I don't understand how family means everything, and the culture is super family oriented, but no family around to help out? Ok. |
You don't read well. Try it again. |
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It's a very touchy topic. |
| I understand the no kids thing if the family are heavy drinkers. |
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A agree.
For the most part anyway; if you give me a required "dress code color palette" I'm going to roll my eyes. Hard. I'll find a %$#@ing "cornflower blue" or "dusty rose" or whatever dress. But I'm going to look down on you and probably even talk about it. |
What? Oh wait. That's right. We WASPs are all exactly the same. All however-many-millions of us. Ok. |
Happened to me as a flower girl when I was little. I still remember it and how upset I was. That said, I was like 7, lol. As an adult, I think it's fine. |
The wedding industry has became massive, Instagramified, and overworked. My parents got married in the backwoods church my mom grew up in and had the reception at the local vfw. People used to have cake and punch weddings. A 100 guest wedding in a decent location with florals is going to run you about 50 thousand in the DC area. I think that insane expense makes brides want every single little detail to be perfect. |
Why do people on DCUM turn everything into this class thing? You really think that not inviting kids to a wedding is about being perceived as "elegant" and "distinguished"? And that "Old Money" people (I swear, this is a made-up aesthetic to you people, you are always so far off with it) "just invite everyone" and that "working class" do the same? Some venues and times are more or less appropriate for kids. That's all. Some parties are appropriate for kids, and some are less so -- no matter the "class" of the people throwing it or the country it is taking place in. |
I will assure you, this is not the case. |
| My brother and his wife did not invite my kids. They invited me, so that was nice. But I live across the country, 10 hours of flying. So I did not go (it was my brother’s second wedding and he is a disaster). A wedding can be a party, or it can be a celebration of the joining of two families. In this case, it was the former. |
Yes, a hundred people drinking too much, at a reception that starts at 8pm ... With some crowds, it's not going to be the best for kids. The opposite of how that PP was saying that people want to look "elegant," lol -- more like the opposite, they are concerned it will be anything but. My sibling told my mother that she was only invited to the wedding if she promised not to drink. She promised. And drank. And it was a disaster. Not family friendly. |
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I love how some of you drone on about “the joining of two families” when you’ve probably met, say, your brother’s wife’s cousin only during that wedding weekend. And while he was perfectly pleasant, he didn’t even make your holiday card list.
I love how “it’s the joining of two families” but you only see the vast majority of the “now-married-in” people at your cousin’s wedding is if mayyyyybe you all live locally. Get over yourselves. A lot. |
I was a 4 yr old flower girl at a wedding and it was a horribly long boring day. My brother and i were the only kids there. Not sure why people are desperate for their kids to be a part of this. |
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It’s because weddings are now typically a weekend long. When my parents went to evening weddings without us, it was an evening— they’d leave around 4 and be home by midnight.
Now theres “out of town” dinner and departure brunch and the wedding venue is 2.5 hours driving. Of course people resent the ask to get three days of childcare, it’s nothing like a trip to the dentist. If couples are good with a no, I have no concerns. When they start complaining about the no (or expecting gifts) then it’s extremely tacky. Invitations are not summonses or invoices. |