I’ve been married to the Serb for eleven years and in that time we’ve been lucky enough to attend a few cultural shindigs. The recent wedding of his cousin, with over 600 people at the reception, was the pinnacle of my training.

It could be my giving nature or that I watched Karate Kid II yesterday, but I’ve decided to impart you with some wisdom from the Rakija-soaked trenches. Here is a handy cheat sheet to help you survive—nay thrive—should you ever find yourself in a similar situation.

Get Yer Hooch On
I purchased my hoochie mama dress months ago, but chickened out when I realized the celebration would begin hours before the ceremony. Also, despite my lack of religious upbringing, it seemed wrong to have so much cleavage flopping around a house of worship. Fortunately, most of the other women had two outfits planned all along, so my girls had a chance to come out and play after all.

Me being demure. I don't know why I'm wearing sunglasses indoors.

Me doing my best Blake Lively impression.

Barfing and Car Crashes Aren’t Cool
Prepare hangover cures and designated driver arrangements in advance. The Serb swears by Ibuprofen and vitamin B before bed while I rely on a quarter pounder with cheese for breakfast the next day. As for the driving situation, I think it’s an unspoken Serbian marriage vow that the wife will be DD until death do they part.

Kako Si?
Like most people learning a language, the first Serbian phrases my husband taught me were the bad ones. As a result, I can make a sailor cry in ten words or less. Make sure you have some phrases in your back pocket that can be used in polite company (“moje ime je Lori” = “my name is Lori” “hvala” = “thank you” “Ja sam oženjen” = “I am married”).

Prepare for the Meat Sweats
A Serbian wedding reception without meat is like a politician without a sex scandal: it’s just not done. This reception was held at an Italian banquet hall and offered guests the standard soup, salad, pasta, chicken parmesan with veggies and tiramisu (*shudder*). What made our dining experience uniquely Serbian were the massive trays of lamb, pork and beef that supplemented the meal (the lamb and pig having been recently roasted on a spit). Any leftover meat was brought out at midnight along with the mountains of cookies and cakes.

This isn't from the actual reception, but you get the idea.

Embrace the Sweaty Palms of Others
A kolo is a folk dance that is part bunny hop, part line dance and all sorts of awesome. People hold hands and perform a grapevine-type move from side to side. The music usually gets faster and one song can last over five minutes with hundreds of people snaking across the dance floor, around the tables and maybe even through the kitchen. Dancing kolo is a wonderful metaphor for life: some take it very seriously while others smile the entire time; most parts are beautiful but it can also get a bit messy; and, just when you think you’ve got the hang of it, a new move is thrown your way. All you can do is hold on tight and try not to step on too many feet.

I can’t get this thing to embed, but here is a quick link of a kolo that began before the meal was even served, or the bride and groom even sat down: IMG_2341

26 Responses to Secrets of a Serbian Party Ninja

  • Miloš says:

    Must have been a crazy wedding, 600 people, incredible, mine had 150 guests and I thought that was way to much.

    “Ja sam oženjen” does mean “I am married” but only for men, for women you would use “Ja sam udata”.

    About “kolo”, if the first one was at the reception that’s nothing. At my cousins wedding (about 450 guests) there was one at the groom’s house before his party left to pick-up the bride, then there was one when they arrived to the brides house, one before we left for church, one after church, and a whole lot more at the reception, and it was like 104 degrees that day, amazing how people in their 60′s can dance, eat and drink so much in that much heat.

    • Lori Dyan says:

      Ohhh – I think my husband just passed a major test if that’s the version of “I am married” that immediately came to mind ;-)

      And you’re right – it was only the first kolo of the reception. There were more than a few at the house/church before that!

      I think the seniors are so good at it because they’ve been in training for 50+ years :-D

  • annabelle says:

    1. You look lovely. That red is hot hot hot.

    2. The Blake Lively reference made me laugh. Do you read GoFugYourself? They call her Boobs Legsly and I love it.

    3. I rarely pimp out my place, but I’d really love to hear from the people that I myself like to read, on this particular post. So if you could make a comment here:
    http://dontmakeitlikeimdumb.blogspot.com/ that would be super sweet.
    THANKS
    a-

  • Holy Hotness, Lori. Wow!

    You put the hot in saucy…

  • Suniverse says:

    Kako si? Dobro.

    Ethnic weddings are exhausting. I couldn’t get over the first American wedding I went to. It was a sprint, not a marathon.

    Loving the red dress.

    • Lori Dyan says:

      Shut. The. Door.

      You speak SERBIAN!?!??! I may have to get knocked up by the Serb just so I can name a baby after you.

  • lisa says:

    ok, i’ve known you for how long now? longer than you’ve known the Serb, that i know. And i had no idea you were so stacked! nice work sister

    • Lori Dyan says:

      HA! I KNOW! It’s something about that dress combined with a certain gel bra. I took a pic of my cleavage for the post but the Serb deemed it mucho inappropriate for the interwebs (like, Dolly Parton obscene).

  • Elena Aitken says:

    Lori,
    Holy hotness, mama!

    I, like you, I rely on the quarter pounder with cheese as a hangover cure while my hubby swears by the ‘bottle of gatorade before bed’ trick.
    Sounds like a fun wedding for sure.
    Elena

    • Lori Dyan says:

      Hmmm…maybe it’s a Calgary thing…

      Check you out commenting from the fancy pants new blog! Love it!

  • Tiffany says:

    girl, that red dress is sassy. and i would like to have it please.

  • The kolo sounds all sorts of awesome =)

    Also, the red dress is smokin’. Just saying.

    • Lori Dyan says:

      Ha – thanks – the kolo is great. When we move, the Serb wants to hire the band to play at our housewarming.

  • Ally says:

    I’m ibuprofen and vitamins AND the greasy breakfast! :)

    Best line: “Ja sam oženjen” = “I am married”. Hahaha

    The whole things sounds like an amazingly fun time!

  • I think I might secretly be Serbian.

    Because rolling out meat leftovers at midnight sounds smart.

    (and it preps your stomach for the quarter pounder in just a few hours…)

    Also, that dress???

    Yowsa.

    (is that something nasty in Serbian, by any chance? because I’m really feelin’ it.)

    XO

  • Morgan B. says:

    That’s it- my next husband is going to be Serbian. And rich and handy, obvs. ;)

  • Samantha says:

    This reminds me of the few weddings on my father’s side I attended. All God fearing Catholics, but with enough cleavage to make a hooker blush. And the meat. My cousin’s wedding had several different carvable animals, as well as free flowing booze.

    All that remains of my Hungarian is very dirty curse words and how to ask where the dog is. Priorities!

    • Lori Dyan says:

      Hey – my hubs is Serbian but from a tiny town on the border with Hungary that used to be part of Hungary (he learned the language in school). I wish I had some Hungarian words to curse you with but, alas, mine are limited to Serbian. I will be learning how to say, “Where the f*** is the f***ing dog?!?” tonight!

  • Sendie says:

    Looking good Lori!!! That red dress is a keeper!!
    Hope you enjoy the wedding. My wedding have 2000 people in attendance. It is a literally “my big fat Indonesian wedding!” :)

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