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It’s not easy being the mother of a Covid bride

The wedding is approaching - could Emma Kunkel be any more stressed?

November 4, 2021 07:18
masks in the park during quarantine on their wedding day GettyImages-1225660256-a
Young loving couple walking in medical masks in the park during quarantine on their wedding day. Coronavirus, disease, protection, sick. Europe celebration canceled.
2 min read

Anyone who has had to organise a wedding knows that it requires the stamina of a marathon runner, the serenity of a saint and the diplomacy skills of UK ambassador based in some far-flung hotspot. And that’s under normal circumstances. Factor in planning during a pandemic, and the stress levels assume stratospheric proportions.

This is what is accounting for my increasingly short temper, my habit of bursting into tears at the slightest opportunity and the fact that I haven’t had a decent night’s sleep in six months. Covid has added a whole new dimension to what is normally a joyful, if busy time.

Firstly, there’s the question of will the wedding be allowed to take place at all? As things stand, I doubt that there will be another full lockdown within the next month, but I do know of people who had to cancel their long-awaited simchahs as the ban on all celebrations came into force, so it is at the back of my mind as I listen in panic to the daily rising Covid numbers.

If we suddenly go from having 220 guests to being allowed only 30, how does that work? Will our friends ever forgive us and who gets the chop? Will there be an almighty broiges if most of our relatives don’t make the cut and the bridal couple just invite their friends? (Come to think of it, that could work out quite nicely… and save us a fortune.)