Something New Officiant gives us some tips on the ring exchange part of your wedding ceremony. "The ring exchange moment in a ceremony is so commonplace that many people believe that it's a legal requirement. However, it’s not - it is customary, and within North America a relatively newer tradition and component of a wedding ceremony. It wasn’t until World War II that men began to wear wedding bands at all. It was said to be a reminder of their spouse at home.
And why the left finger of the left hand? A tradition believed to originate with the Romans. Based on the thought a vein, the Vena Amoris, runs from this finger leading directly to the heart. This belief has since been debunked by modern science.
Regardless of where we pick up the story of why wedding bands became a feature of ceremonies, it's not going away soon. Most of the time my clients have spent more time determining who will hold the rings, than thinking about why they are exchanging the rings.
So how do you take this common tradition and mold it into one that’s uniquely yours?
I suggest starting the conversation between you and your partner prompted by the following set of questions:• What does the ring exchange element of the ceremony mean to me?• What will wearing my ring mean to me?• What would I like the ring my spouse will wear, to represent to them?
Like anything ceremony related, please carve out time for each of you to answer the questions before you share your answers with each other. With all the shared decision-making moments that happen during wedding planning, the ceremony too needs collaboration and communication.
If you are lost for words, and not actually sure what exchanging rings means to you, let me give you some tips.
Generally speaking, my clients will say the ring exchange represents the symbol of the promises they will have made. Clients have shared how the rings will serve as a public declaration that one loves, and one is loved. A ring is a visible sign that love shared between a couple is invaluable and something to be displayed. Or in the words of one of my clients, “The ring will say to others, ‘I got dibs on this one, move along’”.
Once you have come to some understanding of WHY you’d like to exchange rings, and what the rings mean to you. There are different possibilities for how the ring exchange component of your ceremony is performed. Here are just a few suggestions:
Of course, there are endless possibilities in terms of the language and meaning you might ascribe to this moment. So free your mind, and have a little fun here. Draw on your answers to the above questions to inform your wording, and ask your officiant for suggestions as well. Oftentimes what couples choose to say and how they will say it, boils down to comfort level with public speaking. How traditional or modern you’d like this component to be, and what just makes sense according to what’s uniquely you.
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