T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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492.1 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | bread&roses | Tue Oct 30 1990 11:12 | 12 |
| Desyrn,
I have no idea where this custom originated or when. It was definitely
not the custom when I married 23 years ago.
Personnally I find it tasteless, and definitely not a requirement
for an American wedding.
The simple solution as far as I am concerned is for the engaged
couple to mutually agree not to shove cake.
Bonnie
|
492.2 | Its not a requirement. | ROLL::FOSTER | | Tue Oct 30 1990 11:12 | 14 |
| Desryn,
I have seen it done both ways. I think the shove-version is
hilarious, but at the same time, rather tacky. It shows that the couple
are fun-loving. The delicate version is a very loving gesture, and beautiful
to watch.
I think the groom is being a boor if he won't give in on this point. A
wedding does not need to be a spectator sport of spoofs... but that is
the way some people do it.
There's also a custom at some weddings that when you hit your spoon to
a glass, the bride and groom must IMMEDIATELY kiss. You can make them
run across the room to find each other if you want. Its fun! But only
if you know that the bride and groom feel like putting up with it.
|
492.3 | | LYRIC::BOBBITT | COUS: Coincidences of Unusual Size | Tue Oct 30 1990 11:16 | 9 |
| I've only seen cake-smushing done at one wedding, the rest I've seen
were fairly normal....
I don't think it's at all a tradition, but if the couple wants to do it
I'm not going to get in their way (particularly when they're wielding
cake!)....
-Jody
|
492.4 | | ASABET::RAINEY | | Tue Oct 30 1990 11:22 | 7 |
|
I agree with Jody that it's not really a tradition, just an
alteration of one. All I know is that at my wedding, I'm
going to arrange for Kevin to feed me first. If he smooshes
cake, he's dead meat :-)...actually he enjoys teasing me
about it, but I dont' think he'll do it (if he knows what;s
good for him!)
|
492.5 | I don't see anything funny about it | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Tue Oct 30 1990 11:27 | 10 |
| Neil and I gave each other a bite at the same time, as a symbol of
our sharing our life and livelihood.
I've never seen the smooshing done anywhere but in the movies or
on TV. I don't see anything fun, or fun-loving, about it. Can
you name any other circumstance, outside of TV or movies, where
one person smearing cake in another person's face wouldn't be
grounds for an assault charge?
--bonnie
|
492.6 | | TCC::HEFFEL | Vini, vidi, visa | Tue Oct 30 1990 11:32 | 11 |
| Well, to show you how much of a "tradition" this is, when I saw an
earlier note in here that mentioned cake Smooshing, I did a double-take and
said "what??!?!"
Most definately, Gary and I did not shove cake. We did the twine your
arms around and gently place the cake routine.
I'd tell the groom that if he wants cake in his face, he can have it,
but I want my cake in my mouth where it belongs!
Tracey
|
492.7 | I seen it happen right there. | ORCAS::MCKINNON_JA | I'm for ALL-IN-1 | Tue Oct 30 1990 11:35 | 6 |
| I attended one wedding a few years back with the B & G doing
the smushing and it carried out into the parking lot and got
both sides of the family involved. It was piteouslly funny.
This union was doomed from the start. The B & G are now involved
in a very, messy, bitter divorce with two kids as primary victims.
|
492.8 | A poor time to be a boor | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Tue Oct 30 1990 11:47 | 16 |
| I've seen both cake feeding and cake used as a weapon, and I don't
like the idea of smearing cake all over one's spouse in public. It
shows a lack of respect that would scare me if I were involved in
the wedding. (We didn't have a cake, so that issue was moot.)
One wedding I went to had one person threatening the other before
feeding more or less reasonably. It didn't give great confidence
in that marriage.
I have heard a (possibly apocryphal) story of a groom smashing
cake in his wife's face getting her so upset that she ran off,
locked herself in her room and filed for an anullment in the
morning. She seems justified to me, as this sounds like it could
be a prelude to more general abuse.
--David
|
492.9 | more variations | TARKIN::TRIOLO | Victoria Triolo | Tue Oct 30 1990 11:52 | 16 |
|
I've also seen both. Cake-smooshing and cake feeding.
My sister and her husband did a variation of cake smooshing.
At the last minute, they
turned around and smooshed it into the maid of honor's (moi) and
the best man's face. (personally, I didn't like this variation :-)!).
However, if he's determined to make light of cake-cutting ceremony,
it may be an acceptable version.
I did have a friend who ducked when her husband threw the cake at
her and he got his mother.
My husband and I opted for cake feeding especially since we had
a chocolate wedding cake.
|
492.10 | | SCARGO::CONNELL | Reality, an overrated concept. | Tue Oct 30 1990 12:25 | 12 |
| I've seen both. At one wedding, where the cake-feeding was done, the B
& G were boo'd. I didn't boo and thought that it was incredibly tacky
on the part of the boo'ers.
At my wedding, we smooshed. Did we ever!!! We both had to go the
bathroom and clean up. It was so bad that we couldn't breathe through
our respective noses. We are divorced now, so maybe it is bad luck.
Hey!!! A new wedding tradition. It's considered bad luck to smoosh the
cake on each other at the reception. Do it during the honeymoon. :-)
Phil
|
492.11 | marriage and roughness don't travel well | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Tue Oct 30 1990 12:42 | 9 |
| there is a fairly consistent trend here... smoshed cake, smoshed
marriage...
Personally, I find that feeding with respect shows the respect that
must follow for a long, durable marriage. My husband would have never
shovel any of it to me because it would have been his first and LAST!
We simultaneously fed each other, intertweening our arms to the
applause of all guests in the party and then kissed! to more applause!
I still find it was plain beautiful after 26 years...
wish I could marry again, (to the same person, of course!)
|
492.12 | extremely uncool | TOOK::CURRIER | | Tue Oct 30 1990 13:21 | 9 |
| My husband and I did not throw cake at each other (people who are old
enough to get married are too old to engage in food fights) neither
did we cut our cake to the tune of 'The farmer in the dell'.
I'm not an an exceedingly conservative person - in fact, most people
who know me well consider me to be fairly rebelious. But - marriage is
serious business and should be entered into with some dignity. We
invited people to our wedding to help us celebrate our marriage - not
to be entertained by a spectacle.
|
492.13 | oops | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Oct 30 1990 13:56 | 8 |
| But then again, in an ideal world, shouldn't it be possible to
heave your cake and eat it too? :-}
D.
|
492.14 | To Smoosh or Not to Smoosh | USCTR1::JNOVITCH | | Tue Oct 30 1990 14:13 | 7 |
| On his wedding day my brother, under threats, fed his wife very nicely.
She then turned around and smooshed it all over his face. He grabbed
her and gave her a big kiss thus shoving the cake in her face. It was
all in fun and they are still married after 8 years.
However, my husband and I chose not to do that particular tradition.
So, cake smooshing is definately not mandatory.
|
492.15 | | IE0010::MALING | Life is a balancing act | Tue Oct 30 1990 14:49 | 5 |
| I've seen it both ways, but to be honest I've never seen smooshing at
weddings where the B & G are over 30. Now smooching ... that's another
story!
Mary
|
492.16 | Traditions ignored | DECWET::DADDAMIO | Testing proves testing works | Tue Oct 30 1990 17:02 | 10 |
| We just cut the cake together. My husband didn't like the idea of
feeding each other and I didn't care if we did it or not. We both
agreed that smooshing it in each other's face was definitely out. So
we opted for not feeding each other, and no one boo'ed or anything. If
anyone had said anything we would have told them we were old enough to
feed ourselves. We also didn't kiss when people tapped their glasses
with the silverware. When they started it, we kissed other people in
the bridal party. When it turned out that the people starting in were
his young male cousins, the bridesmaids and I went over and kissed
them each time they did it. They stopped pretty quickly.
|
492.17 | | SHAPES::SMITHS1 | | Wed Oct 31 1990 06:07 | 12 |
|
Being from the UK I can't believe that some people actually shove cake
in their partner's face at their wedding! In the UK you just cut it
together, and then everyone applauds as if you've just done something
really difficult!!
I got married in June and would have had a fit if my husband had even
suggested shoving cake in my face! And as, as far as I know, that
custom is unheard of in the UK, so would most of the guests!
Sam
|
492.18 | Semi-seriously... | VALKYR::RUST | | Wed Oct 31 1990 09:38 | 23 |
| Personally, I blame the cake-shoving business at photographers,
professional and otherwise. I'm sure the first time(s) it happened it
was (more or less) accidental - nervous person trying to insert chunk
of cake in new spouse's mouth jerked a bit and smeared the frosting,
and the combination of all that formalware and the "food-fight"
implication struck everyone as quite amusing... the first time or two,
anyway. But since then, I've seen wedding photographers actually
programming weddings as photo opportunities, including instructing
the happy couple on how to do the cake-feeding/smooshing ritual. "OK,
now smear it down his chin <click>; that's great! Now you dab the
frosting on her nose <click>"...
And now that scenes like that are appearing on those supposedly-funny
home-video shows, I foresee the situation becoming worse. Brides will
be expected to faint at least once during the ceremony, grooms will
have to leave the altar to use the bathroom, somebody will have to fall
down and/or have their clothing rip in embarrassing ways...
Grump, grump, grump. This is far from the worst annoyance I've come
across - but isn't it interesting that such a small thing can make
people so wild?
-b
|
492.19 | Cake smashing not for me! | ERLANG::GIZZONIO | | Wed Oct 31 1990 09:55 | 9 |
| I was the matron of honor at one wedding where she fed him cake and
he smashed cake in her face. She then hit him with a right hook,
knocked him unconscious, and he fell under the table. They divorced
8 months later.
I personally don't think there's any room for cake smashing at *any*
wedding! It's just not my idea of a fun time.
Jane
|
492.20 | I'll never grow up, I'm a Toys R Us kid | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | being gentle is *not* being wimpy!!!!!!!!! | Wed Oct 31 1990 10:45 | 6 |
| Oh, well. Then there are those of us who are just plain uncouth who had a
great time getting frosting in our new spouse's face.
(*8
E Grace
|
492.21 | lighten up people | MILKWY::APT | | Thu Nov 01 1990 07:24 | 7 |
|
Me and my wife *loved* shoving cake at each other. If you cannot take a
joke with your own spouse than I don't think you should be getting
married.
Eric
|
492.22 | It needs to be the couple's choice: *both* of them. | ASHBY::FOSTER | | Thu Nov 01 1990 08:46 | 11 |
|
re .21
I'd like to believe that its more true that the two people are well
suited if EITHER:
- both enjoy the cake smush
- both enjoy the quiet, dignified approach.
Its when one wants to and the other doesn't that creates problems.
Some people would not consider it a joke "shared". Some couples would.
I hope there's room in the world for jokers and non-jokers...
|
492.23 | The Colonel is back ... | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Thu Nov 01 1990 09:13 | 32 |
|
Like the base noter I was bemused to discover this facet of American life on
arrival. No version of this ceremony is common in the part of Britain I hail
from.
Similarly my wife (Thai) did not understand this behavoural pattern.
However to pick up on the "if you can't take a joke" theme: I do not consider
this to be a joke. Not a "practical" joke. Not a "light hearted" joke. Not *any*
sort of joke. It is the sort of juvenile behaviour I would stamp on at a party
for preschoolers. It is about as funny as laughing at somebody falling on a
banana skin and breaking a limb.
Fortunately when we married (in the US) we agreed beforehand that neither of us
would do this in such a way as to make the other lose face. We would both have
preferred to not do it. We didn't want to do it. But our American friends
insisted - mainly so they could take pictures!
Cultures differ. National ideas of humour differ. It is apparently considered
funny in America to push cake in people's faces. It is considered de rigeur to
"roast" people at parties held in their honour. In other cultures dignity is
far, far more important, and the loss of dignity - "face" if you will - is not
to be tolerated, and certainly not to be considered a laughing matter. If the
couple mentioned in the base note were both of the same culture, and indeed both
from a culture that finds such behaviour amusing, then I would agree that
"lighten up" is appropriate. But they aren't, and in the circumstances one
questions the ability of the cake-smashers to identify with the mores of the
other more dignified cultural background.
/. Ian .\
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492.25 | it's your party! | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Thu Nov 01 1990 10:28 | 15 |
|
The day belongs to the folks getting married... Play, dance, eat cake
-- whatever it is that expresses the joy you feel!
I remember when a cousin of mine got married, the minister came to
the rehearsal wearing a sleeveless top. All during the rehearsal
dinner, the only thing my aunt (the bride's mother) could talk about
was the fact that the minister didn't shave under her arms :-) I
almost said, "you should see the hair on the singer!" (me :-) ha, ha.
I always have the most fun at weddings where there's a little bit of
rebellion or some kind of irreverence from the "young folk" getting
married...
Justine
|
492.26 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu Nov 01 1990 11:16 | 8 |
| re .22, I agree. The important thing is that both know what the other
considers to be a joke. I think I have a pretty good sense of humor,
but I don't really enjoy physical humor and I would be p*ssed to have
some clown (especially some clown I was about to marry) shove cake in
my face.
Lorna
|
492.27 | I plan on SMOOSHING! | ASHBY::JENNINGS | | Thu Nov 01 1990 15:47 | 6 |
| I agree with .25. It is the day for the bride and groom...I
plan SMOOSHING it in scott's face and if he chooses to do the same
than fine.....it will be our day!!!!
Candy
|
492.28 | oh yeah | SUBWAY::FORSYTH | LAFALOT | Thu Nov 01 1990 20:41 | 3 |
| re .22, .26 .27 YES! It is important that BOTH people agree..then
anything goes..............!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
|
492.29 | Comments on traditions | CUPCSG::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Fri Nov 02 1990 07:26 | 24 |
| I have read only the basenote and not any replies...
I think if it were *my* wedding again, I'd rather do it like it's
described in the trysting note.
However, my son got married last March. They managed to get a little
frosting on each others' faces without getting it on their clothes and
without really "shoving"! Actually, the cake bit reminded me of the
Tom Jones eating scene -- which is *very* suggestive. (Anyone here old
enough to remember that movie -- seems like ages ago...)
There are a lot of other "traditions" I
don't particularly care for -- like all the stuff surrounding the
garter bit -- but all in all, *their* reception -- it bugs me when the
reception is referred to as the "wedding" as though *it* were the
solemn ceremony rather than a praty-celebration -- seemed like a
celebration of sensuality and sexual love, etc., and, in that context,
wasn't as offensive to me. I mean, really, do we have to be serious
all the time? How about a little bawdiness now and then? (But let's
make it "equal" :-) )
Nancy
|
492.30 | Update..No Shoving! | VFOVAX::DUNCAN | | Fri Nov 02 1990 10:25 | 16 |
|
Well, I spoke to my girlfriend recently.She said that herself and
her groom-to-be have agreed NOT to shove cake in each other's faces.
She said that she made it quite clear that SHE would consider it
a form of hitting her..that is abuse. (please no flames, everyone is
entitled to his/her preferences with regards to his/her body).
She said that she's discovered a lot of cultural differrences while
they were speaking about this and he has accepted that there will be
more instances where they will disagree but they have agreed to always
discuss it and respect each other's opinions.
Well, the wedding is next weekend. I will tell you what happens!!!!
Can't wait!
Desryn.
|
492.31 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Fri Nov 02 1990 10:56 | 6 |
|
It's true that I've not seen it done at weddings where the
bride and groom were over 25 years of age. I'd hope that the
younger folks doing it will be able to grow together in their
relationship, as well as 'grow up' together.
|
492.32 | | JJLIET::JUDY | I put highbeams on my Xmas tree lights | Wed Nov 07 1990 16:33 | 6 |
|
We smooshed. It was fun. Our family and friends applauded.
We laughed. No damage done to us or our clothing.
Though I can't say the same for the floor....
|
492.33 | All's well!!\ | VFOVAX::DUNCAN | | Mon Nov 12 1990 22:55 | 9 |
|
Well, I went to the wedding. It was beautiful!!! They put the cake
carefully into each other's mouths and then kissed.sighhhhhhhh.
A few people started to boo, but everyone ignored them and
everything went ahead as planned.
Desryn.
|