keeps it a secret; they feel like it's fraudulent not to tell | |
| and that they don't like that they are not seeing the moment | |
| when the couple is actually wed. I'm not sure why that seems so | |
| important or why it's anyone else's business, but then, previous | |
| generations felt the same way about public display of a bloody | |
| sheet after the wedding night! And at least in the US, you | |
| aren't seeing The Moment anyway -- the marriage becomes official | |
| for legal purposes not when they say "I do,' but when the | |
| officiant signs and files the license. If The Moment for you is | |
| the "I do" before community and/or God, then you're seeing it | |
| anyway, no matter when the couple did the legal bona fides. | |
| And in many countries, including, I believe, the UK, you must | |
| have a civil marriage at a government office in addition to any | |
| other kind of wedding you have. I don't think that makes the | |
| wedding a sham or a lie or anything else. | |
| So for me, I roll my eyes at people who just want to have things | |
| more than one way -- like both destination wedding and BWW at | |
| home, or any kind of multiple "public" weddings for more | |
| attention. But for situations like the ones above, I honestly | |
| don't think it's anyone else's business whether the government | |
| requirements were met at the same time as The Wedding. | |
| #Post#: 82154-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why lie? | |
| By: Hmmm Date: October 22, 2025, 10:33 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| For me, it depends on the timeframe. Given that they had an | |
| extremely small event, I have no issues that they are planning | |
| their ceremony for the future. Part will depend on how long they | |
| go on with the pretense. | |
| For example, my niece and husband did a civil ceremony to allow | |
| her to relocate with him to another country for work. They had | |
| already been living together for 3 years so really no difference | |
| in their daily lives. When they returned to the US a year later | |
| they had the BWW. (my sister would have been heartbroken if she | |
| hadn't been able to have one for her only daughter and his mom | |
| was pretty much the same). | |
| Even 40 years ago, I had a highschool friend who was in the | |
| midst of planning her wedding for about 6 months in the future. | |
| But he got deployment orders and he wanted her to be his | |
| beneficiary while gone so they went ahead and got married but | |
| still considered themselves engaged. The planned wedding was | |
| pushed to 9 months out if I remember correctly, but I doubt only | |
| a few of us new about the prior civil ceremony. | |
| My only times I'd look sideways at the BWW is when a couple has | |
| been living together for 10 years, have 4 kids together and then | |
| suddenly decide they want a BWW. | |
| #Post#: 82155-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why lie? | |
| By: Aleko Date: October 22, 2025, 10:40 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote]And in many countries, including, I believe, the UK, you | |
| must have a civil marriage at a government office in addition to | |
| any other kind of wedding you have.[/quote] | |
| Not quite true in the UK. Here in England and Wales, clergy of | |
| several major religions - eg Church of Engkand, Judaism, | |
| Quakerism - who perform marriages in a registered place of | |
| worship are also licensed to complete the civil marriage forms, | |
| so the religious ceremony is also a civil ceremony. And for | |
| weddings of some other faiths - e.g. Sikh, Muslim - provided the | |
| wedding takes place in a building registered for marriages a | |
| registrar can attend and do the civil marriage paperwork. | |
| And even if you do need an actual civil marriage ceremony in | |
| addition to whatever religious rite you are having (either | |
| because your religion is not something recognised by the civil | |
| authorities, or it isn�t taking place in an authorised | |
| building), you can arrange for a registrar to perform it in any | |
| place licensed for marriages. | |
| #Post#: 82156-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why lie? | |
| By: lowspark Date: October 22, 2025, 10:41 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I'm curious as to how you know about this, assuming that you are | |
| not either Sam, Jazz, or one of the other four people in | |
| attendance at the ceremony. | |
| If you are not, then the secret's out anyway, right? | |
| If you are, then I'm guessing that you are not comfortable with | |
| keeping this secret. | |
| If this IS the case, I'm not sure how obligated you are to | |
| comply, but on the other hand, I'm not sure what good would come | |
| if you didn't. | |
| I agree with what gellchom said, because the purpose of the | |
| first ceremony was just to legalize the marriage for the purpose | |
| of military benefit, it's completely understandable and | |
| practical. I don't think most people would care. | |
| To be honest, when a couple does do multiple ceremonies or | |
| celebrations for a wedding, as their friend or family, what I | |
| need to evaluate is how I feel about the couple and how | |
| supportive I wish to be. In the grand scheme of things, if they | |
| are people I care about, I'm going to just go with the flow and | |
| attend as best I can. If I find myself being so annoyed at the | |
| mechanics, it's probably because I'm not super close or have a | |
| real affinity for them. | |
| So to answer the original question, i.e., the point of lying | |
| about it, I don't see much point. | |
| But I can understand that Sam and Jazz do. | |
| #Post#: 82157-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why lie? | |
| By: oogyda Date: October 22, 2025, 1:25 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=lowspark link=topic=2647.msg82156#msg82156 | |
| date=1761147718] | |
| I'm curious as to how you know about this, assuming that you are | |
| not either Sam, Jazz, or one of the other four people in | |
| attendance at the ceremony. | |
| If you are not, then the secret's out anyway, right? | |
| If you are, then I'm guessing that you are not comfortable with | |
| keeping this secret. | |
| If this IS the case, I'm not sure how obligated you are to | |
| comply, but on the other hand, I'm not sure what good would come | |
| if you didn't. | |
| [/quote] | |
| One of the sisters that was in attendance is my | |
| granddaughter-in-law. I don't know why she told us (her DH's | |
| family), but we know both Sam and Jazz to varying extents as | |
| Jazz lived with sis while my grandson was deployed and Sam | |
| eventually moved in, too. I"ve spent time with them all, | |
| including a week where everyone was ill and they needed help | |
| with the kids (my great-grandchildren). | |
| I guess the secret IS out. I don't know who all might know, but | |
| someone in Sam's family asked a question about it, and she lied | |
| to them. | |
| I am completely comfortable keeping the secret because it | |
| doesn't matter one way or another to me and I get it with the | |
| military aspect. I know that revealing the truth would cause | |
| upheaval and hard feelings and, as an in-law, I wouldn't want to | |
| do that. | |
| #Post#: 82158-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why lie? | |
| By: Gellchom Date: October 23, 2025, 9:02 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I think that plenty of couples who had planned weddings for 2020 | |
| and had to postpone them for a couple of years went ahead and | |
| got officially married and then had the BWW or whatever they | |
| were planning anyway when they could. After all, no one knew | |
| how long it would be, and they needed to get on with some | |
| important things, sometimes including starting their family. It | |
| would seem cruel and unnecessary to declare that they couldn't | |
| then still have their wedding with their family and friends, | |
| kind of like when same sex couples had to go somewhere for their | |
| "legal" wedding. | |
| Everyone is entitled to feel how they do. For me, it comes down | |
| whether it is just a matter of separating the legal formalities | |
| from the social/family life cycle event, which doesn't bother me | |
| at all, secret or not (if anything I'd probably not mention it, | |
| especially not something like the city hall visit a few days | |
| before or after the BWW I described above) or if it's an attempt | |
| to maximize attention or have your cake and eat it too (like | |
| having a substantial destination wedding with guests and a BWW | |
| at home as well -- even if they call it a reception or | |
| something, it still feels to me like wanting it both ways) which | |
| feels to me like too much focus on the wedding, not enough focus | |
| on the marriage. | |
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