
For my 25th birthday, my parents sent me one of the coolest toys ever: An Artisan Stand Mixer by KitchenAid. I love this thing. I have wanted one for a long time and mentioned it was the only thing I wanted to register for as a wedding gift. Now that I have it, I intend to bake bread, make frosting, cookies from scratch and delicious whipped cream on a regular basis.
In my eyes, this piece of equipment marks my entrance into true adult society. Like the fountain pen to the pre-digital-age-adolescent, this stand mixer is the bar mitzvah gift of the active cook. It also means I have a lot less room in my kitchen. But I couldn’t be happier about this "thing."
People are endlessly looking for the best "thing" to get couples for the wedding. (If you are looking for me you can check out the wonderful attachments that can be used with my fantastic Artisan Stand Mixer by KitchenAid,
most notably the pasta tools.) However there is a lack of creativity and lack of acceptance there of by the wedding world.
On Doug Gordon’s blog there is much discussion about
getting registered and the hell it raises. Granted we have not yet done this, but clearly we have talked about it. What could be cooler than running around a big store shopping for stuff people will give you? I think it is pretty cool. However it seems to be stressor in that such a ridged set of gifts is expected to appear on one’s registry list.
There is a lot that should be stressful about a ceremony that everyone expects to be perfect; that is a given. However the gift giving shouldn’t be. I have picked up a few rules along the way regarding these gift stress issues. In a class taught by
a brilliant writer and somewhat fanatical caffeine-free soda drinker, I read a top ten list of what to do as a wedding guest. One of them was to buy off the registry. Given the amount of time and agony that people go to to pick out the prefect champagne flutes, you can do them a favor and get the flutes. (Did I mention the pasta tools?)
While there are always alternative gifts, like donations in the name of the new family or planting trees in the rain forest, you should know for sure that the couple wants that first. There is also the donation to
Marriage Equality organizations. I strongly support such efforts and believe it to be a powerful statement of celebration. But again, it seems prudent to know both the bride and groom’s wishes. Even the most socially conscious couple may really want pasta tools for a wedding present.
Looking at these gifts lists often you find the same stuff over and over. I understand that most couples in the past didn’t live together and didn’t have a set of silver wear, but there is no energy is such a selection today. Now people tend to live together for some time and if they don’t they also tend to have at least a decent set of forks, knives and spoons. I do wonder, as every other aspect of the wedding has been updated for the 21st Century, why it is still expected to register for housewares.
Regardless, I am very excited and have little-to-no stress about this part of the process. Partly because I already have everything I wanted! (Yes I mean Abby…but the mixer is fun too)