It was almost 7 pm and my feet
were tired. The hairpins were digging into my head, my make-up was gone, the
wedding dress was uncomfortably tight around the waist (note to bride —any snug
fit around the waist will feel tighter after a meal!).
And our best friend had driven
off with our honeymoon luggage.
One of my girlfriends offered to
help out. Go to her house and have a quick change of clothes. My brand new
husband gave me that look that I’ve come to understand to mean “Not gonna
happen.” Starting our first night at a girlfriend’s house instead of a honeymoon
suite was not the plan.
And so it was, after a long
event-filled happy day, that we finally walked into our honeymoon
hotel. Finally. Just the two of us. The start of our marriage.
The wedding night
Most of you reading this are past
your first wedding night. But many others are planning for their first wedding
night (one of my friends is getting married this week!). Here are:
10 things every bride should know
before (and about) her wedding night
1. Take it slow.
It’s been a long tiring journey,
planning for your wedding. The running around, the planning, the actual
wedding day, it will all take a toll on you and your beloved —mentally,
emotionally and physically. By the end of your wedding day, you’ll be
tired though chances are you might not even feel it (that adrenaline thing can
lie).
My husband and I knew we were
tired. Plus I was recovering from chicken pox so my tiredness was on the
double.
Our plan for the honeymoon night
was dinner, lots of cuddles, massage, plenty of rest and sleep. But things
didn’t’ go according to plan! The saving grace was that we’d talked about
slowing down so we were able to extend a lot grace to ourselves later.
“Slowing down” is easy to say,
but not so easy to follow through when you feel like you’ve been waiting forever!
So you’ll need to discuss with
your husband-to-be and be on the same page. Don’t get into intimate details but
have a rough idea how the evening will play out.
For example a typical Kenyan
wedding ceremony might last the whole day. Afterwards a couple will have a long
drive —or flight —to their honeymoon destination. There’s only so much you
can do after being awake and active for almost twenty four hours.
There’s no hard and fast rule but
if you can plan to ease into intimacy, the better the evening/night will be.
2. You won’t know everything.
You might have read that and
thought “I have some sexual experience, you know.” Well, here’s some truth
you want to consider —sex within marriage is completely different from sex
outside of marriage. Past sexual experience will not make you a “pro” on
your wedding night. If anything you have a lot to unlearn and lots to learn
(See # 3)
Also on this first night you’ll
want to err on the side of less “wow.” Most grooms want to wow their
brides on the wedding night, many brides want the night to be memorable and
intimate and scoring a 10 out of 10.
I am not trying to be a wet
blanket because there’s nothing wrong with planning to wow each other. But
sometimes super high expectations can set you up for serious disappointment
when things don’t go according to plan.
It’s so much easier when you come
to your wedding night wearing a learner’s hat. Because learners don’t have
anything to lose but everything to gain. So prepare to become a student of
your spouse, not just on the wedding night, but for the rest of your married
life.
3. Shut the doors to your past.
If you have a sexual past, any
baggage and works of the flesh, you’ll need shut that door and leave the past
in the past. Begin to ask God to do a deep work in you now, to change you
and transform you.
Or maybe you come from the other
side of the camp —you feel completely clueless about a wedding night cos you
are a virgin.
It’s easy to feel clumsy and
foolish, easy to begin to think that you’ll never learn anything. Actually
there’s a little truth in there; you will always be learning something —better
get comfy in that student seat! But the whole truth is that you have
followed God’s design and plan for marriage. You are at the perfect place. He
will help you, you will learn.
No matter what camp you fall
under, don’t listen to the lies of the enemy who wants to discourage you.
Choose to fall in love with God’s truth. Allow His word be a lamp to your
feet and a light for your marriage path.
4. It might be awkward.
I had no idea that one can kiss
and breathe at the same time! So I held my breath on the wedding night
…and almost fainted! Okay I did not faint, but my breathless thereafter
was not merely a result of a …er …heady session.
So your delicate lingerie might
snap, you might fall off the bed, you might dislike the feel of lubricant, you
might gawk, and feel embarrassed till your toes curl. (Hopefully not all of
them in the same night!)
Here’s something to remember
—making love is not a neat, clean, surgical-precise process. It’s not what
you’ve seen or heard in movies (that you shouldn’t have been watching in the
first place!).
Making love can be awkward, messy
and hilarious! Doing it for the first time can be twice as awkward, twice as
messy and twice as hilarious! So you’ll need to bring in your easy genes.
Feel like running to the bathroom
and hide till you die of old age? Well, just don’t do it.
Tripped on your elaborate pair of
heels? (See why #2 is such a good idea?) Laugh it off and get along.
Your beloved is going through as
much awkward himself and taking things lightly will help both of
you. These awkward moments are “naked and unashamed” in motion; you are
learning to be vulnerable with each other. And making fun memories!
5. You must communicate.
There’s no other place where
wives hope their husbands will read their minds the most like the marriage
bed. And you’ll discover this on your wedding night where you sort-of hope
he will figure out your body all by himself without a lot of input.
The reality of the matter is that
you are learning your own body too (and his), so it’s not like you are expected
to deliver a whole thesis.
As we pointed out in # 2, you
don’ know everything, it’s your first night together (even if it’s not, it’s
still the first night under holy matrimony). So you’ll need to begin to
learn how to communicate and engage, to let him know what’s going on with you.
And in order to let him know
what’s going on with you, you’ll need to understand what’s going on with you.
So tune in and listen (see #6). Don’t fall for the lie that “he’s the man,
he’ll figure it out.” He won’t figure it out because he doesn’t live in your
brain. And even if he did, his brain works very differently!
So if it hurts or you want to try
something else or if you are sore and want a break for a few hours, tell him,
communicate. Don’t keep quiet, he wants and needs you engaged.
6. You can’t just lie there and
do nothing :)
It’s said that the biggest sexual
organ in a woman’s body is her mind. That’s no old-wives tale. One of the
things you need to begin to learn on your wedding night is to reign in your
thoughts and concentrate on the moment.
I remember having a thousand and
one thoughts buzzing through my mind —the guests, the food, the dancing, the
music, the ceremony. And the TV was running in the back ground. I was
distracted to pieces but I did not know what I know now —that sex begins in my
mind.
I can’t get into details but I’ll
tell you one resource that helped me prepare for my wedding night. Our
mentors had asked as to read The Act of Marriage: The Beauty of Sexual Love
, a book by Tim and Beverly Lahaye.

I read it month or so to the
wedding and my sweetheart got to read a week to the wedding. (You don’t want to
be lighting unnecessary fires so read any detailed intimacy books a really
close to the wedding day.)
So you want to get a resource and
learn something. Begin to unlearn untruths and learn the truth.
(If you have some solid biblical
resources for the bride/groom that you can recommend, please share in Comments
below. I’ve also heard great things about Sheila Gregoire’s book The Good Girl’s Guide to Great Sex
. I haven’t read it yet but I
love her blog and practical marriage and intimacy advice.

7. Sex might hurt a little.
The first time I heard that
brides bleed on their wedding night, I had images of a blood bath on our
wedding bed. Not trying to gross you out, but we can really be mixed up and
loopy about the wedding night! The first night might be uncomfortable, but
that’s all it is (or should be).
I like how one marriage blogger
put is. Concerning sex on the first night, she says:
“You will be sore, just like you
were after your first aerobics class. Hey, you’re using muscles you haven’t
used before. What do you expect? But just like exercise, you shouldn’t respond
by deciding it hurts too much that you have to stop doing it. Be gentle, be
careful, but keep up the ‘exercise.’ Your body will get used to it, and sex
will no longer hurt. “
Be gentle, be careful, but keep
up the “exercise.”
On the other hand if sex hurts
too much, you’ll want to see or call your doctor immediately.
8. The wedding night is not the
end, but the start of your life together.
Here’s the main thing I’d love
for you to take away from this post. You don’t have to have a perfect
wedding night. In fact, most couples will tell you that they did not have a
picture perfect wedding night. But they loved it anyway.
With all the embarrassments and
little issues, it was the start of their married life and they wouldn’t trade
the experience for anything. There’s so much to be grateful for and so much to
look forward to.
So don’t exchange the joy and fun
for perfect. Enjoy the evening/night/day and keep in mind that it’s not
all you have. There are hundreds of evenings to come.
You have more time to learn, to
grow, to explore, to get better. So enjoy this night/day because you only have
one first wedding night after all!
9. It’s not just about the sex.
Real intimacy in marriage is not
just about sex. It’s about connecting in all areas —mentally, emotionally,
spiritually.
Hopefully you’ve been connecting
in all these other areas (minus the physical) before your wedding
night. Work on building your friendship during engagement and courtship.
Because it’s connecting in these other areas that makes sex beautiful.
10. Have a mentor.
I love online ministry and
reading great books and listening to great sermons and teachings. However,
God designed us to do real life with real people. This blog and every other
resource is meant to complement real life relationships, not replace them.
Sometimes I’ll receive a heart-breaking
email from a reader and one thing I often ask is whether they have a mentor,
someone to talk to and walk with through life’s situations.
You need a mentor, someone to
share your heart with not just before the wedding but after. We are meant to do
life together.
A mentor will have real
instructions. For example I thought I was weird because we were using
(artificial) lubrication weeks after the wedding. I mentioned it to my
girlfriend and she reassured me I was normal!
You will have questions, need
real-life clarifications from someone who knows you personally.
I can think of some practical
things a mentor or close girlfriend can help you with:
– If sex is downright painful,
like shads-of-glass-tearing-into-you painful, see a doctor fast.
– Empty your bladder after (and
before, if you can get to it). It will help you not catch a urinary tract
infection.
– Fall in love with cleanliness.
(I know that sounds obvious but you know, some girls can go a weekend without a
shower.)
– Use a lot of lubrication.
– Keep a towel near, sex can be
messy (we already said that).
– Get something good for your
wedding night but be reasonable. That stringy lingerie might look good on a
mannequin but it needs to fit a real life body.
What can you add?
Okay so there’s my small thoughts
concerning this special night.
What wisdom can you add? Any
other biblical resources you can recommend?
For my single/engaged sisters, do
you have any questions? (Let’s keep any sharing or questions tasteful and
within reason of course.) If you have private questions, you can email me at ndoatakatifu@gmail.com looking forward
to reading all your thoughts and insights!
#marriagemissions
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