Family Traditions: For Your Wedding and for Your New Life Together
(ARA) - Family traditions define
who we are and where we came from. From the simple Friday
night pizza party in the living room to the elaborate
wedding celebration, family traditions are the bedrock
of society -- bringing order and predictability into
our lives and emotionally nourishing us by building
bonds with family both near and far. They make the mundane
and everyday special, and they make the special occasions
and milestones even more meaningful.
Holidays and family celebrations like weddings are catalysts
for inspiring traditions. Traditions handed down over
the generations, as well as new traditions, are all
part of the mix. Most Americans know the tradition of
“something old, something new, something borrowed,
something blue,” but what about weaving in wedding
traditions based on your or your spouse’s heritage?
In Germany guests lay fir boughs
in front of you as you leave the ceremony, to pave your
way with hope, luck, and fertility. In a few regions
in Italy, the couple shatters a vase or glass into many
pieces. The number of pieces represented the expected
number of years they'll be happily married to one another.
Many Web sites explain different ethnic traditions.
These and others can supply ideas to enhance your ceremony,
tying one generation to another.
“I think people need traditions
more now than ever,” says Dr. Susan A. Lieberman,
of Rice University in Houston, Texas, and author of
“Family Traditions: Redefining Celebrations For
Today’s Family.” “The world is changing
so rapidly now, and traditions give us an anchor. Traditions
make you feel good as a family. These indelible memories
bring character and texture to our lives.”
Modern Woodmen of America, a fraternal
benefit society offering financial services, created
a Web resource, www.gatherings.info., which offers tips
for creating traditions and encouraging family gatherings.
The organization’s survey of 500 Americans discovered
that people are most likely to attend family events
that celebrate tradition.
“Celebrating family, holidays
and major life events all rank high on the list of why
Americans feel it is important to gather together,”
says Modern Woodmen’s Sharon Snawerdt. “In
fact, 87 percent of Americans say they attend family
gatherings simply because the gatherings themselves
are a family tradition.”
What about developing traditions
after you’re married? Try some of these or let
them be your inspiration to create your own.
* Purchase a guest registry book
for your new home and every time you have guests (friends
and family too) have them sign and date. Include the
purpose of the visit when special events arise.
* Plant shrubs or trees each year
on your anniversary or for the birth of a child.
* Before you and your spouse leave
for work, take a minute to say goodbye and state something
you are grateful for about the other person.
* Celebrate the anniversary of
the day you moved into your first home together by purchasing
a special item that could be handed down to your children
someday.
* During the holidays consider
starting your own tradition of sponsoring a needy family.
* Not everyone gets the holidays
off, so why not take baked items or part of your holiday
meal to the local police station, fire station, or hospital?
* Many people live too far away
to get back home for any holiday. Create an annual gathering,
and invite friends who are in this situation. Buy a
simple cheesecloth tablecloth and fabric markers. Drape
it over your table and have guests write their name,
the date and what they are thankful for this year. Each
year everyone can reminisce about the year and what
has happened since.
“Always remember to honor
the spirit behind your traditions,” concludes
Lieberman. “You can describe building new traditions
as unraveling the old and weaving new with the same
threads. The whole value of traditions is to give pleasure
and joy and make us closer to those we love.”
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