+1 Most weddings I've been to have exceptions for close family members. |
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I wouldn't have kids miss 3 days of school when they can't attend the reception. Leave them at home with DH.
Decide whether of not you personally want to go two days earlier for the dinner. Do not reduce your gift if you do. |
| Just fly, OP. |
To your SIBLING??? Cheap ass. |
Some no kid weddings invite the kids of bride + groom siblings. If a sibling is short on cash due to being a student, expenses, lower income employment, it's fine to give a low cost gift or go in on a joint gift. I had a kid get married- sibs with almost zero money contributed small amounts to a gift the couple really wanted and I paid the bulk. Also paid hotel etc plus gave $ for clothes, any travel expenses, non-wedding food... |
Going to school. Not driving 8-10 hours. You’re ridiculous. |
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OP here. Thank you everyone for the responses. I'm feeling better about doing what works best for my family. For some reason I did feel like I was being summoned to the Thursday dinner. I do think that is just for the groom's family, but it could change or I could be wrong. The wedding is in the bride's hometown whether my brother and bride do NOT live. There has been no word about a rehearsal dinner but I'm in the groom's family so don't expect to get all of the details about events until the actual save the date arrives in the mail.
Several have suggested thanking the bride's parents directly for the invitation to Thursday. That is a great idea I hadn't thought of. I'll do that. I agree it is a very thoughtful gesture on their part. It just lengthens the trip and takes more time away from work. At this point I'm inclined just to go myself on Friday and leave Sunday. DH's parents are not local so we'd either higher a stranger to watch them (not excited about that), or maybe one of my sibling's older kids (assuming they take their kids which they may not because they'll be flying). |
Uncle’s second wedding. |
It’s a wedding. Some people value family. The ceremony is the important part -the kids can attend. Op doesn’t have to bring them for the future in law dinner if she’s worrying about missing an extra day of school. I had tweens/teens attend my wedding even though they missed school and I appreciated it. And 10 years later I attended their weddings with my kids even though I had kids in school. That’s what families do. |
But in this case the kids aren't welcome at the reception. To many of us, that IS the most important part. |
This, definitely. |
I am on your side and generally agree with you but wanted to point out that your parents would be the ones who would traditionally hosting the rehearsal dinner so hopefully you can just check in with them! |
That is a fair point. Our parents are divorced. One parent gives a few thousand to spend on the wedding however the child sees fit. I haven't asked what that parent is doing for a second wedding. The other parent hasn't had the means to contribute to any of their children's weddings. |
I wrote that. For a second wedding, you betcha. |
Why do people have kids if they can't contribute to weddings? So classy. |