Iβve been to a handful of weddings in my time; mostly as a kid, tagging along behind my parents as we celebrate some friend of the familyβs union. This past summer, Iβve gone to two in which the people getting married are close to my own age.
In comparing the two experiences, Iβve reached a startling conclusion: You should dance at weddings.
I know, I know, revolutionary and controversial and yet itβs true.
My sister got married on Sept. 8, in a lovely ceremony at Memorial Park with the reception at a charming place that had go-karts, laser tag and a bar area where one could watch the Huskers lose to freaking UCLA on six giant- screen televisions and five smaller ones.
And I danced. I was in the wedding party though, and led to believe that I was required to. But that doesnβt change much.
The fact is: at a wedding, after the coupleβs first dance, after the father- daughter dance, after the mother-son dance, the music will play and you will have to decide if you are going to dance or not.
I myself am under 21, so I canβt drink at weddings. Okay, so I could drink at weddings if I really put some effort into it, even though people still ask if Iβve started high school (the bridesmaidβs dress adds something to my cause). But anyway, that takes away a good chunk of things I can do at wedding receptions.
I donβt have many people to talk to other than my family. And, at my sisterβs wedding in particular, I didnβt want to watch the Husker game because it hurt my soul. So I danced.
Wedding time passes faster when you dance. Once the meal is over, the cake has been cut and the music has started thereβs no set time of how long youβre supposed to stay. Iβve always figured thereβs a line between βI came for the foodβ and βthereβs alcohol here so Iβm never leaving everβ thatβs hard to tread.
In my case, I was both a member of the wedding party and actually related to the bride; so I couldnβt leave until the disk jockey stopped playing anyhow. So, short of bringing some serious homework or going to bowl by myself, there wasnβt a whole lot for me to do with my time other than dance.
But I was shocked to find that the dancing was actually pretty fun. There are dances that everyone knows: the Macarena, the cha cha slide, the cupid shuffle, the Time Warp; and it might be human nature, but itβs fun to dance in a group.
Like I said, dancing gives you something to do, and it tires you out, and itβs a nice way to bond. Iβm definitely in favor of dancing at weddings.
That being said, forget slow dancing. You can book it the heck out of that reception hall once βThe Way You Look Tonightβ comes on.