Happily Ever After: Why Couples Renew Their Vows

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Happily Ever After: Why Couples Renew Their Vows

Whether a reaffirmation, a "road check," or the party you couldn't afford when starting out, vow renewal is a glorious celebration of continued commitment.

When Kathy and Dale Bissette first married they were so young and so strapped for cash that their wedding party could have been mistaken for dinner with the family. Their guest list was limited to seven relatives--mothers, aunts and siblings.

What a difference 20 years of married life and savings in the bank made when the Bissettes renewed their wedding vows.

"We wanted the whole shebang: white wedding gown, big church, big limo, caterers and flowers. There were over 200 guests," says Kathy Bissette, who lives in Phoenix.

The extravaganza, which went on for a full week, cost "well over $15,000" and included visits from out-of-town friends, backyard barbecues and a whirlwind of activities.

MTVozzy_sharon.jpg
The Osbournes' New Year's Eve ceremony marked 20 years of marriage..

"We wanted it all. I didn't want to half-step it," Bissette says.

Although there are few statistics to confirm it, wedding experts say they're getting more requests for vow renewal events. A yearning for strong family ties and the after-shock of September 11 motivate couples to re-affirm their love, say the marriage pros.

Even Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne, the offbeat couple whose family antics are a weekly obsession on MTV's The Osbournes, see the value of vow renewal. "We wrote our own vows and had our marriage blessed again," Sharon told People magazine. The ceremony, which took place on New Year's Eve with 500 guests, marked 20 years of marriage.

The spiritual component, which many couples weave into their renewal ceremonies, pleases Rabbi Jamie Korngold.

"What I love about the renewal of vows is that it's about the marriage," says Rabbi Korngold of Boulder, Colo.

"The wedding is about who should be invited and the napkins and the flowers. It's a struggle to get a couple to think about the marriage. In a renewal of vows the couple thinks about their marriage," says the rabbi.

"Some couples will go through sessions with their rabbi and look at their goals for the future of their marriage. It's like getting the 50,000 mile tune-up on the car and feeling good about it. That's how couples feel coming out of this [the vow renewal] experience," says Rabbi Korngold.

She sometimes sees couples at their 10th or 15th anniversary. Then the vow renewal is a road check, rather than a golden wedding commemoration.

The Bissettes decided at their 15th anniversary to renew their vows after 20 years of marriage because they wanted to do so while they had the energy for all the planning involved.

Traditionally, couples renew their vows at significant anniversary dates, such as the 30th or the 50th. Then it becomes a celebration of a marriage that works, says Rev. Dr. David Glusker, minister of the First Radio Parish Church in Portland, Maine.

"When you commit at age 22 or 26 you're a different person from 30 years later. It's a new commitment," says Rev. Glusker.

Although some couples ask their religious leader to preside over the ceremony, a renewal shouldn't be confused with a wedding, says the minister. The language and intent are different.

"Instead of saying you're 'taking' the person, you say 'once again I commit myself to you as your wedded wife,' " he says.

According to Rev. Glusker, most couples aren't comfortable creating their own language for commitment. He included wedding renewal vows in his book, Words for Your Wedding: the Wedding Service Book (Harper San Francisco, 1994).

A handbook for Reform rabbis also includes a renewal ceremony with appropriate prayers. Couples considering the experience can get recommendations from their religious leaders as well.

However, exchanging personal vows, as the Bissettes did, can be even more meaningful.

"We had butterflies in our stomachs and could hardly talk. My vows were short. Dale went on about how I was the angel in his life. We teared up as we exchanged vows," says Bissette.

For some couples, exchanging vows is a personal and private experience. For others, it's a way to mark a milestone anniversary with family and friends. Destination parties at vacation resorts are very popular, according to wedding planners. A vow renewal occasion can be modest or luxurious and even off-beat.

How does a Jewish renewal service in the Rockies sound? Rabbi Korngold conducts them. She is affiliated with Boulder, Colo.-based Adventure Rabbi, and a company for those who find their spirituality in nature. "I have a couple coming from New York to Aspen for a long weekend. We'll do different outdoor activities, then go for a hike and do a renewal of vows in the wilderness," says the rabbi.

Another renewal ceremony, arranged by a wedding planner, called for Northern California's Mill Valley Outdoor Arts festival as a backdrop to a dinner dance. The original wedding invitations were transformed into menu cards and the tables were adorned with green and yellow flowers, the wife's favorite colors.

The Bissettes' renewal experience was part church service and part reunion of extended family and friends.

"It was a big organizational thing," Bissette says. "It was absolutely huge. But it wasn't as stressful as getting married would be. This was a re-do. The biggest thing was to have fun."

Advice on Saying "I still do"

If you're considering renewing vows, make sure you and your spouse both agree to it, advises Kathy Bissette.

"If your spouse isn't into it, don't do it because you'll argue about the details, such as money. Our vow renewals were very frivolous, but also very important, to my husband Dale as well as to me," she says.

It's challenging enough to plan a wedding when you're young and unencumbered. Add family, job and other obligations and vow renewals may be more than you can handle by yourself. Delegate as much as you can to friends, family and grown children, Bissette advises.

Resorts fill up early. If you're planning a combination vacation and vow renewal for a large group, make reservations at least a year in advance.

Find ways to incorporate things that are important and meaningful to you and your spouse in your ceremony. For example, your invitations can include wedding photos or a band can play your wedding reception music. Perhaps your friends who were there since the start can compile a memory book of your married life.

© 2003 Content That Works
Happily Ever After: Why Couples Renew Their Vows... *click me*

IMO: Sounded great...Making sure if seriouis relationship go ahead for re-vows again. I would like that too.. More stay longer relationship stronger! :thumb:
 
I would renew my marriage vow if my husband and I are living up to our 20 years of marriage. We never had a wedding, all we got married in nice dress and suit and preacher who married us and never had a honeymoon. I was 6 months pregnant when I got married. :ugh:

I am hoping if we are alive to til our 20 years of marriage, I would like to have a big wedding, me in nice wedding dress, riding limo and honeymoon in Hawaii or Bahamas. :mrgreen: That is my dream...
 
Oh that would be nice to do..renew our vows..we never had a wedding either..we got married by the Judge in Ft. Smith, Arkansas..no honeymoon.
I told my hubby someday we take our honeymoon somewhere like on a cruise for a week! he agreed and we will someday! whhheeee!
 
Same here, my parent renew their vows when I was in the 20's.... They are still married and forward to the 50 years.... :ugh: I will be 40! :cry:
 
Hubby and I were invited to a wedding this summer - and last night, I was just asking him how he felt about this - and he'd like to renew our vows someday, too. I'm thinking it would be nice to do the things we didn't have money to do before. Our son was already nine months old when we got married, so money was soooo tight. But hey, a few years down the road, we might just do that - renew and then go on a nice week-long cruise. :)
 
Malfoyish said:
Hubby and I were invited to a wedding this summer - and last night, I was just asking him how he felt about this - and he'd like to renew our vows someday, too. I'm thinking it would be nice to do the things we didn't have money to do before. Our son was already nine months old when we got married, so money was soooo tight. But hey, a few years down the road, we might just do that - renew and then go on a nice week-long cruise. :)

Malfy,

You could also wait for your 25th Wedding Anniversary, and take that cruise! LOL My parents did this, and that is actually how they found Key West. They were cruising to Mexico, and one of the destinations on the itinerary was Key West, FL. They fell in LOVE with the place, and guess what? We now live here! LOL
 
Aw I find it so romance for couples who renew their marriage vows....
 
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