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If you're old enough to get married, you're old enough to make this decision for yourself. You can politely turn down his money if you want. You have the right to establish boundaries with your family. |
| Elope and spend the money on a fabulous honeymoon. DH and I did it. Best decision ever! |
This plus 1000! Ignore the weird haters on here. Seriously where did they come from? Oh yeah, Congrats!!!! |
| Very rude to take the money and not invite her. Also, no one is forcing you to take the money. Pay for it yourself and invite who you want |
OP here- we honestly thought about doing this. Did you regret not having a wedding with family and friends at all though? My concern is that at some point I'd regret not having the traditional wedding. |
Op here- my dad apologized to me about 3 years ago for never standing up for me. He called me out of the blue one day and opened up about how he regretted not taking my side and always being on her side. He was never around when she would throw things at me or hit me so he never saw it and she was good at persuading him that I was lying or being dramatic. |
Just don't invite your mom. It's okay to not have her there! I get the sense that an elopement would not be right for you. |
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OP, there's some weird hater on here giving you a hard time- ignore that person.
Here's my advice, though- you say you have siblings. Is it possible to assign someone to deal with her? That is, have someone who sits with her, who runs interference, who prevents her from getting to you? Is she this way to your siblings? Is she different with you? Is this just how she is and for whatever reason your siblings cope with it in different ways? I have no experienced anything like what you have posted, so take my advice for what it's worth. But for your family, maybe having her there (with several people in charge of keeping her away from you) might be worth it. tYes, she'd be in some pictures. But you can tell the photographer ahead of time about the issues and a skilled photographer will work to make her feel included while actually excluding her from some photos. I had a tough experience with my MIL before the wedding. Several of my husband's friends knew, and simply ran interference whenever she was headed my way - they'd swoop in and take her to dance or distract her. It was awesome of them. |
| Are your parents still married to each other? |
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The thing is, not inviting her to the wedding is pretty much an official cut-off of the relationship. Cutting her off may be the right thing to do; but sometimes it takes a while to getting to that point.
And a cut-off that is precipitated by something so symbolic as a wedding is likely to be MUCH more dramatic and difficult to manage than doing it in a way where you can be more calm and more sure about yourself. It's going to muddy the waters because now SHE can claim that you are the awful one and make it all about her and the offenses you have committed. Also, a complete cut off with your mom might not be the way you want to go anyway, since you seem to still want to be able to have a relationship with your dad and siblings who still live with her. So I think you really only have 2 choices: invite your mom, but work HARD to maintain good boundaries and not let her ruin things (like, have a deputized Mom Manager who ensures that she doesn't wreck things). Or, elope. |
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If you take the money, you have to invite her. But as another PP said, perhaps a sibling or friend can run interference so you don't have to spend any time with her at all. And you can mention to the photographer that you want to limit photos that include her to the whole family (ie not mother-daughter) and to make them quick.
Alternatively, you can tell your dad that you really appreciate the offer but you've decided you cannot accept the money to pay for the wedding. If he still wants to give it as a gift post-wedding, you could accept that, but you and fiance are adults and want to pay for the wedding yourselves and not feel beholden or obligated to invite any particular person, including your own mother. And finally -- if your parents are still married and you invite dad and not mom, as another PP said, that will be the complete end of the relationship. Which is fine if that is what you want. But be certain before you do it because there's really no going back. |
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OP, I have a mother like you. Don't listen to those people. They don't know what it is like to have a mother like that. If you don't cut her off, this mommy issue is going to create dramas for the rest of your life. It's going to affect your relationship with your husband and your future children, believe me. One day I decided that I had enough and cut my mother off completely. Sometimes I feel sad because my kids do not know their grandmother, but I'm glad that I does not subject them to the abuse from my mother.
Do not take THEIR money for the wedding. You wont' hear the end of it. Pay for it yourself. Do not invite your mom. It's your special day. Live a better and free life. |
OP Here- My siblings are both in high school so I'd hate putting them in charge of something like that. My dad knows how I feel towards my mom so I could probably ask him to do his best to keep her away and keep her as "normal" as possible during our wedding. No, she's not like this with my siblings at all. My brother is her "baby" as it's her only boy so he can do no wrong in her eyes. My sister pretty much took the place of me and is the daughter she always wanted and she makes that very clear. My sister can also do no wrong in her eyes and gets away with everything. For example- when I was 17, I got my cartilage peirced (top part of my ear). When she saw it, she called me a whore and a bunch of other nasty names and let me know how trashy it was. When my sister turned 15, she wanted it done and my mom happily took her. When I was 16, I came home from the movies with eyeliner on and my mom literally dragged me to the bathroom and scrubbed my face. My sister has been wearing makeup since she was 13 and my mom constantly takes her to Sephora to stock up......so you can see where I am coming from? |
+1 You don't have to let your dad contribute. If you do, understand that the cost of accepting the money is having your mother there. |
OP here- Thank you. I was seeing a therapist up until this past Summer and a lot of it was focused on my mom and how i was brought up and a lot of issues I have as an adult because of her. He told me that he ususally focuses on keeping families together and working through things but from everything that I told him and all the stories, he told me that the best thing would be to not have her in my life as she's such a toxic person. He thinks she is a narcissit (sp?) and that nothing will change and for my own mental health, I need to not have her around. When I have kids, i do not want her around my kids at all. She has no problem screaming at me on the phone in front of my fiance or saying nasty things to me so I can only imagine how she'd be around my kids. |