VOWS

Writing your own vows...

Start with reflection. Before you write a single word, sit with your thoughts. What do you love most about your partner? What promises feel most true to you? What does marriage actually mean to you, not in the abstract, but in your life together? Think about your relationship’s defining moments, your inside jokes, the qualities that first drew you in. The writing gets easier once you know what you’re really trying to say.

Find your tone early. Do you want your vows to be romantic and poetic, warm and conversational, or laced with a little humor? There’s no wrong answer, but your vows will feel most natural when the tone matches how you actually speak. If you and your partner can agree on a shared tone beforehand, even better. It doesn’t mean your vows have to sound identical, just that they’ll feel like they belong together.

Use structure when you’re stuck. A loose framework can save you from staring at a blank page: express your love, share what you’ve learned from your partner, make specific promises, and paint a picture of your future together. You don’t need all four elements, but having a roadmap helps prevent rambling.

Be specific, not generic. “You make me happy” is lovely, but “you make me laugh until my stomach hurts, especially when you do that terrible impression of my dad” is unforgettable. Specific details land harder emotionally and make your vows feel unmistakably yours.

Match your partner’s length. Coordinate beforehand so one of you isn’t speaking for thirty seconds while the other goes five minutes. Most vows work well between one and three minutes when read aloud: enough space to be meaningful, short enough to stay powerful.

Practice out loud. What reads beautifully on paper can feel awkward to say. Read your vows aloud several times to catch tongue-twisters, overly long sentences, or anything that doesn’t feel natural in your mouth. Time yourself too, since wedding-day emotions have a way of speeding you up or slowing you down.

Prepare for the moment itself. Write your vows down on a piece of paper to hand to your officiant OR better yet, write them in a vow book.