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The Rebel's Guide To Getting Married And Planning A Wedding

The Rebel's Guide To Getting Married And Planning A Wedding

By Josh Withers

Everyone has an opinion on how, when, and where you should get married. They probably even had opinions on who you should marry.

I'm not that guy, I'm Josh Withers, an Australian marriage celebrant, presenting a different way to get married, the rebel's way. This is the Rebel's Guide To Getting Married!
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The Rebels' Guide to Beach Weddings

The Rebel's Guide To Getting Married And Planning A WeddingMar 03, 2020

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How to actually budget for a wedding without going into debt and choose a wedding date based on that budget

How to actually budget for a wedding without going into debt and choose a wedding date based on that budget

The biggest stress I encounter with writing a book, and especially with sharing it with you here is that I have these great ideas all bouncing around my head and they all feel like such great ideas, but as those philosophies and thoughts reach my finger tips they turn to mud.

So thank you for trasping through the mud with me as we write this book together. My gut tells me I'm just throwing your globs of mud every day, so if there's some value here, let me know in the comments or in email to let me know my gut is wrong.

Budgeting for a wedding and choosing a date should be the same activity

Having explored the economics of the wedding industry, and before you start contacting vendors, let’s build on your mental model - your wedding planning philosophy - on how to budget for a wedding.

Normally when people start talking about wedding budgets they’ll talk about how much you should expect to pay for a photographer and how much to pay for catering. We’re not taking that route, we’ll make choices on vendors soon, as we survey the marketplace and decide who can provide services so that we can have the best wedding that expresses who we are and what our values are, a wedding with intent. Today though we’re going to provide a framework on how to approach budgeting and paying for a wedding, and instead of starting with a date and working backwards, we’ll start with cash and work towards a date.

My personal disposition is to not enter into debt for things that aren’t property, but I’m also a champion of adults making their own damn adult decisions, so if you want to enter married with a wedding-sized debt that’s your cross to bear, but I’m going to assume we’re not going into debt on this one.

Another assumption I’m going to make is that the two of you want to have a lifelong and joyful marriage, which means you either have done or are about to, combine finances and have joint accounts etc. Research shows that people who don’t combine finances don’t combine their lives and might as well save money on a wedding and just not get married. But hey, that’s just my opinion.

The maths

So as we would do with any purchase, we start with what we have:

a, how much money you already have saved

And then we figure out how much per month we can save:

s, how much money you can confidently save each month

Then we need to figure out how much we’d like to spend, and if you’re following this book chapter by chapter, you won’t know that yet, but we’ll create a variable for it:

e, for total wedding expenses

And when we put it all together in an equation with m being how many months away this wedding can be it looks like:

m, how many months away the wedding will be

So once you know how much you want to spend, pull out your calculator and go

(e - a) / s = m

So maybe you’ve decided that the wedding will cost $30,000. You’ve saved $20,000 already, and you can easily save $1000 a month.

($30,000 - $20,000) / $1000 = 10 months.

So if you’re reading this in January, you could be hosting your wedding in November!

The expenses

Working out your total expenses will be an activity split between scalable and static expenses. For example, my job as a celebrant is static. Generally speaking, my fee doesn’t change if there are 20 guests or 2000 guests, but then if there were 200

Mar 01, 202307:32
The wedding tax and why wedding vendors are the way they are

The wedding tax and why wedding vendors are the way they are

We’ve got one final stop on this road trip to Weddingvendorville before we start booking wedding creators and that’s to talk about how the wedding industry isn’t like every other industry.

I believe that one of the leading causes of stress and anxiousness in wedding planning is the beautiful coming together of two people who are, for most likely the first time, planning the biggest event they’ve ever planned, gathering the most people, from the extremities of their family and friendship trees, spending the most amount of money they’ve spent yet, and they’re doing it in an industry unlike any other.

And instead of understanding how the wedding industry is different, people bang on about the "wedding tax" without understanding the complexities of creating weddings and running businesses around that skill.

There’s no industry that can directly be compared with the wedding industry. Just ask all of us who went through the pandemic and tried to get other work. Creating weddings really well is a very specific and valuable skill that doesn’t exactly translate to working 9 to 5 for a global corporation.

You might think that the corporate events industry would be an easy translation, but even the corporate and business events industry is different. If you attend one of those big name conferences or events, the budgets are so much larger, and the events are so much larger. The providers of services have to operate in ways that governments and corporations like, we’re talking tender processes, massive quotes, big numbers, purchase orders, catering for thousands of people, parking and amenities for the same numbers. If you’ve worked in weddings you’ll walk into those government and corporate events and have a real appreciation for doing things on that scale.

But if you’re planning a wedding for 50 to 150 of your closest you’re not calling those people, if only because you don’t want boxed lunches to be handed out, and you don’t want a cookie-cutter corporate event. You’re creating an intimate and personal affair.

The wedding industry is almost exclusively home to micro to small businesses. In my 15 years of meeting and working with wedding vendors I’ve met maybe 10 businesses with staff numbers larger than five people, and revenues of more than $500k. When you contact a wedding vendor it’s more than likely that it’s a solo operator or a duo/couple.

Controversially I’ll say that you don’t want to hire a wedding vendor who does weddings as a side-hustle or a hobby, I simply think your wedding deserves a dedicated artist whose time is devoted to creating the kind of creations you want at your wedding.

Full time wedding  creators are limited in the amount of output they can bring to market each year. They’ve done their own maths and come to an understanding that with all of the associated work they might be able to create 15, or 30, or 80 weddings a year. They know their expenses and they have an income goal for their household, so it’s a simple calculation of:

Annual expenses + annual household income + annual taxes = annual required income.

Then:

Annual income / number of weddings I can do a year = charge per wedding.

I’ve very much over-simplified the process, and each business and each category of wedding creator will have their own specific way of pricing themselves, but that math is a good start.

The expenses

There are just so many costs of business that are not immediately known by the general public. You can start by talking about insurance, registration and government fees, income taxes, state taxes, goods and services taxes, vehicles, maintenance, fuel, etc. Then start talking about the cost of equipment to make the art, whether it’s the $30,000 of camera gear, or the $5,000 PA speaker system. Travel, rental car, flights, accommodation and travel time expenses.

And we’re not even at the

Feb 22, 202311:57
Fleshing out your intentions

Fleshing out your intentions

I'm not going to lie, writing a book is hard. You get all excited and start writing and eventually you get all those initial words out, and then - in my experience at least - your brain and your fingers disconnect for a moment and you lose the ability to make words out of the thoughts in your head.

Do not fear though, your intrepid writer spent a few days trying to burst through that dam wall between "figuring out why you're having a wedding" and "here's how to get some epic wedding vendors" and I'm hoping this chapter is it.

From here we're going to start down the list of the different categories of wedding vendors, so I'm really looking forward to the hate mail I'm going to get as we open each of those cans of worms.

Before this chapter we were talking about figuring out
how people like YOU get married, and also elopements, so if you missed those, clickity click.Fleshing out your wedding intentions

The next logical extension of figuring out how people like you get married is shaping that vibe and intention into something that resembles the skeleton of a wedding.

Your wedding-creating team, your wedding vendors, will flesh out your intentions and dreams on that skeleton, but we need a starting point.

The head

The head of your wedding is the list of answers we went through before. Your core values, worldviews, and beliefs as a couple. Where are you going as a couple, what are your intentions for your wedding and how would you like it to feel?

The heart

The heart of this whole thing is so much more important than anything else, and it's not even about 'the day'. The heart of your wedding is your marriage and I hope that your marriage is bigger and better than your wedding, that as good as your wedding could be, it's only your best day so far and that your best as a couple is yet to come! In-fact, if it isn't, let's stop and regroup once we realise that it's super weird if your wedding is the best day of your life.

The spine

Much like a human body, the spine is the bit that holds everything else together and basically changes a blob of jelly into a body.

In wedding planning lingo we're talking about the general timeline of your wedding. We're not talking exact times yet, but what part of the day, then how will things look in that day-part?

This is not the complete list, but it's a good starting point of day-parts to choose from.

  • Sunrise into breakfast
  • Breakfast or brunch through to noon
  • Lunch into the early afternoon
  • Afternoon into the sunset
  • Sunset into the evening
  • Night (after sunset)

You'll note I don't mention times off the clock, because time doesn't matter as much as "relative to sunset" for the kind of event you're having.

Think about the difference between meeting a friend over lunch and going camping with a friend and talking around a campfire. Same friendship, two different day-parts, and I bet the campfire goes much deeper and is more intimate.

The most common day-part for a wedding would be sunset into the evening and it's no secret that it doesn't matter where in the world you are, or what time of year it is, it's almost certain that a late afternoon into the evening event is just nice. The temperature is best, the light is beautiful, the sunset colours are beautiful, and then the celebration continues into the night.

But that doesn't exclude the other day-parts from being fun and valid.

I've created sunrise elopements in that amazing just-before-sunset light and the couple of went off for an Eggs Benedict intimate breakfast

Feb 17, 202306:39
Clearing the air on elopements

Clearing the air on elopements

Writing this chapter prompted me on a future book, The Rebel's Guide to Eloping. There's so much confusion around weddings and elopements I've now committed myself to writing two books. Lord knows how many will come after that.

As always, your comments and reviews are welcome as I write this book in public, it's how a rebel does things, out from under the shadows, in the full light of day.

Join me on email to get the full light of day right next to an email from your boss.

A chapter on elopements

This is a short note on elopements because I have a whole other book I’m writing on the whole deal, but in planning a wedding I wanted to be sure about how a wedding is different to an elopement.

An elopement is not a wedding. An elopement is not a small wedding, an intimate wedding, a micro wedding, or an elopement wedding.

A wedding is a wedding, and you’re not going to believe this, an elopement is an elopement.

Here is how they differ:

  • A wedding is an event you host for your favourite people. Although you have professionals doing the hosting, it’s an event you host and invite people to. As much as it’s your wedding, it’s for them.
  • An elopement is for you. Other people, like close friends and family, might attend, but it’s not for them. An elopement is more like a birthing space. Not everyone gets an invite, it’s a sacred and intimate space where we craft a marriage without the spotlight and the pizzazz.

Both are great options, but you can’t fit a wedding into an elopement and you can’t stretch an elopement into a wedding. They are different events with different purposes and different intentions.

You probably already know if one or the other is for you, it’s not for me to move you either way. That’s our commitment at The Elopement Collective, my wife’s elopement company. We actively turn people away because they don’t want to elope, they maybe want to spend less on a wedding, or they might want to buy a packaged wedding. Those people are who I’m writing this book for, if you’re going to have a wedding, have an intentional wedding.

An elopement would be one of the most intentional getting-married decisions you can make, but it’s not a wedding.

Feb 09, 202304:05
When people like us get married, what happens?

When people like us get married, what happens?

Today's chapter is a favourite conversation of mine. Something I love about being in the wedding business is that planning a wedding is one of the first big things a couple does together. For many couples, it’s the most people they’ve gathered together, and the most money they’ve spent, and it’s a fantastic exercise in working on your relationship as you make such a large undertaking.

So as you undertake it with your significant other, I hope you get to a place of peace and joy.

Also, if you fnid a typo or if words I use mistakingly in a sentence, then B shure yo comment so I dont miss nething wen dis goes to my editr.

How do people like us marry?

You’ve probably walked past, in a public park, or a shopping mall, a big brand doing some sort of promotion. It might be the Red Bull car, with really good-looking people in Red Bull uniforms, handing out free Red Bull; a free sausage sizzle in front of a hardware store; or Veuve Cliquot opening pop-up champagne bars in fancy locations. Inside the marketing industry, these are called brand activations. A good brand activation leaves everyone who interacted with it, aware of the brand’s qualities and products.

It’s fairly hard to leave a Red Bull brand activation without knowing that Red Bull sells Red Bull drinks in a can, and you’ll know what they taste like, how they make you feel, and you’ll probably have “Red Bull gives you wings” stuck in your head.

Think of your wedding as a brand activation.

You’re telling a bunch of people who you are. What do you taste like? What are your values? Your worldviews? What do you not value? You’re saying as much in what you don’t do as in what you actually do, do. If everyone from work is invited, that’s possibly less special than if a guest is the only person from work invited. That means you singled them out as someone who had to be there.

Truth be told you could have anything and everything at your wedding. It could be a music festival with thirty bands and twenty food trucks. Or it could be a small event in a wine bar that fits fifteen people.

When Justin and Hayley Bieber got married they had at least three photographers, from completely different studios, photographing different things because that’s what they valued, but I’ve been to a wedding where there wasn’t a photographer.

The key here is to figure out, how do people like you marry. I’d sit down with your partner and talk through these questions and write down the answers.

  • What is important to you both? Why?
  • What is important to only one of you? Why?
  • What must happen at your wedding for it to even be called a wedding?
  • What could force you to reschedule or change your wedding?
  • What have you loved at other weddings? Why?
  • What have you hated at other weddings? Why?
  • What vibe or thought do you want everyone to leave your wedding with? Why?
  • What elements make a good event?
  • What music have you liked at other events? Live music? Or a DJ playing music? Or a non-professional layout of music, a.k.a “off an iPod” despite no one really having iPods anymore.
  • What kind of food service have you enjoyed at events before? Sit-down dinners? Finger food? Buffet? Food truck?
  • What kind of vibe do you think you have as a couple? Look around your house, what kind of vibe are you projecting to guests to your house? Look across your social media and think about what kind of vibe you’re projecting to people online. (This is the style and the vibe you should take to your wedding - be authentically you.)
  • Do you like photography? What kind of photography do you like?
    Do you want photos like that of your wedding day?
  • Do you enjoy short videos? What kind of video do you like? Do you want a video like that documenting your wedding?
  • What do you think the most important part of a wedding should be? Why
Feb 08, 202311:58
Me, not being chill, about being chill in wedding planning

Me, not being chill, about being chill in wedding planning

An attack on being chill, and then, what you actually, probably mean

In my years as a marriage celebrant a common statement couples make as we’re planning their ceremony is that they want a ‘chill wedding’. This sounds like a great idea, compared to all those stressful weddings we’ve heard about. The problem with chill is best described Priya Parker in her book The Art of Gathering when she says, “chill is selfishness disguised as kindness.”

When you host a wedding you’re doing just that, hosting. The whole vibe of this book is to establish and develop purpose and intent around what you’re hosting, and when we say we want to make it chill we’re negating our role as host.

Things that are chill, are relaxed, they’re a lazy weekend, by the poolside in a resort, but events with intent have leadership.

As you arrive at a purpose-driven event planned with intention we know why we’re there and what’s happening. Not because there are signs pointing the way, but because our decisions have been made with clarity and intention.

When you abdicate leadership you create a vacuum that can and will be filled with useless traditions and other people’s opinions.

This isn’t to say that an intentional wedding is intense and stressful. It’s just not chill. Everyone at an intentional wedding can tune in to the vibe you’re laying down. There’s no guesswork involved. There’s a plan being executed by your wedding-creating experts, and there is a place for everything and everything is in its place.

By chill, I mean no-stress

When most people say they want a chill wedding, they’re not talking about some kind of loose shin-dig, but they don’t want there to be stress on the day. I hear that and please, do not worry at all, but stress at a wedding originates from one or more of three places:

  1. Un-communicated expectations
  2. An amateur team creating the wedding
  3. Unwanted input from friends, family, or traditions.
  4. Un-communicated expectations

    This might sound crazy, but we don’t know what we don’t know. If you have an expectation of someone, it’s your sin if you don’t communicate it. And you might think it’s something they should know, but at the very heart of what we’re doing here is changing expectations and dropping the status quo, so expectations can be expected to be different. Communicate your expectations.

    This is actually great life advice.

    An amateur team

    A solid source of stress at a wedding is when “this is supposed to be happening now” and it’s not happening, and it’s either because the people making it happen are incompetent, or the timing for the wedding wasn’t well planned. Two signs of an amateur team. By amateur team, I’m taking a clear swipe at your friend who just bought a camera and is ‘really into photography’ whilst also taking a shot at the alleged wedding professionals who don’t know how to create a good wedding.

    A professional says that something will take 30 minutes and it just does. A professional says that something will happen, and it does. Amateurs do neither.

    Unwanted input

    Finally, this is the hardest nut to crack, and it reminds me of our two pregnancies. For most of my life, I’d successfully avoided ever talking about a vernix or colostrum, but the second you announce you’re pregnant every conversation with anyone, even strangers, is about this how this impending joy is about to spring forth into your life - and most of it is bad advice. Not bad in the medically-bad advice, but bad as in it’s not contextually personal for us. It’s other people’s experiences with birth or parenting and their experiences aren’t necessarily ours. So if you need to to be, be polite, nod and listen, and thank them, and then change the subject to that local football team and how well they kicked a ball on the weekend.

    These people, as lovely as they are, don’t know that you’re having a wedding with intention, so don’t expect them to be

Feb 07, 202307:07
How to be a rebel!

How to be a rebel!

How to have an intentional wedding

The path to an intentional wedding is light and airy, it’s not supposed to be hard. That’s my biggest gripe with the world today, that when you do the hard work of finding someone you really like, and then you fall into love, so much so that you would want to marry, the entire narrative is that it’s hard, it’s stressful, it’s expensive and basically terrible.

It’s the narrative you read about, you hear about, and everyone parrots, that as you proceed through the steps of life things get harder. Getting married? Hard. Having kids? Hard. Buying a home? Hard. Starting a business? Hard.

The truth is that all these things are hard if you’re not walking your own path, living an authentic and vulnerable life in a community with people that you love, and love you. When you’re freed of the burdens of keeping up with the Joneses and the Kardashians, and you make decisions as a couple things aren’t hard, they just are what they are because you decided so.

Take the example of hiking a mountain. If you never climbed the mountain the mountain would be fine without you, but there are personal fitness gains to be had from the hike, it can be enjoyable, the view from the top will be unforgettable, and if you’re doing it with friends it will be enjoyable. The unavoidable fact is that walking up a mountain can be tough on your body, but you’ve made the personal choice to embark on the adventure. It’s not hard, it’s just exactly what it is. A large amount of energy is required of you.

I’ve got two daughters and raising them is much like climbing a mountain, they require a lot of me, but they bring me so much joy and fulfilment, and they have certain requirements of Britt and I, but it’s not hard being their dad. It is what it is because we decided to become parents. We were so very intentional with this decision.

As you embark on marriage, it’s impossible to be married without getting married, so as you get married, make those decisions with intent. Knowing they may require finance, energy, and talking through decisions with your partner, but it’s not hard. It’s not stressful, it is what is, the beautiful process of getting married.

To have an intentional wedding the steps ahead of you include:

  1. Figure out how people like you marry. What is important to the two of you when you marry? When people like you marry, what happens?
  2. Assemble a team of people that can make that happen. From venue to photographer, celebrant, and ice sculptor, figure out who you need to make what you want. But don’t lock in dates yet.
  3. Work out where in the world it should occur. Start with which country or state, then start narrowing it down. What matters with location? Do you want to make a getaway out of it, or keep it close to home? Which kinds of venues are available in that area and are they the kind of place you’d like to marry?
  4. Build a list of the people who absolutely have to be there to celebrate with you. No obligation guests, only the people who are contributing parties in your life. Jim from work does not have to come unless you’d like them to. Be intentional with each guest and who would accompany them.
  5. Knowing the rough costs (after getting quotes, and multiplying guest numbers by food and beverage costs) work out when you can get married according to your current finances and your saving ability.
  6. Collaborate with your wedding-creating team and venue on available dates for everyone according to your financials.
  7. Book everyone in for that date, start saving, and collaborate with your vendors to make it happen, and look forward to that date.
  8. Let your wedding happen to you!

In the coming chapters, we’ll explore these steps and the actual wedding planning in more detail. But the important takeaway today is that your expectations are in line with your realities, and you chose a

Feb 06, 202306:10
Why should you have an intentionally planned wedding?

Why should you have an intentionally planned wedding?

After having created thousands of weddings I would, quite bluntly, say that if you’re going to even have a wedding, let it be with intent, or don’t have one at all.

After all, you don’t actually need a wedding to get married.

Some people say they’re “not really into weddings” and those people are so very welcome to head down to the marriage registry office or find a local celebrant to help you with the legals and get it done without the beauty of a wedding.

The truth is though, anyone I’ve ever met who’s not “really been into weddings” would actually love to have an artistically created and inspired event that made them feel like a million dollars and actually celebrated them in an authentic and meaningful way. No-one is actively wanting to not feel good, it’s just that for so many, weddings as they have been don’t feel good.

Weddings in times past have been all about family expectations, religious requirements, traditions and the status quo.

Weddings like these founded purely on tradition are simply bad, in my humble opinion. They’re not worth the time or money invested in them. Eliot Schrefer wrote “traditions are just peer pressure from dead people” and that’s true to a point. The fact is that tradition can be great. Every Sunday my family has tacos for lunch at the same fish taco restaurant, and every birthday date we make an effort to celebrate each other. But we as a global community have become so disconnected from the idea that a wedding is a very personal and intimate place where a couple gets to create their own traditions, that a wedding can be really good, that we as a society don’t really know how to make a good wedding.

So we just do the same old thing and we end up with a wedding without intent.

We keep doing the same old thing hoping for a different result.

So if you’d like to just get through this wedding thing without upsetting too many people, and blow thirty or fifty thousand dollars at the same time you’d be best served to put this book down and to pick up a copy of something Martha Stewart has published.

But if you’re prepared to throw out the script and create a moment in your life that is good and beautiful where you end the day as a married couple then let’s do this.

Jan 31, 202303:44
You're getting the damn book

You're getting the damn book

Eight years ago I started 2015 with a Facebook post proudly declaring that I was going to "finally" write my wedding book and if you've known me for that long you'll know the book never happened. Lots of weddings happened, lots of travel, two children, a pandemic and a few tacos thrown in most recently. But I've got a fire inside of me I can't put out, so this year is the year, I've asked for help from some friends, and I'm writing a book - I've even written an introduction!

Jan 20, 202305:00
The rebels guide to being a wedding guest

The rebels guide to being a wedding guest

Everything you need to know about how early you should arrive at a wedding, where you should sit, what you should do, and what kind of gift you should bring.

Jun 12, 202107:60
The Withers Wedding Method

The Withers Wedding Method

I've got a very specific and seemingly different way of looking at how to create a wedding, it's my own little wedding planning method, The Withers Wedding Method. If that was a sexier name I'd probably make a book, but until I get a sexier book title, I'll drop it here as an episode of The Rebels Guide To Getting Married podcast and vlog.

Jul 29, 202022:33
Photographing a wedding on an iPhone, and what is a virtual wedding fair?

Photographing a wedding on an iPhone, and what is a virtual wedding fair?

Would you trust your wedding photographer if the only camera they had was an iPhone 11 Pro? This week I talk to my friend, and Indianapolis wedding photographer, Jen Van Elk who did just that, her husband Steve helps me find the best wedding venue on the Gold Coast, Sharne Perrett from the Australia-wide Virtual Wedding Fair explains what a virtual wedding fair is, and Michaela wants to know what to do about her partner wanting a big white wedding while she wants to elope.

This podcast is the wedding planning bible for rebels, so if you're doing something rebellious at a wedding and want to tell the world about it, or if you want to do something crazy, but don't know how, ask a question at the website https://therebels.guide

Jen's blog post on shooting a wedding on an iPhone: https://jennifervanelk.com/iphone-11-pro-wedding-full-day-from-getting-ready-till-night-shots/

Steve's podcast, Wedding Photo Hangover: https://weddinghangover.com

The Virtual Wedding Fair: https://www.thevirtualweddingfair.com.au

Thanks for listening, if you enjoyed the podcast, do me a solid and share it around, rate and review online, and send in questions for me to answer.

Jul 09, 202041:47
How do we tell my mother-in-law that we eloped?
Jul 03, 202027:31
The Rebels’ Guide To Staying Married While In Self-Isolation

The Rebels’ Guide To Staying Married While In Self-Isolation

If you’ve found yourself and your partner in each other’s bad books a little bit through the COVID-19 imposed self-islolation, lockdown, shelter-in-place, hell on earth, that we’re all living through at the moment, I found this one simple thought from a therapist to be really helpful for Britt and I this week.
Apr 20, 202005:33
The Rebels’ Guide to Changing Your Name When You Get Married

The Rebels’ Guide to Changing Your Name When You Get Married

Here’s something for the newlyweds to add to their quarantine todo list: changing their name after your wedding ... if that’s what you’re choosing to do. This is a comprehensive guide on how to do it, what options you have, and who you need to contact.
Apr 16, 202009:05
The Rebels’ Guide To Re-Planning Your Wedding Now That COVID-19 Ruined It

The Rebels’ Guide To Re-Planning Your Wedding Now That COVID-19 Ruined It

The rebels' guide to getting married now that the Coronavirus has ruined your original wedding plans and you're trying to re-plan, postpone, and move your wedding
Apr 02, 202012:50
The Rebels’ Guide To Getting Married Around The Coronavirus

The Rebels’ Guide To Getting Married Around The Coronavirus

These are weird times, especially if you’re getting married, so here’s an idea that should keep you safe and healthy, while also getting you married. We’re just going to delay the reception, because being married is so much better than getting married. Just so we’re clear, this video does not serve as legal or medical advice. I’m just a wedding celebrant facing the same pandemic as you, wondering how we can still celebrate life while in a pandemic.
Mar 22, 202006:35
A Rebels' Guide Q&A Episode - My Partner Wants a Wedding, I Want An Elopement

A Rebels' Guide Q&A Episode - My Partner Wants a Wedding, I Want An Elopement

In today's Q&A I addressed making a destination wedding fun, is 5:30am too early for a wedding ceremony, my partner wants to have a wedding but I want to elope, and whether celebrants get "butthurt" if they are asked to not be in photos.
Mar 05, 202009:12
The Rebels' Guide to Beach Weddings

The Rebels' Guide to Beach Weddings

The most popular place in the world to get married is probably not far from your hose, it's the beach! Here's some reasons why it's the worst, but also how you can make it great. The audio is pretty bad in this episode, because it was recorded at the beach. This is one of the reasons it's a bad place to hold a wedding ceremony, shoutout to the videographers!
Mar 03, 202004:44
The Rebel’s Guide To Attending a Wedding

The Rebel’s Guide To Attending a Wedding

I met a lady at a wedding reception recently and she clearly didn’t know how to attend a wedding, so to the lady who didn’t like that bride, this vlog is for you. In case you’re not a viewer, there’s a few seconds of audio in this episode from Queer Eye.
Feb 16, 202004:19
Rebel's guide to getting married overseas but doing the paperwork in Australia

Rebel's guide to getting married overseas but doing the paperwork in Australia

When I marry people overseas, I generally do their marriage paperwork in Australia, here's why
Feb 05, 202005:60
Wet weddings and ice cream for breakfast

Wet weddings and ice cream for breakfast

Today’s podcast is part of my 29 Day Content Challenge at www.29days.club but also reflecting on Alex and Taneisha’s wedding that got rained out at the end this afternoon just outside of Melbourne
Feb 01, 202004:57
The rebel's guide to choosing a wedding date

The rebel's guide to choosing a wedding date

There's been one simple and inhibiting way people have chosen wedding dates in the past: whatever their wedding venue had available.

I've got a new idea and I'd love to share it in this episode, consider it the upgrade to wedding planning 2.0. Choosing a wedding date based on your entire wedding squad.
Nov 13, 201905:36
The rebel's guide to being totally stressed out planning a wedding

The rebel's guide to being totally stressed out planning a wedding

I feel like there's a cultural legal requirement for people planning a wedding and getting married to be totally stressed out. Like it's expected of you, and if you aren't stressed out then you're getting married wrong.

In this episode of the Rebel's Guide I'm presenting a different way, a better way, the rebel's way to get married - without stress!
Nov 12, 201908:30
The rebel’s guide to finishing your wedding

The rebel’s guide to finishing your wedding

Britt’s grandma always said you should start how you want to finish. In saying that she was encouraging you to think about the entirety of the project, including how you would like it to end. Here’s an episode on how your wedding might end, but keep in mind I haven’t covered disaster weddings like the one where the groom’s father gets into a fist fight with his son. When that happens you’ll just have to figure it out on your own.
Nov 06, 201905:02
The rebel's guide to wedding rehearsals

The rebel's guide to wedding rehearsals

My least favourite thing about weddings is the idea that they have top be perfect and rehearsed. You can’t rehearse real life, and you can’t rehearse an authentically meaningfully good wedding. Apparently descriptions are supposed to encourage you to listen to an episode but I’ve literally given away the whole episode in the description. Sorry.
Nov 03, 201904:39
A rebels’ guide to choosing a wedding photographer

A rebels’ guide to choosing a wedding photographer

There are so many blog posts, podcasts, videos, about how to choose a wedding photographer, and they're all great. This guide however is what separates the sheep and the goats, this is how to actually and easily choose an awesome wedding photographer.
Nov 03, 201904:23
What to do if you don't have the cash for a good wedding photographer

What to do if you don't have the cash for a good wedding photographer

I’m definitely going to get in trouble for this episode, but the truth is that not everyone can afford a great photographer. So here’s the rebel’s guide for saving money on wedding photography. Thanks to Lucy for the topic!
Oct 19, 201905:43
The rebel's guide to wedding day timing and scheduling

The rebel's guide to wedding day timing and scheduling

Creating a rough schedule for your wedding day could end in a all-in death match between your wedding planner, venue, photographer and celebrant or officiant. So here's my guide to create a schedule, or timeline for your wedding day. (Recorded in #Yosemite!)
Oct 19, 201907:59
The rebel’s guide to tradition

The rebel’s guide to tradition

Rebel’s Guide in New York City! I’ve got some bad news for you: when you say you want a non-traditional wedding, it doesn’t really mean anything. There’s no simple fix to de-traditionalising your wedding. This is an episode trying to help you frame that conversation about wedding traditions and having a traditional, or non-traditional wedding.
Oct 06, 201908:56
The rebels’ guide to wedding vows

The rebels’ guide to wedding vows

The number one thing I get emails about is about how to write wedding vows. Couples getting married talk about being scared of public speaking, of not knowing what to write, and how to write them, so here's my rebel's guide to writing wedding vows!
Sep 12, 201907:15
When seven years felt like seven days

When seven years felt like seven days

Today is Britt and my seventh wedding anniversary, and my whole Rebel’s Guide ethos has it’s roots in our own wedding and how we decided to marry. So today I celebrate our seven years in the podcast, and look forward to seven more!
Sep 06, 201906:37
How to elope, a rebel's guide to elopements

How to elope, a rebel's guide to elopements

Most people have a weird worldview of eloping, like it's a sin, or dishonouring of your family, so let me tell you why people elope, but also offer you a tip on how to elope, along with the difference between an elopement and a wedding. Recorded on Wanaka's Coromandel Peak in New Zealand in the motherflipping snow with real true blue snowfall!
Aug 01, 201904:25
Please don’t spend 6.7% of your life planning your wedding

Please don’t spend 6.7% of your life planning your wedding

Sitting in the back of a ute, in a river bed, outside of Queenstown NZ, here's me trying to convince you to not spend the next five years of your life planning a wedding - because your marriage is way more important than your wedding.

Thanks a million to Harley from Bulb Creative for filming today's episode!
May 22, 201905:44
After the first dance

After the first dance

What should a rebel do after the first dance and what's the secret ingredient to a full dance floor?
Apr 24, 201904:35
How to be photographed at a wedding, feat. Morgan Roberts Photography

How to be photographed at a wedding, feat. Morgan Roberts Photography

I don't think many people understand that you don't have to pose, make weird faces, smile awkwardly, or be generally weird when you're getting your wedding photos taken. This episode features my mate, Morgan Roberts.
Apr 07, 201907:51
People at your wedding, who should be there?

People at your wedding, who should be there?

When no-one has to be at your wedding, when no-one deserves an invitation, who do you invite?
Apr 04, 201904:53
It's the vibe. I rest my case.

It's the vibe. I rest my case.

This is a podcast about a part of your wedding that no-one talks about, the vibe. It's the very undercurrent of everything happening in your wedding.
Mar 16, 201947:08
Wet weather wedding backups

Wet weather wedding backups

A super exciting Rebel’s Guide to wet weather backups, or, How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love The Rain, or, Thunder Only Happens When It’s Wedding.

Anyhow, this is the Rebel’s Guide to a wet weather wedding backup and what to do if it’s raining.
Mar 15, 201905:02
Why create The Rebel’s Guide? Featuring Luna Withers

Why create The Rebel’s Guide? Featuring Luna Withers

Why create The Rebel’s Guide?

Why would I invest time and effort into creating this podcast and vlog? Because I think it matters, and I think you getting married matters.

Bonus guest appearance from Luna Withers, my little girl.
Mar 01, 201903:28
Rebels don't force children and animals to perform at their wedding

Rebels don't force children and animals to perform at their wedding

The title kind of gives it away, but I do reference a video in the podcast, and that video is available on my Youtube and Facebook channels
Feb 16, 201902:06
The rebel's guide to wedding photographers

The rebel's guide to wedding photographers

Did you know that you don't have to have a wedding photographer to get married? So if you are going to have one, why, and who? And how much?

Feb 14, 201910:26
Why?

Why?

This episode of The Rebel's Guide To Getting Married is about your wedding's why ZTzpnI9qR1R4suXQfR1Q

Feb 11, 201905:38
A rebel's bridal party

A rebel's bridal party

Don't listen to this episode if you are keen on a massive bridal party!

Feb 06, 201904:38
The wedding checklist

The wedding checklist

Most wedding planning checklists are designed to scare the heck out of you. Here's one that will set you free.
Feb 05, 201903:45