More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
GET UPDATES FROM Hillary Quinn
 

Bridesmaids: A Training Manual

Posted: 11/28/11 03:22 AM ET

Is there anyone out there besides me who's feeling a little sorry for the Bridezilla these days? This oft-maligned monster-in-white -- with actual TV shows dedicated to her outrageous behavior -- has been getting a bad rap of late, and might as well be taking Frankenstein as her new last name. But can we give the poor gal a break for a moment? After all, she's in the heat of planning a wedding day that she's likely been dreaming of since childhood, and has a 24-hour window to get it right -- with any luck, no do-overs in her future. Complicating this one-shot, fairytale opportunity are a potential host of landmines, including, but not limited to, anxieties over money, tricky family dynamics, loss of independence, pressure to look her all-time best, and the potential judgments of everyone on the guest list about her choice of food, venue, dress, vows... and mate.

You bridesmaids, on the other hand, joyfully accepted a position in the matrimony corporation, and now, like any hardworking employee, have a job to do. I speak from experience, having sat on both sides of the desk; and while I'd like to think I wasn't an evil bride, some may beg to differ. One of my bridesmaids, when asked to wear lace gloves -- it was the 80s, okay? -- remarked, "What is this, an f-ing Broadway production?" I would like it noted that when she married two years later, an actual Broadway star performed at her reception. Thankfully, we're still friends to this day.

In the interest of helping you become employee of the year, I propose you follow these simple guidelines:

Carefully evaluate the job offer: With great excitement (and likely, a few tears in her eyes), the bride asks you to be in her wedding party. Maybe you've known her since childhood. Maybe you introduced her to the groom. Maybe she's related to you. Whatever the connection, your first instinct is likely to be pure, unadulterated, "I'm-in-the-inner-circle" joy, because being asked to be a bridesmaid is an honor. (Keep saying this to yourself, by the way -- it will help). But before you get swept up in your new stature, think long and hard about whether you're right for the position, because accepting a spot at the altar is a significant and pricey undertaking. In fact, it may well be the first job offer in which you pay them: You'll likely be expected to shell out for a dress, shoes, shower gift, wedding gift, possible travel and hotel expenses, as well as share in celebratory costs, including the bachelorette party and bridal shower. Unlike Kim Kardashian, you will not be able to offset these expenses by selling ad space or securing pro-bono vendors.

Being open and honest about your limitations up front -- which may also include discussions about any plans to get pregnant, or a potential job transfer to Europe -- is far better than bowing out further down the aisle. (In which case, you will be blackballed from the company forever). It also gives your bride the opportunity to come up with solutions, like offering to pick up some of the tab, finding you a friend to stay with, or assuring you that she'll happily include a 36-week-pregnant attendant on her aisle.

Say yes to the dress: There will be a temptation on your part to equate the fact that you're paying for the dress with the freedom to comment on the dress. This is not so. As much as you'd like to believe that your exalted position puts you in management, the fact is, you're an underling and the bride calls the shots. She wears white; you and your colleagues blend (key word: BLEND) into a sea of sameness. Of course, if your dress is horribly ill-fitting -- i.e. your boobs are spilling out -- feel free to pipe up; but skip any commentary about the color, style, or shiny taffeta fabric, because, no matter how you phrase it, it will come out as an insult. I was once forced to wear a "winged" periwinkle, backless number that required a special bra that clasped in front, somewhere south of my belly button. After the wedding, I carried the offending ensemble home in a Hefty bag, which I promptly threw into the dumpster outside my apartment building. Did I hate wearing it? Sure. But honestly, I wore it for an hour at the altar tops; and a few drinks at the reception took the sting out of my humiliation.

Deflect the bride's tantrums: Think about this: Brides don't actually remember the good bridesmaids, but they'll share the details of the ones who acted out for the next 20 years. Nine times out of ten, the tantrums have nothing to do with you (at least they won't, if you follow these instructions). A good subordinate will help soothe the pre-matrimonial meltdowns, be a sounding board when things get overwhelming, and never take the bad behavior personally.

Express yourself--not: There's a big difference between saying "I'm allergic to Gardenias" and "I can't wear fuchsia because it's not in my color wheel." Ultimately, a good staffer is the one who solves the problems, not the one who creates them.

Get along with your coworkers: Bridesmaids have a habit of becoming oddly territorial over their queen bee. And then they complain to the bee about the other wasps in the nest. And that doesn't make you a honey in the eyes of the bride... it just stresses her out. Just as a teacher has a pet and a boss has a favorite employee, a bride has a close friend and, sometimes, it's not you. It doesn't help anyone when you bridesmaids all jostle for the position of who knows the bride best; when you sulk and scale back your involvement in the wedding plans as punishment; when you pretend to hide your jealousy with passive-aggressive remarks ("I'm sure that A-line skirt will hide the 10 pounds Jocelyn gained"); or when you make unkind statements followed by a disingenuous laugh that's supposed to mean "just kidding", note to self: The bride knows you're not.

Don't mess with production: The plans, no matter how faulty you find them, or how much you're itching to tinker with them, are heavily orchestrated and coordinate dozens of people, places, and times. Hours of effort have gone into their creation. So resist the urge to propose changes, as the bride might just spontaneously combust when you ask to be moved to Table 5, or request that the charter bus make an extra stop at your hotel.

Be willing to perform odd (really odd) jobs: There's no other way to say this: When the bride has to pee, someone has to help her hold the dress. If that someone is you, you will be bonded in sisterhood forever. Is the bride worried that her resentful, divorced mother might bail during the family photo session? Be the person who -- without being asked -- hands Mom a stiff drink, then sticks by her side and cajoles her through the awkward moment. My husband, though not a bridesmaid, performed this last task on numerous occasions and is, to this day, beloved for it.

Remember that this is an honor: Despite the fashion humiliation, the mass emails, the 12 months of myopic conversation, and the endless debates over Prosecco vs. Patron, you've been asked to be a bridesmaid because you're important to the bride. Keep this in mind as you watch her beam her way down the aisle. Like any good employee, you played a vital part in building the brand.

 

Follow Hillary Quinn on Twitter: www.twitter.com/hillbargainhunt

 
 
  • Comments
  • 49
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
04:52 PM on 12/07/2011
Great tips! Although the job is difficult for the bride to choose the decorations, picking out bridesmaid, choosing dresses, where to reserve the spot for the big day, it can also weight in on the bridesmaid as well. I remember my cousin was picked for bridesmaid twice, and in both scenarios she didn't like the style of the dress. But again, we should stress that getting chose for bridesmaid, is an honor and a sign of true friendship :)
http://www.camdendrive.com/bridesmaid-dresses.html
01:58 PM on 11/29/2011
Am I the only one that loves being a bridesmaid?!! Great tips on how to do the 'job' well, though I hate to think of it as a 'job' as opposed to an honor.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Hillary Quinn
03:16 PM on 11/29/2011
Nope! Most of the time, I love it, too (maybe not the dress, but I do love the honor of being included).
10:30 PM on 11/28/2011
When I got married I had 4 bridesmaids and a matron of honor. They ranged in height from 4'8" to 5'11". I KNEW that one dress would never work for this range of people. I decided on a color and told everyone to wear whatever dress they wanted as long as it was in that color and "respectful" for a religious ceremony. Each person chose a dress that worked for them.

As for the rest of the details, I told my Mom [who was my wedding planner] to pick out what she liked. All I cared about was that I was getting married to my best friend [he still is my best friend after 17 years of being together all over the world].
10:20 PM on 11/28/2011
So this author really thinks that bridesmaids are to behave as employees? Really? I'm amazed she ever found someone who wanted to marry her with that attitude. Remind me to NEVER EVER be part of a wedding party. Let the brides find someone else to abuse...
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:30 PM on 11/28/2011
Gia, you are hereby reminded. What you are calling "abuse" is commonly referred to as "acts of kindness and regard for others" by the rest of the world. The work analogy is an apt one. If you don't want the J-O-B, then don't accept the offer.
09:10 AM on 11/29/2011
You're right. Serving as a bridesmaid is an act of kindness. But it is unacceptable for a bride to treat her so-called friends so disrespectfully with a bad attitude and expect them to take it. Unless a regular job, where you're paid to put up with a certain amount of BS, serving as a bridesmaid is done out of love. Love is patient, love is kind, love is not self-seeking. That goes for everyone; even brides and bridesmaids. And the people in the wedding party are not marrying the bride. They don't have to tolerate her "for better or for worse." And when I see a Bridezilla up ahead, I know it's time to run in the other direction. FYI-in my comment I stated that I won't apply for the "job" or accept an offer for one =]
06:29 AM on 11/29/2011
I agree especially as most of them (unless they are little girls) have full time paid jobs of their own which come first or at least part time jobs while they study.
03:58 PM on 11/28/2011
I've read the column and all of the comments and some of you are clearly in the BITCHY bridesmaids category and don't want to her the author TELL YOU WHAT YOU NEEDED TO HEAR IN THE FIRST PLACE.

This article (great title) is about being a RESPONSIBLE bridesmaid and a RESPECTFUL friend and the writer lays out the groundrules so clearly and in such a simple way that I almost want to say, "Well, of course that's right" until I read some of the truly insipid responses.

The article is DEAD ON because it say, in effect, "If you can't handle the REALITY of the job - and recognize that it comes with MEANINGFUL responsibilities - then you should be mature enough to say, "Thanks, but I'll pass" with grace and honestly.
05:39 PM on 11/28/2011
One has just as much right to be a bridesmaidzilla as to be a bridezilla. In fact that's what bridezillas deserve and they seem to forget that bridesmaids have full time jobs or studies and lives of their own to lead and that they don't get put on hold in the few weeks or months leading up to the wedding. It's not their big day so why should they sacrifice their time and energy. Rather than turning bridesmaids into slaves then hire a wedding planner and pay them what they ask rather than have the bridesmaids acting as your unpaid personal servants.
06:46 PM on 11/28/2011
No - no one has the "right" to be a bridesmaidzilla, and if you think that you are going to be a bridesmaidzilla then the author has great advice: DON'T TAKE THE GIG. If your life is so important that you can't sacrifice the time, effort, money and energy to be a bridesmaid, then DON'T ACCEPT THE GIG. Lots of people can't afford a wedding planner, and they look to the bridesmaid for help -- and they need help!

I've also had to jump in and assist my friend at her wedding when her bridesmaids decided they needed to "powder up" for their photos and left the bride in her room, unable to come down the stairs by herself in her dress. Granted, it was a steep staircase, and the bride wasn't looking for anything more than a hand, but her friends kept saying things like, "This is my day, too." NO, it isn't YOUR day. You are the bridesmaid. It is the bride's day, and if you can't face that fact then DO NOT TAKE THE GIG.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Victor Saymong
Canuck up Toronto way
03:39 PM on 11/28/2011
Simple solution: Be a groomsman.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Hillary Quinn
03:33 PM on 11/29/2011
And then you get out of wearing the dress!
photo
LivelyLexie
Don't panic.
03:23 PM on 11/28/2011
When I got married, I had my friends in the wedding, not to be basically my servants, but because I loved them and wanted them there. The dresses were very inexpensive, (I knew my one bridesmaid didn't have a lot of money, so I bought it for her, no questions asked, no repayment expected) and I literally didn't ask them to do a THING. I didn't want to stress them out.
That being said, I don't think bridesmaids should complain if they are asked to do something for the bride or don't like the dress. Unless it's ridiculously expensive. I knew someone who had to pay $800 for a bridesmaids dress. That's INSANE.
03:19 PM on 11/28/2011
i think you should let the bride know what's not in your color wheel and let her know that it's the pictures that are gonna suffer!!!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Laura Darch
03:03 PM on 11/28/2011
Some brides are too evil to contain. For instance - my husband and I lost our jobs after our first son was born, yet I still had to be a bridesmaid in a DESTINATION WEDDING in ENGLAND. The bride (I can't call her "friend" anymore) was so cruel to me, dragging me everywhere even though I had caught walking pneumonia on the flight there and was sick for a week straight. I had to carry her luggage, drag half of her luggage home with me while she honeymooned in Rome, and when I was at my ultimate low, she wouldn't let me take pills to ease my suffering because "you may get drowzy during the ceremony". This was not a good time had by all - I was a handmaid, broke turned broker, and all because I was terrified if I said "No" I would lose her. Since she got married, the old friend I had turned into a desperate housewife, hates her husband, spends all her time boozing with her new neighborhood gal pals, and hits the spas all the time on her husband's dime. I lost her as soon as she got married, so I shouldn't have spent that $3,000 I didn't have to make her happy. Brides need to grow up too.
photo
FoxIslander
Fox Island...no relation to Fox News
02:49 PM on 11/28/2011
...do yourself, your family, your friends and especially your marriage a favor...elope to Tahiti.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HannahaS
Have great day!
02:04 PM on 11/28/2011
How about the Bride not having 15 bridesmaids and throwing a hissy fit when one tries to bow out.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
intellifran
insert clever line here...
02:52 PM on 11/28/2011
How about the 15th maid should feel honored?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JMK62
Presley--The World's Most Precious Dog!
01:49 PM on 11/28/2011
If the bride doesnt want bitchy bridesmaids, then I suggest the bride not get married until she is older and has more stable, mature friends.

Or, another thought...the bridemaids could just grow the hell up.

I swear, young women today have set the women's movement back a zillion years with their catty, 'mean girls', spoiled attitudes. What ever happened to female solidarity?
photo
FoxIslander
Fox Island...no relation to Fox News
02:45 PM on 11/28/2011
"I suggest the bride not get married until she is older and has more stable, mature friends."

...that will be marriage #2....or 3.
01:15 PM on 11/29/2011
I suggest the bride gets married when she's past being a bridezilla or else opt for a simple civil wedding with few guests and no fuss.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NWmom
03:13 PM on 11/28/2011
I don't think age has anything to do with it, if you don't want bitchy bridesmaids, just don't ask bitchy people to fill the role!

I was 21 at my wedding and my four bridesmaids ranged in age from 19 to 21. They were each fantastic, couldn't have asked for a better group of ladies :)
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Hillary Quinn
03:36 PM on 11/29/2011
I agree with you, NWmom. I think the bride should be very thoughtful about whom she asks to be in the wedding...and choose people who are up to the "job" and can go with the flow.
12:58 PM on 11/28/2011
This is seriously ridiculous; it seems that people are asking for their behaviour to be excused (i.e., Bridezillas) in the expectation that they are throwing themselves a "Pretty Pretty Princess Party" and therefore, have license to be as abusive, insensitive and downright Jackass-ish as possible. When I got married, I told my maids of awesome that they could wear whatever they wanted. It was more important that they be there and be comfortable than that they "Matched" or "participated in a colour scheme." The bridal bath consisted of an afternoon tea party hosted at my future mum-in-law's house, followed by bowling in cocktail dresses. No bachelorette (I had that; it's called being a single woman who enjoys herself).
Seriously, it's one day. ONE. DAY. No one will remember the colour of the napkins, whether or not the dresses were A-lines or Sweethearts, or if they matched the roses in the bride's bouquet. What they *will* remember is whether or not you all had fun, looked happy and if everyone enjoyed themselves. It's a party, not the staging of D-Day. No unicorns will be killed if it's not some sort of Gaga-esque production worthy of an Oscar nomination. Brides need to chill out and bridesmaids need to say if they don't want to take part or think that it's going to be a huge hassle for them to do so, instead of "sucking it up & taking one for the team."
05:49 PM on 11/28/2011
Well said. The best comment made so far and a breath of fresh air after this stupid and inane article. The reason why brides turn into bridezillas is because they grow up with Princess toys and clothes and this is the latent outcome. They plan their wedding day when they are still playing with dolls forgetting that fashions and tastes change. They're even planning what the bridesmaids are to be wearing before they have even met them. It really is like they are still playing with dolls except those dolls are now real life people such as their fiance and female friends. Even the bridegroom is relegated to something as no more important as the flowers, maybe even less important.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kelly Jade
12:58 PM on 11/28/2011
There are exactly two people I would be a bridesmaid for. Neither of those two are my sister (I told her this a long time ago and she laughed and admitted I would probably kill her).
12:51 PM on 11/28/2011
What a ridiculous article. If you're doing a job where you have to put up with just about anything including licking the feet of your employer then you should expect to be paid for it and also be refunded expenses. Plus you should be allowed to say 'no'. It's also the bride's responsibility to let would-be bridesmaids know what they are in for so they can make an informed choice and if it gets too much or the bride hasn't been truthful about what the bridesmaids' duties are and what dress they get to wear then they have a right to resign. They are not slaves that can be bought and sold.