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View Full Version : After popping the question, scary stuff pops up - cute :)


SerendipityCrafts
02-16-2007, 08:39 PM
Posted by the Asbury Park Press on 02/16/07

So I'm totally ready to spend the next 1 1/2 years of my life talking nonstop about five hours that aren't going to happen until mid-2008. I'm really fine with this. Seriously.

I always knew wedding planning would be the closest thing to eternal damnation that I'd ever experience. According to a stat I just made up, 82 percent of men branded as "commitment-phobic" are just scared of being involved, in any way, with planning a wedding. I've seen way too many fellow men fall during this experience, and only the bravest among us are willing and able.

By proposing, you're temporarily ceding control of your life. Beforehand, I was in charge. I could decide how, when and where the uber-important proposal would go down.

I was able to choose between proposing in a magazine article (like I did); buying a magic plant that grows a leaf saying "Will you marry me?" (that really exists, check it out, it'll blow your mind: www.message-plant.com); or hiring a company to project the proposal below the Eiffel Tower (www.apoteosurprise.com).

But now that I'm engaged, now that I have a fiaaaaannnnce, I'm no longer in charge. I just spend my time answering questions.

The only things you hear as a newly engaged couple are questions. This is what is asked, in order of popularity: (1) When's the Big Day? (2) Where's the Big Day going to be? (3) My step-cousin's bar mitzvah is ———, so the Big Day isn't going to be then, is it?

Then there are questions we ask ourselves: Are we supposed to have an engagement party? Does a shower count as an engagement party? Is a boy-girl shower as inappropriate as it sounds? Is commitment really that important these days that people give us gifts just for making a commitment to make a commitment?

And if Elvis marries us in Vegas next Thursday, will we still get cash from relatives?

The first thing Deb and I decided was we need a registry, because registering is — no sarcasm here — good times. It's like "Supermarket Sweep" with things you can't afford.

But what do you register for? We don't live in a home large enough to accumulate useless stuff — even if it's nicer than the useless stuff we already own. So why can't we register for something that could actually help our lives, like a down payment on a house? Or a new car? Or a "cat condo" for Shmelvis?

Questions, as you can tell, make me anxious. But nothing — nothing — prepared me for The List.

Without The List, wedding planning goes nowhere. The List represents relationships past and future; it can end ties, forge bonds, cause fights and make at least two distant relatives mad beyond reason.

This list will haunt me for the next 600-plus days of my life. That I am sure of.

I compiled The List by copying all the names out of my cell phone file. But part of me just wants our wedding open to the public — that way we don't have to decide whether people we haven't seen since the '90s should get an invitation.

The rest of me wants to register for a Jet Ski and forget about The List for a year.

But that's impossible. I have to face it now. Just like I have to face something even more formidable: the French question.

The French words fiance and fiancee (one's for the boy, one's for the girl, although I'm not sure which is which) are strange. I'm not sure how your nasal passages handle the words, but when I say them I sound like a 7-year-old trying to order fancy wine in a restaurant. We will only use these words sarcastically — the fiaaaaannnce and I have already agreed on this.

The engagement process requires all kinds of such decisions about whether traditions are meaningful or just extreme forms of peer pressure.

Sometimes, two people are meant to be together simply because they agree it's lame to play "Here Comes the Bride," and they agree weddings can still be beautiful if the bride (gasp!) doesn't wear white.

By the way, if anyone's interested, the one tradition we do support is sending envelopes filled with hundreds as engagement gifts. We're all about that one. Certified mail, please. Love, Matt and Deb.

ladymelissa
02-16-2007, 08:47 PM
I really want to know how they get the messages on the plants.

SerendipityCrafts
02-16-2007, 08:51 PM
The urls were not configured correctly ... maybe this will help?

"Will you marry me?" (that really exists, check it out, it'll blow your mind: www.message-plant.com); or hiring a company to project the proposal below the Eiffel Tower (www.apoteosurprise.com).

I didn't look too closely but maybe there is an explanation on the site.

shawnsgirl
02-16-2007, 08:59 PM
The article is funny..But now that plant has me intrigued...hmm..I sure hope it isn't poisen ivy!

ladymelissa
02-16-2007, 09:03 PM
I got to the page by typing in the address, I didn't see a really good explanation, just a demo of what it looks like. I'll have to look again more closely.

It looks like the message is just inscribed on the bud, but it is done before the plant even grows, which really blows my mind. I guess they would have to either find a way to open the seed, write the message and then close it back up without damaging it to the point where it wouldn't grow. Or they genetically alter the plant.

ladymelissa
02-16-2007, 09:09 PM
I found the explanation in the media section:

The message is lasered on the bean, and as it splits during germination the imprint appears on the leaf.

shawnsgirl
02-16-2007, 09:13 PM
I found the explanation in the media section:


hmmm wow..I'm no herbitologist (not sure if that's the correct term) but do you think it actually works??? I'm a little doubtful of that...

I've tried those flowers in a can, bulbs in a box and rarely do I get anything more than a sprout come out of them!
Although, it could be me and my ability to kill any plant that comes into my home too!

ladymelissa
02-16-2007, 09:25 PM
hmmm wow..I'm no herbitologist (not sure if that's the correct term) but do you think it actually works??? I'm a little doubtful of that...

I guess it has to work or else they would not get all that coverage on TV, radio and in newspapers.

I don't have a green thumb either, mine would probably die before it ever got a chance to bloom. They could also be very hearty plants, I am tempted to get one for Mike or my stepmom for mother's day (my mom wouldn't like that at all) and Mike's mom too. This could be a really good idea.

Jacklynn
02-16-2007, 11:20 PM
very cute to see it all from a guys train of thought!

woohoo2me
02-18-2007, 05:16 PM
lol thats cute lol and so true lol

BriansBride07
02-19-2007, 03:20 PM
LOL I think this was my FH writing this. He has stated some of these things already. Nice to see it for a change from a man's point of view.