In: Psychology
Summary of the article modern wedding explode gender role
The article modern wedding tries to to address something that gets missed on the wedding book shelf, even now. "How to make any wedding liberating, brave, and sexy how modern wedding has paved the way for us all it has lead to gender neutral. All weddings at the core, celebrate the choice two people make to live their lives together, in a way that loves and public and protected by the law, regardless of their gender. No matter our gender, gender expression, or sexual orientation, the choice to get married can be a way to express our authenticity as a couple, on equal terms, rather than to hide behind conformity. With this freedom of creativity and individual choice as the foundation of modern marriage, all of us are more prepared than ever before to negotiate our needs and desires, not just for one day, but throughout our entire lives together. Any couple-same or opposite sex-seeking a personalized wedding that dignifies the relationship and the individual self author Mark O'Connell reflects on conflicts that arrive during wedding transitions, as well as various other transitions throughout your lives. As a psychotherapist, O'Connell offers ideas to bridge relational gaps with your partner, family, and friends. As a professional actor, he also offers insight into the ways your wedding is a theatrical production: how this can help you to conceptualize the event, consolidate your efforts, and increase creative collaboration as a couple. This will serve you not only on the day, but also for the rest of your time together. Whether we're straight, gay, or other, weddings inspire us to carve out more fun, freedom, recognition, life-space, love-space, and connubial space than we've ever had before.
The author wants to inspire the couples to celebrate their unique loves in their own unique ways. He wants to inspire and empower couples to reveal who they are, in the spotlight, as opposed to concealing their wonderful individuality behind tired social norms. He wanted to address something that gets missed on the wedding book shelf, even now.