Posts Tagged ‘marriage’

From Miss to Mrs . . . Make it Official!

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

Image Courtesy of: Wedding Paper Divas

Even after your “I Do’s” and your honeymoon, there are still a few things that must taken care of before the wedding planning phase of your life is over. One of those tedious tasks often includes changing your maiden name. This task can sometimes seem like checklist of things to do on its own. So the following is a checklist of the to-dos for carrying out the process:

1. Order extra certified copies of your marriage certificate for agencies that require originals before allowing you to change your name on documents.
2. Request a new Social Security card reflecting your name change. Visit Service Canada to find out how, click here.
3. Visit your department of motor vehicles for a new driver’s license. Find out in advance which documents you’ll need to bring in order to certify the validity of your name change. Visit AMA Alberta for more details, click here.
4. Obtain and complete a Passport Amendment/Validation Application. Send this along with appropriate fees, your current passport(s), and a certified documentation of your name change (such as a certified copy of a marriage certificate or court papers) to the nearest passport agency.
5. In addition to changing your name on your car registration, insurance, mortgage company, frequent-flier programs, etc. . . . make sure to order replacement checks, business cards, credit cards, and other documents as well that contain your old name
6. Call employers and schools (if you are a student) to inform them of your name change, and ask them to change it in their records.
7. Make the announcement to your family and friends.



Name Change After Marriage

The list definitely seems long. So another quick and inexpensive alternative to getting your name changed is using name changing services such as MissNowMrs.com. Simply answer and fill out MissNowMrs’ online marriage name change questions and forms, and voilà you’ll officially have your name changed in no time flat.

Married and Moving Forward - Part 2

Monday, July 11th, 2011

Special Guest Author: Gail Vaz-Oxlade the host of “Til Debt Do Us Part” and “Princess” on Slice TV

It was a truly a pleasure meeting Gail at last year’s Bridal Fantasy. I sincerely recommend that if you ever get a chance to see/hear Gail speak at any event, it is definitely worth all the effort. She is not only witty and intelligent, she is beautifully charismatic as well. So as I promised, here it is folks . . . the second part of Gail’s article Married and Moving Forward (If you didn’t catch Part 1 of this blog series, make sure you do before you proceed to Part 2!) . . .

Step #1: Talk to your partner. Now that you’re part of a family, you can’t go off half-cocked, assuming your buddy is on the same page as you. You’ve got to talk about it. Sit down and discuss what kind of timeline you each have in mind.

Your new life partner may want to have children, but may want to wait a year or four until you’re settled in a home of your own. You, on the other hand, may be dying to get pregnant. Step #2 is to work out a time frame that meets both your needs.

Which brings us to Step #3: make a plan that lets you achieve this dream without putting your new family at risk financially. Will you live on one income and bank the rest so you can save up for a down payment on a home? Will you practice living on one income so that when a baby does come along you have a big fat slush fund to supplement your paltry maternity benefits? Will you delay your family long enough to get your student loans paid off? Figure out what’s important to both of you and plan together to make your real life work.

Now that you’re married and moving forward together, you can use each other’s strengths to keep you on track. Share your dreams. Talk about your expectations. And make a plan that takes you from where you are now to where you want to be. Working as a team, you can make all your dreams come true.”

Married and Moving Forward

Friday, July 8th, 2011

Special Guest Author: Gail Vaz-Oxlade the host of “Til Debt Do Us Part” and “Princess” on Slice TV

Match your dreams to reality . . .

Psychologists have identified a phenomenon that’s probably been around as long as the Jack & Jill but hasn’t been talked about much: The Post-wedding blues. After the frantic build-up to the big day, the let-down can be huge, particularly for brides. If you’ve been managing a team of service providers, coordinating a b’zillian details and spending like there’s no tomorrow, the day after can seem like the big fizzle.

Now it’s time to get down to the business of life. And if you want that life to be fabulous, you have to come to terms with your reality. While it’s wonderful to dream that you could make every day your wedding day where everyone does your bidding and money isn’t top of mind, it’s time to grow up and get real.

The only way you’ll be able to create a life that is satisfying and magical - yes, there is magic still to come - is to set some realistic expectations. Don’t just pull wishes out of the air and then hope that you can make them come true. “I want to own my own McMansion by this time next year” may be a little bit of a bigger bite than you can chew. Instead, figure out what you really, really want, prioritize your goals and then create the plan to make it all come to pass.

Whether you want to own your own home, start a family or go into business for yourself, you need to break your goal down into manageable steps.

And to find out what Gail’s 3 recommended steps are, stay tuned for Monday’s blog! So for now, Bridal Fantasy hopes you have a good weekend and we’ll see ya next week.

A Dream of One’s Own

Monday, March 28th, 2011

Special Guest Author: Magdalen Bowyer

It was almost 3 o’clock and the sun had broken through for the occasion. A perfect day for marrying the man of my dreams. Everyone in the cabin was dressed and ready. I turned to see my father examining me. “Do you really want to go through with this?” he asked. The question was completely unexpected and surprising. But even more surprising was an errant voice in my head that wanted to reply, “Actually, Dad, I’ve changed my mind. It’s been fun, but let’s get outta here!” That voice shocked me but was quickly suppressed. This was not the time for a dramatic change of heart. “Yes, Dad, I’m ready,” I said, smiling.

That was many years ago. A marriage to my dream guy. We intended to grow old together and had he lived, we’d be celebrating our 30th anniversary this summer. But he died in a car accident a month short of our fourth anniversary.

His death marked a turning point in my life and set me on a trajectory I could never have imagined. This is what I know: I’ve had a lifetime of learning in relationships and every goodbye has stretched me into the woman I’ve become. Relationships are deeply connected to our wellness as women. Some of us will learn to transform and sustain one relationship over a lifetime. Others will learn through more than one relationship, more than one marriage. If a marriage ends, it doesn’t spell failure. It may even be a kind of success. You’d probably rather not hear this now, but I feel it’s essential you understand that you are about to test and challenge all that you’ve been taught about love, relationships and marriage. In the process, you will face what it means for you, who you think you are and who you want to be.

In my own life I’ve learned that women haven’t had the mentors we need to connect with our own feminine power. Yet it is this vital connection that determines our wellness, which is the foundation upon which we build our relationships and our lives. And at the heart of this vital connection is learning how to develop a level of self-responsibility.

A year before my first marriage, I graduated from high school and was chosen by my classmates to give the valedictory speech. When I read that speech now, I’m curious about the certainty I held about my life’s purpose. The basic plot of my life was to have love find me and then I could rest, knowing I would be cared for. It was a fantasy of passivity. My journey would end and begin at the altar. But that was not to be. Little did I know then I would be challenged over and over again to rewrite the script of my life until I became aware of a crucial fact: I would have to be the author of my own story. And until I was, love would never find me for long.

False notions of love teach us that when we find it in another person we’ll be in constant bliss. The larger narratives in my life had led me to believe that when the right man found me, I would be relieved of the worries of day-to-day maintenance. Then I would be free to turn my attention to my intellectual and artistic abilities. The relief I felt on my first wedding day was momentarily overshadowed by the question my father asked me because that question hinted at something, a longing I was suppressing. I wanted to be independent and free. But it was a longing I quelled. I let myself be pulled into marriage before I had fully claimed myself because I feared that without a man, I’d be isolated and insecure.

Where did this misapprehension come from? From the family and the society in which I was raised. It’s a loving culture, but it’s a very masculine one, oriented around the woman as caregiver, and the man as provider, decision-maker and usually, the focus of attention. The woman is expected to be nurturing, self-less and ready to serve.

It’s helpful to see the context of our own social conditioning. We can then understand where we’ve come from and choose where we want to be. At the age of 38, after three marriages and finding myself the mother of two sons, I realized I could no longer place pleasing others above my own self-development. I had to take a stand. And here’s the great irony: I now know that in doing so, in caring for myself, I was actually stepping into my capacity to care for the whole world.

The practice of love takes time. That’s a challenge in our society as we are supported and trained in the distracting process of accumulation, which tells us if we get all the right things (partner, lifestyle, etc.) we’ll be happy. In contrast, love as a process starts with oneself. It demands we ask ourselves big questions about who we are, what we want, and what we have to contribute. Aristotle had a wonderful word for destiny. He called it entelechy, the magnetic force that draws us into our life’s purpose.

More often than not, females are taught how to give the basic care that is part of the practice of love: how to show empathy and how to listen. Not often enough are we taught to be honest with ourselves about our deepest passions. Listening is more than hearing others; listening is also hearing our inner voice.

As a young woman, I didn’t know how to distinguish my passion for the love of a man from my own life’s potential. I didn’t know how to follow and trust my enthusiasm. Yet whenever a marriage ended, I would decide to go back to school in some way. I see now that this hunger for scholarship was the way I deepened my relationship to myself. I was committed to understanding my entelechy. But I can’t help thinking the process would have been less painful had I listened to the voice of my soul at an earlier age.

The path to love is about embracing ourselves before we embrace someone else. We’re not taught this as females. As children, we’re taught to find our first love in the ‘other’. As a consequence, if we should not find this ideal relationship outside of ourselves, we may be hopelessly distracted from creating a flourishing life. In a way, we lose the roadmap to the self. And our most basic self is love.

Love is the work of the world. As Dr. Humberto Maturana teaches, it expands intelligence and empowers creativity. He writes, “love returns autonomy and, as it returns autonomy, it returns responsibility and the experience of freedom.” I liberated myself when I faced the disparity between what I desired and what I was choosing. “Passion doesn’t fade. It must be suppressed,” says Deepak Chopra. “We are enticed back into passion when we admit to having desires.”

Bell Hooks teaches that the female search for love is what life should be all about because demanding the ‘other’ be our ‘everything’ is a faulty assertion. Love is everything. And she defines love as “the foundation on which we build the house of our dreams.” “It’s a house with many rooms,” she says. “Relationships are part of the house, but they are not everything and never could be.”

Love is a force as real as gravity. And it leads us into the awareness that we are the source of all that we long for - we have the power to foster limitless creativity. This is the time for us to stand with and for each other. We’re all learners. And the learning begins in relationship to ourselves. For without self-love, we are not yet ready to know the love of others.

Magdalen Bowyer
MA, RPC, CEC is a Narrative Therapist & Creativity Coach who knows we make the world with the stories we tell.

Her work helps people create life affirming stories about themselves so they are empowered to re-shape the landscape of their living. These stories are not fantasies; they are real facets of identity, different versions of who we are. She works with women and men around the world while she enjoys a vibrant practice at Cross Roads Clinics in Vancouver, BC. She is currently writing an autoethnography titled ‘Grief & Desire: lies I’ve lived by’. She resides in Surrey, BC, with her husband and sons.

To learn more about Magdalen and what she offers, visit her website www.CrucibleCommunication.com

Creating Happily Ever After

Tuesday, March 15th, 2011

Special Guest Author: Dr. Brenda Wade

Advice and tips on making your marriage a life-long affair.
On the day of the dream wedding, the beautiful bride and handsome groom share vows to love, honor, and cherish. After celebrating in the company of friends and family and the honeymoon, we ask the question, how do you get to happily every after? If your big day is approaching, you’re probably filled with joy, anticipation, and so much love you can’t stand it. So why is it that happy marriages seem to elude many couples? Even though statistics say around fifty percent of marriage won’t make it, it’s not that hard to create a marriage that will stand the test of time. We’re here to show you how an investment of a little time everyday will pay off and create your happily ever after.

The Skills for Creating a Happy Marriage
Hi, my name is Dr. Brenda Wade. I’m a psychologist, television host, author, and speaker, and I want you to know I’m also a happily married wife and mother. A fairytale wedding won’t lead to a fairytale marriage, because real life isn’t make-believe. Along with my friend Darren Jacklin, mega manifestor, author, and transformation teacher, we will show you how a good satisfying marriage is about day to day growing your insight, skill, and love. And I promise you, that is easily within your reach.

Marriage is just like any job. There is a purpose and a skill set that is required along with steps to practicing the skills.

First, the real purpose of marriage is to assist one another in growing to your full potential. You need a high “GQ” or growth quotient score. In other words, you just keep growing so that the score gets higher and higher.

Second, you need insight and skill to successfully navigate your relationship. Just like obtaining a driver’s license requires that you have the basic skills to drive a car, a marriage requires equally vital skills and insight in order to flourish. Following is a brief quiz that will give you an idea of what it takes to get a license to love.

Do you quality for a “Love License?” For a quick glimpse into your marriage and relationship skills, answer these questions.

1. What were your parents’ patterns (or blue print) for love? In other words, what did you see them do in their relationship? Was there abandonment, betrayal, superficial connection, or maybe one or both of your parents tended toward controlling or domineering behaviour?

If you can’t answer this question in one or two concise sentences, you have work to do. Because guess what my friend, you will repeat what you learned in childhood. Or maybe, like so many of us, you’ll go 180 degrees in the other direction as you attempt to not be your mother or father. Mind you, this is not blaming or putting anybody’s parents down. Don’t forget, our parents could only emulate what they learned from their parents.

2. What is the most effective way to communicate in a love relationship? For example, do you point out whatever your partner is doing wrong, by saying:
a. “You never come home on time.”
b. “You never listen to me.”
c. “You aren’t meeting my needs.”

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