10 Reasons Why Every Bride Needs a Mother or
Surrogate Mother
By Leslie Milk author of It's Her Wedding but I'll Cry If I
Want To: A Survival Guide for the Mother of the Bride
1. You are the only one willing to work unlimited hours doing
such menial jobs as typing lists, licking envelopes, and picking
up and delivering for no pay.
2. You are the only other person who really cares whether the swirls
on the wedding cake match the embroidery on her dress or if the
yellow flowers are more citron than buttercup.
3. You'll negotiate the budget with the father of the bride and
take the heat when the bills arrive.
4. You'll come to the rescue when the recalcitrant caterer refuses
to make the groom's favorite pigs-in-blankets for the reception.
5. You'll go with her to 54 shoe stores looking for the perfect
white wedding shoes even though you know that no one will see them
under the wedding dress.
6. You'll go with her to every dress fitting and assure her that
she's going to be a beautiful bride even if she doesn't lose the
last 5 pounds.
7. You'll get the bridal salon to alter the wedding dress at the
last minute when she does lose the last 5 pounds.
8. You'll entertain his mother and all of your relatives.
9. Whenever the bride begins to panic, she'll feel free to yell
at you, knowing that you won't hate her in the morning.
10. After the wedding, you are the only one who'll be willing to
watch the wedding video 20 times in the first month, marveling with
the bride about every delightful detail.
Reprinted from: It's Her Wedding but I'll Cry If I Want To By
Leslie Milk © 2005 Leslie Milk. (February 2005; $15.95US/$22.95CAN;
1-59486-001-7) Permission granted by Rodale, Inc., Emmaus, PA 18098.
Available wherever books are sold or directly from the publisher
by calling (800) 848-4735 or visit their website at www.rodalestore.com
Author
Leslie Milk is the lifestyle editor of the Washingtonian, a monthly
magazine covering the nation's capital. She has written about subjects
ranging from caring for aging parents to Washington's most powerful
women and from climbing Mount Everest to losing weight.
In the interests of full disclosure, Milk admits that she wrote
about someone else's climb and, judging by the results, she probably
should have written about someone else's weight loss.
Previously, Milk was a columnist for the Washington Post and the
Journal newspapers. She has also written for Glamour, Shape, and
Woman's Day magazines. She has appeared on Nightline, ABC's Turning
Point, Entertainment Tonight, CNN, and BBC News.
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