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I Do but I Don't
by Kamy Wicoff
List Price: 22.95


Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Da Capo Press (May 08 2006)
Costumer Rating: Costumer rating

Read an Excerpt

Walking Down the Aisle without Losing Your Mind
I will never forget the first time I saw myself in a proper wedding dress. I walked into the fitting room wearing jeans, boots, a T-shirt, and, believe it or not, green underwear. I emerged before a wall of brightly lit mirrors to see . . . a bride.

Walking Down the Aisle without Losing Your Mind
I will never forget the first time I saw myself in a proper wedding dress. I walked into the fitting room wearing jeans, boots, a T-shirt, and, believe it or not, green underwear. I emerged before a wall of brightly lit mirrors to see . . . a bride.

Walking Down the Aisle without Losing Your Mind, Part 2
Wedding dress shopping, of course, was only one of many wedding-related things I did as a bride. The website weddingchannel.com lists no fewer than 124 items on its 'things-to-do' list, and Andrew and I did most of them.



Book Description

Why is the stereotypical image of the bride before her wedding day that of a stressed, moody, indecisive, and frustrated woman cracking under pressure and snapping at everyone in sight? Why does being a bride feel like going through a second adolescence? And why, with the rate of couples seeking counseling for wedding-related debt doubling from year to year, do we continue to spend absurd amounts of money on this institution? Examining how the pressure to give into the crowd (mothers, mothers-in-law, caterers, dressmakers, bridesmaids, the groom himself) and the associated traditions (wearing white, being given away, being introduced as Mr. and Mrs. Groom) is sometimes at odds with the "progress" the bride and groom may have made on these issues in private, Kamy Wicoff answers these questions and more in this sure-to-be-talked-about look at the modern bride. Through poignant and funny personal experience, eye-opening conversations with other brides, and scholarly and popular research, she strives to find both the personal and cultural meaning of all the trappings and traditions-from the proposal to the ring, to the dress, and even the bachelorette party. Her insights will blow the roof off the proverbial wedding tent. Her passionate argument for conscious marriage will ring true to the thousands of women planning weddings every day. To keep our sanity, our integrity, and our relationships intact, Wicoff says, "the way we marry matters."

About the Author

Kamy WicoffKamy Wicoff

A contributor to Salon.com, Kamy Wicoff lives in New York City. She is married and the mother of one. This is her first book..

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