З життя
My fiancé Nicholas and I are getting married in three months.
In three months, Ill be marrying my fiancé, William. My familys weddings are usually quite simplejust a ceremony, food, music, dancing, and thats all.
But Williams family has this peculiar tradition: at the wedding, the bride must raise a toast, thanking the grooms parents and offering them a symbolic gift, for accepting her into the family. Only the bride. Not the groom.
When Williams mum explained this to me, I thought she was joking. She told me its been this way for generationsthe bride thanks the grooms parents for opening the door to the family. It felt like an initiation, somehow; a strange ritual for acceptance. I said Id prefer if we both gave a toast, thanking both families.
She chuckled softly and said thats just a modern invention. At first, William brushed it off. But at the next family dinner, his father remarked that in their household, traditions are respected. His mother added that they dont want a daughter-in-law who comes in and changes everything.
The word want unsettled meas if I were applying for a job.
When we got home, I talked it over with William. I told him I wasnt refusing the gesture, but I didnt want to be the only one bowing, while he didnt have to. He called it just a simple act. I asked why it wasnt mutual. He had no answer, only that he didnt want any trouble with his parents.
So I suggested an alternative: lets do a joint toast, both of us, thanking both sets of parents and giving a gift to each couple. It seemed much nicer.
When we proposed it, his mum grew serious. She said it waters down the tradition. His father added that if I start this way, Ill want to take charge of everything later.
Thats when I realisedthe toast wasnt truly the point. It was about territory.
To avoid escalating things, I offered to do it privately before the ceremony. But his mum refused. She said it had to be public, in front of all the guests, so respect would be clear.
Something welled up inside me. I respect people. But I wont perform humiliating gestures. William asked me to do it, for the sake of peace, since thats what his fathers village expects. And I said something I never thought Id say before marriage: If keeping peace means I must be the one who always yields, that isnt peace. Thats control.
Now, William stands between me and his family. My mum insists I shouldnt start my marriage in conflict with my in-laws. My best friend says if I give in now, Ill end up giving in on bigger things later.
Meanwhile, my future in-laws tell people Im difficult and disrespectful.
It all feels clear to me. Yes, I can say thank you. But I cannot accept rules that apply only to me simply because Im the bride. And honestly I dont know if Im wrong to refuse to follow their tradition exactly as they demand.
