No way should you feel obligated in anyway to go to this...especially the graduation of a cousin that you are not particularly close with.
Looking back on my college graduation, I had my Mom, Dad, Sister there along with my Mom's two sisters and my godfather. Godfather was son of one of the aunts. Girlfriend was there as well. Held at the school stadium so tickets weren't an issue. At my sister's college graduation it was just my parents, me and my girlfriend. I went to one of my cousin's college graduations primarily because she went to St. Mary's in South Bend, IN and I wanted to check out Notre Dame. LOL. |
I would as a first cousin or aunt. I like ceremonies and milestones, and I think it's important to be present and share these moments when you can. |
My favorite reel the other day was background audio that was unintelligible “sounds like a graduation speech.”
“I want to thank my paahrents. Foralll the ha’ duh for meh. And to my frens, hhwwowiowlwnndnf (ha ha ha) who woul ha thought we woul beh heee today.” Caption: “you are sitting here for 3 hours so you can listen to the same speech given at every graduation” |
I come from a six kid family and we are very close but none of us has ever invited our sibs and their kids to a child’s college graduation. Weddings…yes….graduations no. |
My son didn’t even want to go to his own graduation. Would rather be doing something fun. I basically forced him to go for my benefit. Don’t think anyone should be obligated and there are usually limited seats. We wouldn’t have been able to have more than parents & grandparents if we wanted to. |
No, graduations are boring. However, generally it's not just the ceremony but the after parties, etc. that could be fun. But that doesn't mean you have to attend them, especially if flying is involved. You're fine to say no. |
No. In fact the ONLY extended relatives who get excited and want to go to these things are the weirdos. |
I haven’t read the replies, so I’m sorry if you’ve already answers this. But is your Aunt living in a separate part of the country from the rest of your your/her family?
I have an aunt who is exactly like this. Our whole family is from a northeast state and she and my uncle, early on in their marriage, moved hundreds of miles away to a southern state a few decades ago for my uncle’s job. She raised her whole family in the southern state and really romanticized the rest of the family back in the northeast. Over the years, perhaps understandably, she became very bitter that she’d travel back to the northeast for nearly all family holiday milestones but those same relatives rarely came to her state to visit her. As she’s gotten older, her immediate family milestones have become kind of a “let’s see who is going to show up for ME” test. I know this because I’d visit my cousins fairly frequently, simply because I was close with one of them. Could this be the dynamic. |
17:56 again. I’m not definitely saying that you should go. In your shoes, I wouldn’t attend. I’m just explaining what I’ve seen in my family. |
Definitely not ^ |
No! |
Spouse’s family seems to use graduations as an excuse for family gathering. So, in the fashion of spouse’s family, we hosted events in large rental and provided food for all, over several days. I would have been fine without any of it. Take kid to dinner. Going to graduations, with rare exceptions, is stultifyingly tedious.
If you want to gather, plan something fun. |
Ridiculous. Seriously. |