Behind The Veil: 6 Causes Of Drama At Weddings

 / 

There can be many causes of drama at weddings since itโ€™s a time when your emotions are at its peak. But what causes drama at weddings? What are the driving factors behind wedding mishaps? Letโ€™s find out more about the reasons for wedding drama, and why they act as strong triggers or reasons for problems at a wedding.ย 

Key Points:

  • Weddings can stir unresolved conscious and unconscious issues in all attendees, often leading to problems.
  • Parents and guests who have experienced a recent loss or feel envious can be negatively affected by a wedding.
  • Those with ambivalent feelings about a wedding can sometimes unexpectedly disrupt the event with their behavior.

If you ask any married person how their wedding experience was, you might hear a tale that boggles the mind. Simply put, there is something about a wedding that brings out the bizarre in us.

In my clinical work, I have been told of relatives dropping dead on the dance floor, people getting drunk and making scenes, significant others who have boycotted the affair for various and sundry reasons, grooms giving their best imitation of Sonny Corleone by having sex with bridesmaids or other women in the wedding party, and women running off with old boyfriends and leaving their prospective beaus in the lurch, to name a few.

Some of what happens at weddings is bad luck. A client told me that her uncle suffered a heart attack and died on the dance floor. She said he was in great shape, and that the incident was a total shock to all family members. Of course, he wasnโ€™t healthy, but he might not have known what was to befall him.

While we cannot control everything in our lives, most wedding mishaps seem psychotically induced by the nature of the event itself. And itโ€™s not just a future โ€œmother-in-lawโ€ who is to blameโ€ฆ although it certainly can be. The following are a few of the reasons for problems at a wedding.ย 

Related:ย What Drives Some Couples To Call Off Their Wedding?

6 Causes Of Drama At Weddings

1. Change

A wedding is an event that symbolizes the end of one lifestyle and the beginning of another. Prospective spouses who have problems with this developmental shift, for whatever reason, may act out by pulling out of the wedding at the last minute.

If you talk to enough people, you will find a surprising number of individuals who have been left at the altar by some such person. To avoid marriage, some partners have left the country or completely disappeared never to be heard from their friends and family again. Most of these people are conflict-avoiders and those who shame easily.

Itโ€™s not only the potential partners who may act out with change, or should I say growth on the horizon; parents or relatives may try to destroy it either consciously or unconsciously.

For example, a mother who has been overinvolved with her child had a tough time letting go and the anxiety associated with this shift was unbearable. This woman intermittently excused herself from the festivities and isolated herself in a room at the venue.

The more enmeshed the parent and child were prior to the marriage, the more aberrant behavior to expect at or around the wedding.

Causes of drama at weddings

2. Loss

This is a specific type of change, but it is different enough to merit its own category. Those who perceive the wedding as a personal loss may exhibit unexpressed grief in a twisted or inappropriate manner.

For example, one woman who had lost her daughter in a car accident several years ago got so drunk at her nieceโ€™s wedding that she started a fight with the nieceโ€™s mother (her sister); she also insisted on driving herself home from the wedding and was in a minor car accident.

Only later did she admit that the wedding festivities reminded her of the loss of her daughter and that she wanted to rid herself of those terrible memories as quickly as she could.

3. Guilt

Some people may feel guilty over their loss and punish themselves for it; others around them are simply collateral damage.

With reference to the previous case, when the inebriated womanโ€™s sister told her she could have ended up like her daughterโ€”dead from a car accidentโ€”the woman said that the thought of dying gave her the hope that she would join her daughter in heaven.

She added that she herself deserved to die anyway because she was driving the car when they were broadsided. Some term this โ€œsurvivor guilt.โ€

Related:ย Why Grown Kids Tend To โ€œGhostโ€ a Parentโ€™s Wedding

4. Anger

I once went to a wedding that was filled with people who did not have a good relationship with the parents of the young man who was getting married.

Mingling among the guests I heard several say something like. โ€œI donโ€™t know why I was invited to this. I canโ€™t stand these people.โ€ Of course, none asked why they accepted the invitation, but they did have a point.

Nevertheless, angry people will retaliate in some way, and from what I heard, many gave the cheapest gifts and were the most critical of the venue, meals, and music.

5. Envy

Those who are envious make bad wedding participants. Whether there is jealousy between prospective in-laws or between participants and guests, this never turns out well.

One young married woman confessed to me that her husbandโ€˜s family was less financially fortunate than hers and that two of his uncles decided to take this out on her father.

The men were obnoxious to her father, making fun of his need to throw an expensive wedding and even challenging him to a physical altercation. Luckily, the father took their verbal jabs as a sign of jealousy and refused to provoke them.

Causes of drama at weddings

6. Ambivalence

Anyone conflicted about the wedding, either the partners, parents, or guests may cause a scene. Ambivalence here is synonymous with internal conflict about what is taking place.

Ambivalence is tricky to decipher because there are usually two opposing views expressed by the same individual.

For example, a maid of honor who did not approve of her best friendโ€™s choice of mate felt obligated to attend the wedding but was so late that it was delayed for almost two hours.

A second example is that of a man who wanted to marry his partner on the one hand but was equally attracted to a woman in the wedding party who was equally enamored with him. Just prior to the ceremony, the two were caught having sex in an isolated part of the venue.

And lastly, most divorced and widowed individuals will tell you that they dread getting an invitation to a wedding. They despise having to go alone, and even if they find a friend to accommodate them, it is a bittersweet experience at best.

A divorced male client told me that it was hard enough to attend his friendโ€™s daughterโ€™s wedding solo, but he also felt as if he was treated like a leper by the guest couples.

Another divorced client told me that while talking to a group of women at his friendโ€™s wedding, he was accused by one of the male guests of trying to seduce his wife.

My client said the scene was bizarre by itself, but to make matters worse, several other men came to their friendโ€™s rescue and escorted my client out of the wedding.

Particularly painful was the fact that my clientโ€™s friend did not come to his rescue and allowed this ejection to happen, even though all the women involved sided with him.

Related:ย 5 Things to Know About Marriage Before Your Wedding Day

Weddings are highly emotional events that signify growth and potential, but they also shed light on sensitive wounds that have not been addressed.

While residing in our unconscious, the remnants of these wounds may slip through enough to create symptoms that make oneโ€™s special day special for a host of other reasons.


Written Byย Stephen J. Betchen D.S.W.
Originally Appeared On Psychology Today
drama at weddings

— Share —

— About the Author —

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Up Next

How to Become Pregnant with PCOS: 6 Proven Strategies For A Promising Start

Generally, women who have polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) get problems in conceiving a child and starting a family. If you suffer from this condition of PCOS then we recommend you to take up this manual on how to become pregnant with PCOS.ย 

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

According to American Familiesโ€™

Up Next

Codependence and Interdependence: What Truly Sets Them Apart?

The question โ€˜What is the difference between codependence and interdependence?โ€™ In reality, it asks whether a relationship is dysfunctional or healthy. Well, in todayโ€™s Best Day Blog, I will be taking you through the differences between the two and how to recover from codependency.

(adsby

Up Next

10 Riveting Movies About Broken Marriages: How Love Crumbles Over Time

Marriage is supposed to represent love and commitment, but itโ€™s not always a fairy tale. Below are some of the movies about broken marriages that challenge the โ€œhappily ever afterโ€ stereotype!

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

Sometimes, things start falling apart โ€” from within or without โ€” and this is frequently caused by different pressures and conflic

Up Next

Friendship Marriage: Japanโ€™s Latest Relationship Trend Explained

Friendship marriage is the latest relationship trend taking the world by storm, and itโ€™s got everyone talking. Forget the traditional notions of romance and commitment; these couples are rewriting the rules of marriage and how!

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

This unique approach has not only got people talking, but itโ€™s also challenging many societal norms when it c

Up Next

Should I Start a Family? 10 Reasons That Might Convince You

Two paths are diverging before you at a crossroads. You can either continue with your present life which has the comforts you know so well, or you could choose the other path which goes into the unknown.ย 

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

The decision to start a family is one of those big adventures in life that leaves us breathless with awe; it is filled with twists and

Up Next

8 Questions To Ask Yourself If You Want To Avoid Marrying The Wrong Person

Picture this: youโ€™re standing at the altar, surrounded by beaming friends and family, moments away from saying โ€œI doโ€ to the person who you thought was your soulmate and the love of your life. But deep down, you canโ€™t ignore the nagging feeling that something doesnโ€™t feel right. Could it be possible that youโ€™re marrying the wrong person?

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

Up Next

63 Conversation Starters For Deep Dialogues With Your Partner

Why conversation starters? Over time conversations with your partner might begin to feel shallow and focused more on the daily grind than topics that actually matter. This is normal. Itโ€™s probably not a dangerous red flag that your relationship is about to end, but it is likely unsatisfying and monotonous.

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

Itโ€™s quite easy to reignite t