Go ahead and cut your nose off to spite your face, OP. A wedding is a few hours out of several days. If you really wanted to have a family reunion, then take your family and only you go to the wedding while your husband stays in the hotel. Or talk to the 90% of other guests who will need child care and figure something out. But you won't. You'll stay home and then you'll blame your cousin for ruining a family reunions, when it was her wedding, not your event. Your disdain for your cousin is clear in your original post when you went out of your way to tell everyone that you think it's tacky that they are getting married AFTER living together for six years and having two children. You just want another reason to judge/dislike your cousin, and now you can point to a whole bunch of people on DCUM who are equally outraged with what your cousin is doing, so you can feel righteous in your hatred. Enjoy your bitterness. |
Don't worry, you don't sound like a person that anyone would miss hanging out with anyway. |
Thank you for admitting that I am right.
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I'm the PP. It's not that they're not important at all, it's just that if you don't feel like getting a babysitter is worth attending my wedding (therefore deeming ME not important in a way), it's not important enough for me to go out of my way to make an exception for you to have your kids there. I want you there, but I'm not going to stress if you don't come. Sorry! |
I mean, yeah, though. Yeah. That is pretty much it, with you. --NP |
You know, it’s sentences like these that make me coming back to DCUM, day after day. Personally, I don’t want my grandchild’s wedding to be a photo shoot for my funeral. But maybe that’s me. |
There’s these other great things called family reunions, which can be planned without appropriating someone else’s celebration. I grew up in a time and place where weddings were a church and very close family /friend affair. Inviting second cousins once removed wasn’t in the plan. So, we found other ways to get family together because we wanted to. |
Exactly this. If you want a family reunion, plan one. Don't piggyback on someone else's planning, logistics, money, celebration, travel. Don't over-extend the guests. Let them focus on celebrating the coming together of these two families--bride and groom--which is what so many of you are advocating here. It's not about only your family, right? And making it about your family reunion would be stealing someone else's thunder. Accept or decline. The end. |
You are missing the point. Most people posting aren't in either the "kids have to be at wedding!" camp or the "kids ruin weddings!" camp. Most posters (the same ones, at least) are in the "Either way is fine, it's the happy couple's choice, guests don't get a vote, and can either attend or not, as they see fit. But guests who get pissy (like OP) about the decision (which again, they don't have a vote in) are both classless and presumptuous." camp. |
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Look, OP, at least your cousin told you no kids are invited up front.
One of DH's cousins invited the whole family to the wedding, kids and all. We bought plane tickets for us and our two kids, and then the cousin sent an "update" saying that oops, kids were not invited after all. By that point, most people had already booked plane tickets just like we did, and there was a LOT of bad blood. (We updated our RSVP to no, flew in, rented a car, and went to Canada for the weekend instead - the wedding was in upstate NY near the border.) Other than that sort of a gotcha situation - if they don't want kids there, you can either leave them home with your spouse or a babysitter, bring them with you and get a babysitter or just don't go. For out of town weddings with no kids rules, I always pick the last option but honestly, any of them can work. They owe you a clear heads up but that's all they owe you. |
| You are ridiculous OP. It is not "tacky" to not want kids at a wedding, even if the couple has kids. We had a kid when we got married, and debated the kid question while choosing a venue. In the end we wanted something nicer and not overrun with kids. My relatives were happy to have an adult night out and either left kids at home with local relatives or brought relatives in for the weekend or left their kids at our house with ours and a trusted paid nanny. My in-laws insisted on bringing the kid on their side. He sat around playing an iPad, got sick off too much junk food all day and didn't eat the expensive meal we had to buy him, and then his parents AND my in-laws left before the end of dinner to take care of him and never came back to the reception. He won't say it to them, but it really hurt my DH's feelings. If anything, that night solidified my view that people who feel their kids are entitled to go everywhere will end up being a pita regardless. It's been years, and we constantly have to cater to him/them and what they want. |
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My view is, you don't have to include children, but if you don't, you can't complain when the out-of-town people with kids decide not to attend. It's the same way I feel about destination weddings--have one if you want, but don't get pissy or hurt when people decide not to spend their time and money to attend.
My cousin recently got married, on the other side of the country. Kids were not invited. I flew out by myself to attend, since (1) the only people who could have babysat out there were also invited to the wedding and (2) it made no sense to pay for a plane ticket for a person who wasn't invited to the wedding. My cousin seemed to appreciate that I came, and her mom (my favorite aunt) did, too, so it was worth it. We've also made the decision not to attend weddings that required travel but did not include kids. |
+1. Learn to read an initiation. The kids were never invited. |
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Miss Manners says:
I want to have an adults-only wedding, but my sister-in-law is insisting on bringing my three young nephews. What should I tell her? If you are truly set on an adults-only wedding, don’t let your sister-in-law bully you into including her sons. The decision whether to include children should be made by you and your fiancé-and no one has the right to insist upon bringing univited children to a wedding. Make no exceptions, though. And be realistic. Many couples these days have kid-free weddings, but find that some friends and family members are therefore unable to attend. If your sister-in-law has to travel from another state to attend your wedding, she may not be able to leave her kids at home. If this is the case, you could offer to help with baby-sitting arrangements. Or you might decide to set aside a “children’s room” at the reception that is staffed with baby-sitters and filled with games and toys. Whatever your final plans, tell your sister-in-law you hope she understands your decision and will be able to attend |
Yeah, a Mr &Mrs is clear. When I got one addressed that way, I planned for only adults. Though the RSVP had food choices for kids, I still assumed my kids were not invited simply because they a limited guest list. No big deal. Did you already RSVP? I would contact your aunt or uncle soon and let me know you misunderstood and need to change your RSVP if you've decided not to come. Whatever, please decide soon because surely they have decisions to make and need accurate counts. |