- Jul 10, 2003
- 27,778
I quite like the idea of a parent 'giving away' their child, whether it be father/daughter, mother/son or any other combination. My only problem at the moment is I can't find anyone to take the buggers
Kind of outdated marriage really....
One man (your father) gives you a woman away, to another man (your chosen partner)
Women are not property, but a she is a person in her own right.....
#metoo would have a field day.....
My partner and I have been considering this and how it applies to our wedding when it happens - I'm considering flipping things around and having my Mum walk me down the aisle.
That depends on how you look at it, If you feel the woman is property, then I can understand not liking it, but if you look at it, from care and protection then it becomes a loving gesture.
It's like everything else in life. it's not what happens but how you think of it.
I was proud to walk down the aisle with my Dad, and then later on, with my son.
It was also a way of honouring them with being there for me.
Historically man giveth the woman to another man.
What is wrong with a lovely lady has much love for a gentleman and decides that she would like to commit herself to him until death they do part?
Although i personally would not need a license from the state to stay committed, i can understand others wanting to formalise their relationship.
A wedding that I went to once, when the vicar said who is giving away the bride, the father said, that's me, but i'm not giving her away, i'm sharing her.
I’m sure at the time it didn’t sound as creepy as how I just read it.
What utter bullshit!
It says that the daughter is the PROPERTY of the father who passes OWNERSHIP on to another man. FFS can't we move on from this Bronze age religious anti female shit.
I gave away both my daughters. If they (And i) had thought it meant that, we would have done it differently.
The giving of a woman goes back over 100 years. Now it's just a tradition.
Marriage isn't just a licence from the state (or church) nor is it just a formalisation of commitment. There are very strong legal arguments for it, especially when one spouse dies.
A woman doesn't need giving. She is capable of giving herself. The tradition goes back to a time when few women had any financial resources and her father passed that responsibility onto another man, her husband. In many cultures this is still the case today.
Which is why I said it is just a tradition now.