 Wedding Vow
Writing Your Wedding Vows the Way Poets Do
By Chris Simeral
Secrets of professional poets are revealed in this primer for couples who are
personalizing or renewing their wedding vows.
Let's face it, not many of us have the kind of skills or experience to write
truly poetic wedding vows. Or do we? Here's the truth: Even if you don't know
Dylan Thomas from Bob Dylan, and you're pretty sure T.S. Elliot was that guy
who wrote the words to Andrew Lloyd Weber's "Cats," all is not lost!
In fact, there are ways to learn to write the words you want. With four simple
steps, you can take what you feel in your heart and make it come out as sweetly
as any Shakespearian sonnet.
Step 1: Decide On a Theme
Finding a theme should arguably be the easiest part of writing poetry for your
wedding vows. But you don't want to be stuck with something trite or clich?,
even though the theme of romantic love is probably the oldest known for poetry.
There are lots of ways to avoid writing the same old "roses are red, violets
are blue" type of poem. One trick the pros use is to envision what a newspaper
article about your relationship would say. Would it discuss how and where you
met? How your relationship has stayed strong, even during the hard times? What
your love has meant to one another? Since newspaper articles get right to the
point, this exercise can help you pick out an overriding theme for your vows.
Step 2: Allow Time For Reverie
No, not "revelry" (hopefully that will be what your wedding day is
all about), but reverie - a quiet time devoted to a kind of dreamy meditation.
Try some tricks for allowing yourself time to truly think about your poem --
and not just those things that allow you to "act like a poet." Go
for a walk alone, listen to instrumental music, or simply shut the door to a
room in your house and ask not to be disturbed. The most important thing to
remember with any of these methods is that you don't let other people interrupt
your time.
Step 3: Choose Your Topic
Theme, as discussed above, is the driving idea behind your poem. The topic,
however, is the specific vehicle you use to express the theme. While finding
the theme should be the easiest part of writing a poem for your wedding, finding
a topic that isn't hackneyed and trite can be a challenge. For instance, love
is your theme, but the beauty of your betrothed's eyes may be the topic. You
are using the example of her eyes as the symbol for your love. The key is to
find something new. There's something that makes your chosen one special, be
it appearance, wit, or style. That's the topic you want to choose. Poets use
tools like automatic writing, journals, or "dream work" to come up
with topics for their prose. (These tools are all discussed in detail in the
home-study course I put together for couples personalizing their wedding vows
- visit http://www.WeddingVowToolkit.com for more info.) But anything that allows
you to spark your creativity can suffice if you're short on time.
Step 4: Pick Your Style
As many different poems as there are, there are almost an equal number of styles
in which they are written. There are traditional forms, modern, post modern,
and many more. You can work on fitting your rough draft poem into one of these
many forms, or you can go with no form at all. The benefit of working on an
art form is that there are no hard and fast rules on what the end product must
look like. Perhaps you'd like to try your hand at penning your vows in the form
of a Shakespearean sonnet. Or, to go a completely different route, maybe "experimental"
is right up your alley. No matter what you choose, just make sure it fits your
style. After all, personalizing your wedding vows means just that - they should
be personal, not forced to fit into a style that just isn't "you."
About the Author
Chris Simeral is the creator of The Ultimate
Wedding Vow Toolkit, the wedding-coordinator-approved home-study course
for couples personalizing or renewing their wedding vows.
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