Eric’s Blog Episode 14 – Registering Our Greed
June 23rd, 2009 by EricI’ll admit that I have neglected to buy wedding presents for a friend or two. This was in my distant youth, when I was broke all the time and felt that if I was going to buy plane tickets, book a hotel room and rent a car, my coming to the wedding was gift enough.
There is a part of me that now feels this way about the present of friends’ “presence” at my own wedding.
While I love, love, love receiving gifts as much as the next fella, by no means do I want them just out of tradition or obligation. The traveling and finding a babysitter and all those things can be, for some people, a greater gift of time, energy, and dedication than the Cuisinart Griddler (Product plug! But I’m not getting paid for it!), which, by the way, I adore and use almost daily (thank you Sarah of the Upper Valley!).
Faye agreed with me on this. She even had a brief “Hey! Let’s buy our friends gifts instead!” fantasy. We decided to put a disclaimer on our website that says “we have set up three registries as a guide, but we would love and appreciate any gift, or none — your participation at our wedding is the best gift of all.”
Then one day I found myself at a major department store with a price gun in my hand. I felt like Davy Crockett holing his first musket. I walked around the store, my eyes narrowed and concentrated, trying to find just the right thing to shoot. It took almost an hour to find something worthy of zapping. But after I pulled the trigger (I believe it was a bamboo cutting board) I sort of went nuts. I morphed into a little boy dressed like a cowboy on Christmas morning (except I was wearing pants). I darted around the store aiming and firing. If Faye would have let me do a somersault into sniper shot position, believe me I would have. “I want that and that oh my god! That!” I shot a salad spinner sitting harmlessly on a top shelf. The wine decanter never stood a chance. “Of course we need a metal thingy to put on top of a hamburger while cooking! And when WOULDN’T we cook on a combo grill/griddler/panini maker?” Once Faye wrestled the gun away from me, she fell to its charms. She became weak with dishtowel desire (I think she registered for eight different models!)

We got stumped when it came to fine China. We were told that this was our only real chance to have a beautiful set with which to entertain and host important holidays. (And to pass down to our children, which was a brand-new concept.) But we were horrified by the sticker price. For a 5-piece set of our favorite pattern (which we settled on after almost two full days of China comparison shopping!) the price was around $150. What what what? I would be too nervous to carry the dishes to the dinner table. I would watch the guests like an English nanny. “Is it really necessary to cut your food so HARD?” Where would we keep the china? In a padded safe?
When I asked my mom for advice, she wrote back, “You don’t need fine China. You’ll be nervous washing and stacking dishes that cost that much. We bought our ‘fancy’ dishes ourselves after about 25 years at an auction, as well as lots of miscellaneous pieces at antique shops – and had fun doing it.” We took the China off the registry.
Another thing we are debating is whether or not to register for help with our honeymoon. There are all sorts of websites that allow for the user to register for specific parts of the honeymoon (massages, dinners out, even plane fare). But registering for a facial feels somehow more greedy than registering for a duvet. And you don’t get to shoot it with a gun.
Now I turn to you, fearless readers. Do you think it is Gauche to register for a honeymoon? Did we do the right thing cutting out the China? Is there anything really cool or important that I absolutely HAVE to register for that I might not have thought of?
I wish I could register for a registry gun. Now that would be useless fun.
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June 24th, 2009 at 4:39 pm
Somehow, honeymoon registries do seem a bit tacky. It’s fun but not something you’ll use in your “new life”. (Also, being the shy person I am, I don’t really want my elderly relatives thinking too much about whether or not I and my sweetie are getting a massage.)
As to china, we are registering for china but rather than getting the fancy 5 piece sets, we want some basic, casual TOUGH 4 piece sets. Much less expensive and better for our piece of mind.
August 2nd, 2009 at 4:09 pm
I agree. Registering for a honeymoon is TACKY. No one should expect guests to pay for them to take a vacation. I could see how in our parents’ or grandparents’ generations, when people didn’t live together before marriage, it would make sense couples couldn’t afford a honeymoon, but let’s face it. Today many couples live together first, or lived on their own so they already have a lot of the ‘essentials.’ Registering for 5 pages worth of items really is just greedy. And, out of consideration for your guests, no one should go crazy registering for everything in the store because they get up caught in the moment thinking of all the gifts they might possibly get. I know a few people, one couple in particular, who went crazy with the registry, including place setting accessories even though the don’t really cook! Fifteen years after the wedding, a lot of those gifts are still packed away in storage, probably moldy and unusable so that’s really a total waste. Having said that, there are some things, like sheets and towels, you can never have enough of so there’s still plenty to put on your registry without ridiculously going overboard!
May 11th, 2010 at 10:22 am
I don’t think honeymoon registries are tacking per say. And I don’t think registries are tacky if done correctly. For example, don’t send out registry info with the wedding invite ( a few friends have done that) and don’t add pages and pages of things. Your friends and family are not obligated to get you anything. However, in most cases, people are going to want to purchase you a gift so it’s nice to direct them towards some options. Currently, we are registered (myregistry.com) and only have three pages of items (10 items per page – we actually got the myregistry.com app thingamajig from for my iphone and I just zapped items from williams sonoma and colemans -nothing too time consuming) plus a honeymoon cash gift fund. If people want to donate they can but if not there are other really low priced items. This ONLY if they ask and a majority of our guests has asked. I actually found your site because I was looking for people’s opinions on registries and glad to read some of the comments here! Helpful! Do you have any articles on registries on your site that people have shared opinions on? Thanks so much! Loved the Tuscan picnic wedding idea btw – just saw the photos on your homepage!