I attended a wedding where the bride had some kind of lace apron and danced around in a circle for guests to toss in money and, believe me, bulging envelopes and $100 bills were what was being "tossed" into her lace apron. Frankly, I would have been humiliated to have done this but it as an ethnic wedding. Only men were allowed to contribute as the bride gave each of them a kiss. It was obvious that a goodly sum was expected--nothing less than $100.00. |
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The point of the *wedding shower* is to help someone prepare for their new life w/spouse. I love showers. Plenty of goodwill there!
The point of the *wedding* is to celebrate. Not to shower with gifts, to celebrate the event. I love weddings, too; plenty of goodwill there too! But don't ask me for money when I've come not to shower you with gifts, but to help you celebrate your new marriage. If you are invited to the recepton a gift is obligatory but it should not be brought to church or reception. |
You rock. |
Calm down. Why are you expending so much energy on this thread and why are you so angry? You are doing exactly what you say others shoudn't do. Do you believe in reincarnation because I wonder if you weren't burned at the stake during the Spanish Inquisition. |
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Seems it's best if you politely decline the invitation. An exasperated guest is not a good guest. And I think you would really like to be a good guest!
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You are right, I am getting upset over nothing. I am not angry and should not argue. Being sincere, not sarcastic. I just think some people get way too wrapped up in formal etiquette and lose sight of the celebration because social rules are not what they think they should be. I'm Sorry. |
I find it sadly amusing that people would get exasperated over this small little shower "problem". Ladies, life it too short to spend it with a stick jammed this far up your uptight asses. Don't you have better things to worry about? Pr is your life this small and boring that this is what you all spend your time marinating on? Seriously? |
It does...enjoy your tackiness |
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I am not originally from the US. Where I come from, no one has baby showers. The parents can choose to have a party after the baby is born, but there is no celebration before the baby is born. Some people would be offended by a gift given before the birth since things could still potentially go wrong with the birth.
There is no right or wrong here. What's considered honoring the baby/mother in one sub-culture seems wrong in another. What's considered a charming tradition for some people could be considered tacky by others. Clearly, the people hosting the event see nothing wrong with the event. You can either choose to be offended, or view the whole thing as in interesting anthropological experience. |
Now that is awesome! I mean if you are going to whore yourself out you might as well charge more than a dollar for your trouble!
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Giving money is acceptable and expected for a lot of events in my Italian family. Money and food seem to be the answer for anything from a birth to a death.
It is just the way we do things. American culture is way too uptight about money. |
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Ignore D.C. "etiquette". It is nothing but a bunch of proclamations from a bunch of Yahoos from the middle of nowhere, trying to shed their Yahoo skin. Pissing contest. Worth nothing. |
Yes, I think we're all saying the same thing! Making a distinction between the wedding and the shower re: gift expectations. |
| I don't see the big deal. It's a shower and everyone knows that you're supposed to bring a gift. What's wrong with the host saying "I prefer you shop at this registry, or I prefer you give me money." If a person is offended at the thought of bringing a gift to a shower, then they simply need not attend. I had a friend get mad at me because I wanted my shower invitations to say where I was registered. She thought it was "pushing" a registry on my guests. I didn't think it was a big deal. Maybe I'm tacky, but IMO it's more thoughtful to actually bring a gift that a person wants / needs. However, asking guests to bring drinks / food to the party is a bit much even for me. |
Ha! So true. A girlfriend of mine passed out once from illness and, after the paramedics had been called and we had her sitting, all I could do was keep offering her water and crackers. I finally had to say, "I'm sorry, all I know how to do is feed you. You might just have to drink this water for me." Maybe I should have offered her a $10.
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