Help me write personal wedding vows — specific to my partner, not the generic 'I promise to love you in good times and bad' template.
MY PARTNER'S NAME: {name}
HOW WE MET (1-2 lines): {real_story}
3 SPECIFIC THINGS I LOVE ABOUT THEM (not 'kind' — specifics): {moments_traits}
2 INSIDE JOKES OR MOMENTS the audience will recognize (or not — that's OK): {moments}
1 HARD MOMENT we got through together: {context}
5 PROMISES I WANT TO MAKE that aren't 'be there in sickness and health': {real_things — keep loving their family, build the studio, learn their language, etc.}
TONE: {warm_funny / understated / poetic / direct}
LENGTH: {target — usually 2-3 minutes spoken aloud}
CEREMONY VIBE: {formal / backyard / religious / civil}
RULES:
- Open with one specific moment, not 'today is the most important day of my life'.
- Use the inside jokes. They're what makes vows yours.
- The promises must be specific. Replace 'be there for you' with one concrete thing.
- Land emotionally without going saccharine.
- End on a single sentence that's a real commitment, not a poetic flourish.
Give me 2 distinct drafts and a paragraph at the end explaining which parts of each I should consider keeping if I want to merge.0 copies·0 saves·4 views
209 words·1,212 chars
Sample output
Partner: Mira. Met at a bookstore in 2019, both reaching for the same Ocean Vuong book. 3 specifics: she always remembers the names of people I introduced her to once 6 months ago; she eats peanut butter straight from the jar at 11pm; she texts me articles 'you'll hate but I want to argue about it'. Inside jokes: the broken toaster, the airport flight in 2022 we almost missed. Hard moment: my dad's funeral, she sat with me on the porch for 4 hours and didn't try to fix anything. Tone: warm-funny-understated. Length: 2-3 min.
Draft 1 — Story-led
Mira — five years ago this month, you nearly took the last copy of On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous out from under me at Skylight Books. I let you have it because I assumed you'd vanish, the way bookstore strangers do. You didn't. We had coffee. You asked me four questions about my dad that nobody had ever thought to ask. I went home and bought a different copy.
What I love about you is the same thing I noticed that day. You pay attention. You remember the names of friends I introduced you to once, six months later. You text me articles you know I'll hate, just to argue. You eat peanut butter from the jar at 11pm and look me in the eye while doing it, like it's a dare.
The day my dad died, you sat with me on the porch for four hours and didn't try to fix anything. That's the thing I'm marrying.
I promise to keep arguing about the articles. I promise to keep your sister's number in my phone the way you keep mine in yours. I promise to learn Bengali well enough to understand the jokes at your mom's table. I promise to never own a toaster that works, in honor of the one we still haven't replaced. And I promise that on the worst day of your life, whenever that comes, I will sit with you on the porch for four hours and not try to fix anything.
That's what you taught me marriage is.
Parameters
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FAQ
Read your final vows out loud to one trusted friend. Cut anything that makes you cringe even slightly — your gut is right, the camera will not be kind to that line. The prompt targets Claude Sonnet and lives in the Writing & Content category on mycopyprompt.
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Mira, I'm not going to promise to love you forever — that's the easy part, that's already happening.
Here's what I will promise, specifically:
I promise to remember which side of the bed you're on, even after I've forgotten what year it is.
I promise to keep eating dinner at midnight just because you do.
I promise to learn enough Bengali to know when your mom is making fun of me.
I promise to never replace the toaster.
I promise to fight with you about articles you sent me on purpose because you wanted the argument.
And I promise, on the worst day you'll ever have, to do exactly what you did for me on mine — sit beside you, and not try to fix it.
I love you. I'm in.
Merge guidance: Draft 1's opening story is the strongest hook if you have time (~25 seconds spoken). Draft 2's list structure lands cleaner in a noisy venue and is easier to memorize. Best hybrid: open with the bookstore story (Draft 1, ~25 sec), pivot to the 5 specific promises (Draft 2 structure), close with the porch promise (Draft 1's last line — it's the emotional landing pad).