from the desk of Mari

You’re engaged. You’re glowing. Your phone hasn’t stopped buzzing. And somewhere between the congratulatory messages, screenshots, and celebratory drinks, you quietly typed:
“I’m engaged… now what?”
Suddenly you’re 27 tabs deep in timelines, checklists, opinions, rules, trends, and somehow, instead of feeling excited, you feel… tired. Overstimulated. Like wedding planning has already become another demanding task on an already full life.
Let’s pause right here.
This guide is for the woman who doesn’t need more noise. She doesn’t want pressure, urgency, or a 47‑step checklist screaming at her. She wants clarity, peace, and a sense that this can actually feel calm and maybe even fun.
Think of this as a deep exhale. A clear path. A gentle, step‑by‑step way to move through your first 30 days after engagement without overwhelm, urgency, or losing the joy of why you’re here in the first place.
(Yes, you can close a few tabs now. This one can stay.)
Before we plan anything, we do something wildly underrated:
Nothing.
No timelines. No spreadsheets. No group chats titled “Wedding Stuff” that somehow already have opinions.
This week is about letting the moment land, because you only get to be newly engaged once.
If you’re both working demanding jobs, living in a busy city, and already managing a full calendar, this pause isn’t indulgent. It’s necessary.
Ask yourselves (over wine, coffee, or a walk and not a laptop):
There are no wrong answers. There is only awareness.
This is where planning begins, but not in the way the internet tells you.
This week isn’t about choosing things. It’s about choosing a direction.
Pinterest is wonderful. Until it starts convincing you that your wedding needs seventeen chairs you’ve never seen before.
Instead of saving everything, notice what keeps showing up:
When inspiration starts to feel heavy, close the app. You’re not falling behind, you’re protecting your joy.
Not glamorous, but incredibly freeing.
This week is about having the conversations that give everything else room to breathe.
Here’s the surprising part:
Smaller guest counts often mean less pressure, better experiences, and more intention — not less.
(And yes, it’s okay if your dream list quietly gets shorter once you imagine hosting everyone.)
If you’re dreaming of a destination wedding, this is often the moment it clicks: fewer people, deeper connection, and a setting that already does half the work.
By now, things should feel lighter, not louder.
This week is about making a few thoughtful decisions that open doors, rather than locking anything in too fast.
This is also when many couples realise something important:
They don’t want to manage this alone.
Working with a wedding planner, especially for destination weddings, isn’t about control. It’s about support, clarity, and having someone filter the noise so you don’t have to.
Your engagement period is not a race, it’s the foundation of your entire experience.
The first 30 days after engagement should feel exciting, grounded, and supportive, not chaotic. When you move step by step, with clarity and intention, planning becomes something you experience, not something you endure.
If you’re dreaming of an intimate destination wedding in Europe, this calm beginning matters more than you think.
This guide is part of a calm, intentional planning series designed to replace overwhelm with clarity. You can continue here:
(Each guide is designed to be read on its own, or saved for when you’re ready.)
If you’re craving a calm, guided approach from the very beginning…
I work with couples who value beauty, experience, and ease, helping them plan intimate destination weddings in Europe without the noise.
Schedule a consultation to begin your journey with clarity and confidence.