People said "Marriages are made in heaven",but the production cost is certainly paid on earth.In India there is no greater event in a family than a wedding, dramatically evoking every possible social obligation, kinship bond, traditional value, impassioned sentiment, and economic resource.
Indians are by nature known to spend lavishly on weddings. Even the balanced middle-class will take out their life’s savings and spend generously on their child’s wedding – be it a son or a daughter.
How can, then, the upper class lag behind? By the same measure, they go an extra step and hire fancy farmhouses, high-end designers, natty wedding planners and aggressive public relation agents to have the ceremony appear larger than life and as grand as possible. In the arranging and conducting of weddings, the complex permutations of Indian social systems best display themselves. Over the years, weddings have become a wealth source,people spend unnecessary money on a single day of celebration.most families spend only according to their pocket. However there are some who go beyond their means and this should not be encouraged.
Bride laden with jewellery and make-up that she has shrunken, and her true self is painted by artifice.
People are simply wasting money in the name of tradition.Some spend more because People want to show there relatives or neighbour that no one in there community can do marriage by spending that much money. Actually,Indian weddings are an unnecessary wastage of resources which can be diverted to those who do not get any.
According to me its might give business to some people, but if we can celebrate it other ways instead of catering a great menu.
Why is it that celebrations inevitably imply extravagance, unnecessary adornments and superfluity? It probably shows the money-mindedness that prevails in our society today, a mindset that measures everything on the yardstick of money. Excess of anything is bad; people often forget that. Exuberance is what should be indispensible in a wedding celebration, and not extravagance.
Indians are by nature known to spend lavishly on weddings. Even the balanced middle-class will take out their life’s savings and spend generously on their child’s wedding – be it a son or a daughter.
How can, then, the upper class lag behind? By the same measure, they go an extra step and hire fancy farmhouses, high-end designers, natty wedding planners and aggressive public relation agents to have the ceremony appear larger than life and as grand as possible. In the arranging and conducting of weddings, the complex permutations of Indian social systems best display themselves. Over the years, weddings have become a wealth source,people spend unnecessary money on a single day of celebration.most families spend only according to their pocket. However there are some who go beyond their means and this should not be encouraged.
Bride laden with jewellery and make-up that she has shrunken, and her true self is painted by artifice.
People are simply wasting money in the name of tradition.Some spend more because People want to show there relatives or neighbour that no one in there community can do marriage by spending that much money. Actually,Indian weddings are an unnecessary wastage of resources which can be diverted to those who do not get any.
According to me its might give business to some people, but if we can celebrate it other ways instead of catering a great menu.
Why is it that celebrations inevitably imply extravagance, unnecessary adornments and superfluity? It probably shows the money-mindedness that prevails in our society today, a mindset that measures everything on the yardstick of money. Excess of anything is bad; people often forget that. Exuberance is what should be indispensible in a wedding celebration, and not extravagance.