World-famous Nigerian writer, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie has released photos from her wedding to honour her late parents and to also inspire young men and women who question any kind of convention.
She pointed out that most wedding traditions sideline the mother of the bride, while allowing the father walk the bride down the aisle, get a dance with the bride, and make a speech.
She said that on her wedding day years ago, she decided both her mother and her father would walk her down the aisle.
She also decided to get a dance with not just her father but also with her mother.
She said she told friends and family not to share photos after the wedding because she wanted privacy but she's sharing it now "to publicly honour the rare and wonderful woman" that was her mother.
She also said that she's sharing it to inspire young people who want the courage to go against convention.
She wrote: I have always felt that western wedding traditions sideline the mother of the bride — the father walks the bride down the aisle, the father has the first dance with the bride, often the father gives a speech while the mother doesn’t.
Our wedding, many years ago, was small and lovely, just as we wanted it. I asked family and friends not to post any photos publicly. I wanted privacy. But my need for privacy is now superceded by my desire to publicly honour the rare and wonderful woman I called my mother. And I hope this perhaps inspires any young women (and men) out there who are questioning any kind of convention.
Before the wedding, I decided that both my parents would walk me down the aisle. And I decided that my first dance would be with my mother. My father, who I often teasingly called DOS for “Defender of Spouse,” was very supportive. He wasn’t much of a dancer - I inherited his unrhythmic genes - but my mother was. And my mother’s joy on that day was a gorgeous glowing thing.
Convention is something made up by somebody and then repeated by others. If convention feels wrong for you, if your skin bristles and your spirit stalls at the thought of doing something “the way it is done,” then stop and act.
We can make changes. We can try and craft small slices of the life we want.
We can unmake convention to make things more just, more complete, more beautiful.
Not everyone will be happy with you, because it is human nature to try and conserve things as they are, but your spirit will feel full, and there is nothing more meaningful than knowing you have been true to yourself.