月別アーカイブ: 2015年10月

MY WIFE WAS ASKED TO BE A BRIDESMAID IN A WEDDING ON MY BIRTHDAY

Nothing brings out the ugly in people like family functions—specifically, weddings and funerals.

A Reddit user, who we’ll call “Sam,” turned to the message board for advice regarding his sister-in-law’s forthcoming nuptials. The sister-in-law, who we’ll call “Alice,” is preparing to tie the knot in Milan, Italy. Naturally, she asked her sister, Sam’s wife, to be a bridesmaid. Unfortunately, the trip falls on the weekend of Sam’s 30th birthday and even worse, he’s not invited. Oh yeah, his wife is considering accepting Alice’s bridesmaid invitation. Sam explains:

wife is a bridesmaid

Source: SheinDressAU

My wife told me a couple of days ago her sister would be getting married on the weekend of my 30th birthday, on the other side of the world. I will have to stay home, alone, with our toddler for a week taking care of him. Alone. I’m pretty deeply upset she is even considering being a part of this.

Apparently, it’s no surprise to Sam that Alice blacklisted him from attending her wedding because they have never gotten along.

Her sister has always had it out for me since the beginning of our relationship (8yrs). She is a doctor and looks down on any and all people who don’t have MD’s and JD’s. She tried to break apart our relationship in all stages but because my wife and I have a great relationship and her and her sister do not, these attempts have always been brushed off as being sourced in her superficiality.

According to Sam, he’s welcome to join his wife in Italy, but he’ll have to do something to occupy himself during the ceremony because he’s not welcome. And while funding his wife’s trip to Milan would put somewhat of a strain on their finances, it’s not completely impossible. However, it will mean sacrificing his birthday vacation that they planned together.

I’m not invited. I was told I “could” come to Italy but have nothing to do with the wedding aka, take care of the kiddo and generally be alone. No thanks. My wife doesn’t want to fly for 18ish hours alone with our son so I will be home alone with a 2 year old on my 30th birthday. No family or friends in our area (rural) we are a very strong family unit and last year for her 30th birthday we all went to Hawaii. Her going to Milan would be the budget we had planned for my birthday vacation (far more modest- a weekend driving getaway to a NP).

She thinks I’m overreacting and should respect “her family” despite them showing me absolutely none. Am I that wrong to be upset about this?

See also: Yellow Bridesmaid Dresses

カテゴリー: wedding | 投稿者bestlook 12:20 | コメントをどうぞ

Helen Forman & John Dille

The marriage of Miss Helen Elizabeth Forman to Mr. John Adams Dille IV took place on Saturday, July 25, 2015, at Cannon Memorial Chapel in Richmond, Virginia. The Reverend Steven Mark Browne officiated. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Anthony Forman of Richmond. She is the granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Allen Dotson Steele, formerly of Delray Beach, Florida, and the late Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Jerome Forman Jr., formerly of Charlotte, North Carolina. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Adams Dille III of Tappahannock, Virginia. He is the grandson of Mrs. Claude Havens Hardy of Amelia and the late Mr. Hardy, and Mr. and Mrs.

Helen Forman & John Dille

Photo: bridesmaids dresses

James Cross Barnes Jr. of Arlington and the late Mr. John Adams Dille Jr., formerly of Roanoke. The bride was given in marriage by her father. Her dress of satin and illusion was fashioned with a scalloped embroidered lace bodice and a chapel-length train. With her bouquet she carried an heirloom handkerchief embroidered with the initials of the grooms’ paternal grandparents. Miss Anne Mills Forman of Richmond, sister of the bride, served as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Susan Allison Steele of Orlando and Mrs. Douglas Thomas Johnson of Delray Beach, both cousins of the bride. Also attending the bride were Miss Hannah Joy Hopper and Miss Stacy Nicole Roberts of Midlothian and Miss Jessica Helen Waguespack of Chester. Mr. Martin Minter Dille of Tappahannock, brother of the groom, served as best man. Groomsmen were Mr. Matthew William Allen of Dillwyn, the Reverend Jeremy Shane Gallagher of Tappahannock, Mr. Walter Scott Garber of King William, Mr. Chase Laine-Albert Baldwin of Buford, Georgia, and Mr. Stuart Thomas Welch of Northeast, Maryland. Scripture readers were Mr. Matthew Wright Garbark and Mr. Richard Stephen Garbark of Baltimore, Maryland, cousins of the bride.

Following the ceremony, the bride’s parents hosted a reception at The Commonwealth Club. On Friday evening, the groom’s parents hosted the rehearsal dinner at the University of Richmond. Also on Friday, a bridal luncheon was given at Portico, hosted by the bride’s godmother, Mrs. Timothy David O’Donoghue, and aunts, Mrs. Stephen Thomas Garbark, Mrs. Arthur Francis Forman, Mrs. Anthony Joseph Forman and Mrs. Charles Howard Hodge. The bride is a graduate of Trinity Episcopal School and Longwood University, where she is currently completing her master’s degree in Counseling. The groom is a graduate of Essex High School and Hampden-Sydney College. He currently serves as Youth Director at Richmond Community Church and is pursuing Seminary Studies. The couple traveled to Florida and the Bahamas on their wedding trip. They reside in Glen Allen, Virginia.

Also see: wedding dresses sydney

カテゴリー: wedding | 投稿者bestlook 12:32 | コメントをどうぞ

Perske shares tears of wedding joy with marrow donor

Everybody cries at weddings — brides, grooms, parents, friends, sometimes virtual strangers. Really, it’s almost mandatory.

“Oh, exactly,” Greta Perske said. “A very happy cry.”

In that sense, everything went pretty much according to form Oct. 10 when Greta married Tony Hokanson at Celebration Lutheran Church in Sartell.

But some of the tears that flowed freely into that evening were for an entirely different reason.

Greta Perske hugs Danny Daniels -- her marrow donor

Pictures: wedding dress

“The wedding was filled with tears of joy. To me, it was nothing short of a miracle,” said Joe Perske, father of the bride. “It was a day we didn’t know if it would happen.”

“It was just amazing,” added Jan Perske, the bride’s mom. “The emotions can just take over.”

These also were tears of gratitude — especially during the reception, when the bride danced with a 51-year-old man whom she had met exactly once before.

This was the man who made the wedding possible, the man whose generosity saved Greta’s life.

“It was special for me, too,” said Danny Daniels, an Arkansas resident whose bone marrow donation in 2007 was pivotal for a Minnesota high school girl with leukemia. “I’m just very humbled that it worked out as well as it did for her.”

“I can’t even describe what that feeling is,” Greta said. “There’s the man who saved my life, standing right in front of me.

“He didn’t have to do what he did, but he did.”

He did.

Greta Perske is now a 24-year-old college graduate, a nurse and a newlywed, all because eight years ago a man she had never met gave her a gift.

Fighting leukemia

Sartell High School had just begun soccer practice in the fall of 2006 when Greta — a sophomore three-sport athlete — realized something was wrong.

“We just thought she had a bad cold,” Joe said. “We thought it might be exercise-induced asthma.”

“She was playing soccer — and you need to put ‘playing soccer’ in quotation marks — and she was very fatigued,” Jan said. “She wasn’t playing soccer like she can play soccer.”

It was leukemia. Greta struggled through the season with her state tournament-bound team, but didn’t respond to treatments.

“It just ripped us to the core,” Joe said.

By March 2007, Greta was very sick and on the waiting list for a marrow transplant. One was located through BeTheMatch.org, a national registry that matches patients with compatible donors.

That donor was Daniels, who had registered because of a personal loss.

“It was due to a friend of mine, when I was in the Arkansas Air National Guard,” Daniels said. “One of our members became ill, and needed a bone marrow transplant. That’s why my wife (Angie) and I signed up then.”

“He said to me, ‘I’ve spent my whole life saving lives in the Air National Guard,’ ” Jan recalled. “ ‘Why wouldn’t I save the life of a 16-year-old girl in Minnesota?’ ”

Life inspiration

Greta, Joe and Jan met Daniels for the first time about two years after the transplant, which inspired Greta’s decision to go into nursing.

“I was always planning to be a teacher, and then that happened,” said Greta, whose parents and two older sisters are all teachers. She works at United Hospital in Minneapolis.

“Then I said, ‘That’s what I want to do. I want to help save lives, too. I want to give back.’ ”

Her story also resonated with Hokanson, whom she met four years ago through mutual friends.

“Tony’s mom died of cancer when he was 5,” Greta said, “so he knows the whole cancer thing, too. Of course, that story ended a little differently.”

Their story, meanwhile, progressed to planning a wedding — a wedding that wouldn’t have happened without Daniels.

“Exactly,” Greta said. “I can’t thank him enough.”

Greta and Tony sent the invitation.

Down in Barling, Arkansas, Danny and Angie hopped into the car.

Going to a party

It’s a 12-hour drive from Barling to Sartell, which gave Daniels a lot of time to reflect on the past eight years.

“Greta and I kinda stay in touch every now and then,” said Daniels, who works as a logistics coordinator for a company that does government contracts for unmanned aerial vehicles.

“It was special for me, too. I may have teared up a couple times. Luckily, my wife was there to help me through it.”

There was a lot of that going on during the reception at Kelly Inn, which went through countless tissues.

“Instant tears, of course,” Greta said of greeting Daniels in the reception line. “Unbelievable.”

“I said in my speech at the wedding, ‘Danny, we told you this before — you didn’t just save Greta’s life, you saved all of our lives,’ ” Jan said.

“Because he donated his marrow and was willing to go through that procedure to save your daughter’s life — how do you thank somebody?”

Rousing reception

The Perskes did it publicly at the reception, where Daniels was introduced to the celebrants as Greta’s marrow donor.

“He got a standing ovation that was better than any of the claps I got throughout the campaign,” laughed Joe, who unsuccessfully ran for the U.S. House of Representatives in Minnesota’s 6th Congressional District in 2014.

“That was pretty special — unnecessary, because I was there for her,” Daniels said. “It’s kind of a blur.

“We had a nice conversation while we were dancing. She got emotional — I tried to hold it together. I hope I did.”

Better than most people, as it turned out.

“From the time I walked her down the aisle all the way through the evening,” Joe said, “there were many, many tears.”

Tears of joy

Greta and Tony are honeymooning in the Dominican Republic this week before returning home to Minnetonka.

The bride still deals with peripheral physical aftereffects of leukemia, but she’s moving ahead with her life.

“She’s got some complications,” Jan said, “and she needs her knee joints replaced. But she’s alive.”

“When I tell people my story at work, they’re like, ‘I never would have guessed,’ “ Greta said. “I’ve got a lot of joint problems, and my hormones are all messed up.”

Still, that’s nothing compared to what this could have been — and probably would have been, if not for Daniels.

“I’m humbled by all of it,” he said. “I just thank God that I was able to help someone.”

Danny Daniels also made everybody cry. But this was a good cry.

Read more: vintage lace wedding dresses

カテゴリー: wedding | 投稿者bestlook 14:39 | コメントをどうぞ