My wedding has to perfect. I mean I have envisioned it ever since I was a little girl. A beautifully white gown, perfectly fitted on my slim, tan body (this is how I picture my body on my wedding day). The perfect shoes, not too high but high enough so that I walk as if I am floating down the aisle. My hair falls perfectly around my face, topped by a veil that is ever so gracefully lifted by my father as I am presented to my future husband. I can picture everything: the atmosphere, the mood, the weather, the wedding party, the day…I can envision it so clearly now, but as vision turns to the groom, it suddenly blurs. Before my wedding day can occur, I guess I first have to find the perfect groom….
Kate Middleton has found her perfect groom, Prince William…ever heard of him? This wedding must be perfect. The dress...
“This dress has to be perfect ,” renowned British designer Bruce Oldfield tells OK!. “A hand-crafted piece of couture, using only the best materials; nothing about the fit or finish can be left to chance. It will be part of history.”
...the shoes, the atmosphere, the setting, the weather, the audience, the wedding party, EVERYTHING must be perfect. And, perfect not only in the eyes of Kate, the bride, but in the eyes of the royal family, the country of England, the entire public who so desires to witness this monumental wedding. Talk about pressure on Kate and Prince William. Pressure to be the perfect wedding, the perfect bride, the perfect couple, the perfect Princess (different than princess) and Prince.
It’s hard enough picking out the perfect wedding dress when you’re marrying Prince Charming. Imagine trying to do so when you’re engaged to a real prince!
Personally, I cannot even imagine the pressure Kate Middleton feels to be the main attraction at arguably one of the most anticipated weddings of the century. I would imagine that pressure to be perfect for this day must be suffocating. Yes, she is beautiful, classy and fit to be a princess but she is human, she is flawed as we all are.
She better not trip down aisle or stutter on her vows or be anything less than perfect because the public will surely be watching and taking note. She better not follow in the footsteps of Christina Aguilera, who recently was the victim of the harsh public wrath after she floundered the lyrics of our country’s National Anthem. How could she possibly do that??? I mean, she wasn’t singing in front of millions of people or anything, heaven forbid we cut her any slack. I could NEVER sing in front of ten people, let alone 111 million viewers, the most in Super Bowl history. I could also NEVER walk down the aisle with more than one hundred people staring at me. But good luck to you Kate, and to you too Christina in your next performance, because soon enough the public will zoom in on someone else and their failure to be perfect.
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