Italian woman marries herself in fairytale ceremony

The idea of a solo wedding came to me two years ago after a 12-year relationship ended, says 40-year-old Laura Mesi


News Desk September 27, 2017
In Japan, a travel agency began offering bridal ceremonies for single women in 2014. PHOTO COURTESY: BBC NEWS

A woman tied the knot with herself in Italy on Monday in an extravagant ceremony with a total of 70 guests. She wore a white dress with a three-layered wedding cake and  also had bridesmaids.


"I firmly believe that each of us must first of all love ourselves," said Laura Mesi, a 40-year-old fitness trainer. "You can have a fairytale even without the prince." The ceremony carries no legal weight.


But Mesi is part of a growing trend for self-marriage - dubbed "sologamy" - in countries around the world.

Proponents of such ceremonies say it is about self-love and acceptance, claiming the social affirmation normally reserved for couples who wed.

Laura says the idea of a solo wedding came to her two years ago, after a 12-year relationship ended.



"I told friends and family that if I had not found my soul-mate by my 40th birthday I would marry myself," she told La Repubblica newspaper.

"If one day I find a man with whom I can plan a future I'll be happy, but my happiness does not depend on him."

Mesi says she is the first Italian woman to hold a solo ceremony. In May, a man, Nello Ruggiero, said "yes" to himself in a ceremony in Naples.

In Japan, a travel agency began offering bridal ceremonies for single women in 2014.

Woman 'marries' train station she's loved for 36 years and 'has sex with mentally'

Reports of people marrying themselves go as far back as 1993. It has spawned a number of books and been a theme of episodes of Sex and the City and Glee.

In the US, a website called I Married Me offers self-wedding kits. In Canada, an agency called Marry Yourself Vancouver which has been running for more than a year attributes the rise in solo weddings to the growing numbers of single people.

"Single is the new normal. Celebrate your solo status!" it urges.

But not everyone welcomes the trend, with some calling it narcissistic, and others criticising it as a pointless submission to a patriarchal institution.

The article was originally appeared on BBC News

COMMENTS (2)

Haji Atiya | 6 years ago | Reply @Azi: But if she is schizophrenic she could be getting more than she bargained for..
Azi | 6 years ago | Reply People these days...
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