The other end of the aisle
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Photographer and friend, Kristina Childs, posed this question on Facebook today, and I wanted to answer it in a blog post: What are you supposed to do at the end of the ceremony?
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So, here’s 20 things you can do at the end of the aisle after your ceremony, according to the Gospel of Josh.
- Run, run like the wind!
- Start shaking hands and kissing babies
- Make out with your newly married human
- Just leave the ceremony and go and spend 15 minutes somewhere quiet and personal with your favourite person that you just married
- Depart the ceremony to go and get those wedding photos and your guests can ruin your makeup with hugs and kisses later in the day
- Stand there awkwardly
- Stand there not-so-awkwardly but weirdly
- Stand there and thank everyone and don’t forget to call everyone mate if you forget their name
- Kiss and hug your bridal party and wait for everyone to come and congratulate you
- Get first in line for the bar tab, those lines can be brutal
- Clap a few times so the staff know you want some canapés
- Clap a few times then work your way into a We Will Rock You karaoke session.
- Walk out to the Dire Straits song, Walk of Life, so you can have that epic wedding ceremony walk out you’ve always wanted [reference and another]
- You could not leave the “altar” (for lack of a better description of the area you’re married in) and everyone could come to you.
- Instead of parading yourself all the way down the aisle, you could leave your celebrant and go to your family and starting kissing babies and hugging voters, umm, I mean family.
- If you’re in a chapel you can walk outside the chapel then as everyone leaves you can jump out from behind a bush and scare them … or you can stand there civilly and greet/thank them.
- It’s always a good opportunity to call shotgun in the classical cars waiting for the bridal party, no-one wants to sit in the back.
- Before the ceremony prepare collection buckets and ask for donations as everyone leaves.
- Stand at the end of the aisle with your hands in the air demanding high fives off everyone. Make sure grandma does not pass without slapping that hand.
- Or for that new post-modern ceremony spin we could never end the ceremony, negating the need to ever leave. We’ll set up home in the ceremony area and as your celebrant I become your new butler. Family will come and go but the three of us will never leave each other.
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