Childen are a PITA at a wedding. I specifically said no children under age 16 It is their wedding, not yours and they can invite whom they choose. If you don't like it then don't go |
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I've got a no kids family wedding coming up. Sadly, my kids would be really excited to go -- they love weddings. (They are teen/tween.) I hate weddings because I think all the lovey-dovey "we're the most special people in the world and we are marrying our soul mates" crap is so laughable. I've been married way too long. I mean, I'm happy for them and all, but some decades ago weddings became like these over-the-top celebration of the bride/groom with toast after toast full of platitudes and inside jokes and professions that these two people are the most special people ever to find each other on the face of the earth. And then half the time you don't even get decent cake because people decided that was too traditional and so they're going to do something "unique" like popsicles or something.
Don't worry -- DCUM, I'm spewing my cynicism here, so I can be all smiles for the bride and groom, who really are a very sweet couple. And I'm going to just leave my kids in a hotel room by themselves with the wifi password and hope for the best. |
| Weddings aren’t “family events.” A wedding is whatever the bride and groom want it to be. Their wedding, their guest list, their choices. Go or don’t, but certainly don’t harangue them about it. |
Ahh...yes. It makes sense why you don't have enough money to invite your only cousin's child to your wedding then. |
+1 It's not a party thrown in your honor - it is a celebration of the bride and groom. Get over it, OP. |
| For the PP who mentions family reunions - you need to schedule, arrange, plan and pay for a family reunion, if that is what you want. Clearly, this is not what the bride and groom had in mind, and they are absolutely within their right. Kind of abhorrent how appalled one or two of you are that the bride and groom's day isn't about you and your little one. |
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+1 |
Grandparents don't help when a wedding is not happening - no way in hell they are helping in the midst of a wedding. If the grandparent wants to dictate how someone else plans their day, the grandparents can pay for the wedding. |
We were the childless couple getting married. Problems went beyond screaming-crying during the ceremony. Despite my offers the parents, GP's, etc wanted those kids present. There were numerous situations that were dangerous where the rescuers of the kids were people who didn't even know those kids and were reprimanded by some parents. Long dinner and some under a table- pulled on the cloth and entrees crashed so we also had 4 extra entrees on the bill. Clean up in aisle 5 - sorry table 5. |
NP here, there are lots of opportunities to have large/extended family gatherings (pre-COVID) but IMO it is often a thankless job organizing and becomes an issue of money, time, and the difficulties of not everyone being happy/agreeing with what is planned. It’s like the little Red Hen, I think a lot of people value being the one attending the events with the kids and getting to see cousins etc but not to the extent of volunteering or looking for opportunities to take on responsibility for -family reunions -birthday parties for adults like grandma’s 95th birthday -renting a beach house/vacation house together (that should be a subtopic on DCUM Family relationships unto itself) -milestone anniversaries for parents, grandparents etc. -hosting everyone for holidays so everyone can get together To OP, I agree with posters of you want an event with the kids together, feel free to plan the event you want. It’s also perfectly valid to decide the childcare outweighs attending your cousin’s wedding, same as people declining because of financial constraints. We haven’t attended any destination weddings because of cost. |
Interesting observation....I've noticed the same thing. Example, my BIL and SIL had a very fancy, no-kids wedding. BIL is a VP of a huge company, so money wasn't an issue. Almost 15 years later, they still complain about the people who didn't give them cash gifts. |
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Haven’t read all the replies.
It’s not rude for them to have a child free wedding. It’s also not rude for you to decline the invitation for any reason you wish. An invitation is not a summons. We’ve never had any family to watch our kids overnight (and no nanny or anything like that) so yes we do decline out of town weddings that don’t include kids. We are not resentful, we just politely decline and send a gift. |
| OP probably long gone. We got married no kids a long time ago and kept it small. You have other expenses : honeymoon save for home buy a car etc etc. money is real. Not everyone is a billlionaire |
I like your diversion because it gives me the opportunity to make the observation I love making about weddings - the one about how statistics bear out that the larger and more expensive the wedding, the higher the correlation with divorce. Spending tens of thousands on a fairytale wedding day is fine I guess, but lots of couples experience a lot of dysfunction in the lead up to the event and often that dysfunction pours over to other family members. This dysfunction is so common it is glorified in reality TV by our culture! Too many people- women especially - obsessed with the ‘princess for a day’ aspect of weddings today and not so focused on the pragmatism of lasting marriage. My parents got married in my grandmother’s living room. Married 47 years until my mother’s death. I’ve seen so many big production weddings result in marriages that didn’t last 10. Not sure it’s worth that kind of investment - whether or not kids attend. |