Tag Archives: weddings

Top 5 Facebook Behaviors for Which I Will Click Unsubscribe

5. Bitching About the Timeline Switch

You know what you should really be bitching about? Not having access to clean water, medicine, or an education. Oh wait. You live in the first world and do, in fact, have those things. Quit complaining and use your voice to do some good in the world.

4. Using Pinterest to Plan Your Wedding…and You’re Not Even Engaged

Seriously, ladies. It’s just sad. Not cry for you sad, but wince at you sad.

3. Passive Aggressive Whining or Boyfriend/Best Friend Bashing

Yes, making this example orientation specific serves the stereotype of the whiny straight girl or drama queen gay, but guess the hard truth is, friends? I’ve never seen a straight guy or gay girl write a status like this:

 

 

If you have something to say, say it. To your therapist. To your private journal. To their face. In a phone call. In a heartfelt you really hurt my feelings and here’s why email. Not on Facebook, for the world at large to see. It’s sort of a Peter and the Wolf thing: the more times you wax poetic about something that doesn’t matter, the less likely I am to recognize you have something important to say.

If this particular form of social media has done nothing else, it has extended the span of high school he said/she saids well past graduation.

2. Politics, Politics, Politics

This goes for members of both parties and their outliers. Unless you have a good bipartisan punchline or news source to share – without commentary – I don’t want to deal with it. Similar to how you’re not supposed to have conversations about money or religion in polite company, politics should be set aside. Which is not to say that Facebook is polite company, because it clearly is not.

1. Excessive Updates of Your Future Family

Do you remember plastering on a fake smile when Creepy Uncle whipped out a slide show of the family Grand Canyon trip? Well slide shows were a bit beyond my years, actually, but you get the point. No one not on your trip – and often those who were on it – cares to experience your experience in images.

This goes double for your developing child including – but not limited to – actual sonograms, weekly documentation of your growing stomach in profile, and how doting your parenting partner is. (Obnoxious social media behaviors do not discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation.)

If people – namely, your immediate families – want to see pictures of your trip into parentdom, they’ll ask. You can set up a Flickr account, they can print a poster of a fuzzy black-and-white Junior You and paint a pink or blue bow on it for all I care. As long as it doesn’t pop up on me without warning. Seriously – if I see on vag shot a la Knocked Up or high school health class, I’m off of Facebook forever.

Lest you think me heartless, I do want to extend compliments to my lovely friend, Victoria, who has yet to be removed from my feed even though she’s currently baking a bun in the oven. If you’re going to announce what sex your baby is on Facebook (at least to people not important enough for a personal delivery, like I was, NBD) this is a good way to do it:

What kicks someone off your News Feed?

 

So You’re Getting Married

Congratulations!  This is an exciting time for you, sharing your love with the world for the first time forever.  Here are some great tips on how to plan your grand affair:

Watch Four Weddings marathons each weekend. Steal ideas from your favorites. Mock the losers. (Those tacky bitches have nothing on you.)

Post every single wedding-related thought on Facebook. This includes articles about preparing to be a wedding guest (“Take notes, people!”), excerpts from Dickinson poems, and pictures of your engagement ring amid a variety of backgrounds (“Look how it gleams at sunset!” “Reflection in the Bean!” “I <3 my fiance - oh weird I can’t get used to that!”)

Spend more time with your engaged friends than your single or married ones. If you don’t have any, make some at your local bridal expo. Single gals either won’t get your stress because they are jealous, haven’t met The One.  Married women won’t support you because they are upset that your wedding is going to be so much better than theirs.

Pick a good wedding theme. I don’t know when weddings began to have themes, but clearly it’s important.  Try something no one else has done. Did your groom like to play Cowboys and Indians Native Americans as a kid? Why not try a Wild West theme!

Throw smaller events to prepare yourself for the Big Day. It’s sort of like how competitive eaters prepare their stomachs before a big competition by eating light meals to stretch out their gut.  You will prepare for the stress and chaos of your wedding by throwing smaller parties for your engagement, bridal shower, bachelorette party, couples’ dinner party, meeting the in-laws, meeting the extended family, joining the social circles together, introducing your respective colleagues…

Pay attention to the details. Do your flowers go with your wedding theme? Will the color of your bridesmaids’ dresses bring out their eyes? (If yes, then pick a new color.)
Pick out a classy cake topper. This is your first statement to the world as a married couple – make it count.  (Don’t you want everyone to know that you had to force the Love of Your Life to marry you at gunpoint?)