LOL! Pretentious bores is a more accurate description. If they "never heard of it" in their teeny, tiney, lives, it's "tacky". LOL! |
| omg you people are sooo f'n bugged out about this.... a "money tree" is a nice way of saying we dont want u to pick out present for us bc well prob return it anyway... or wa want the money to pick out what WE want... or instead of getting multiples of everything bc NO ONE can give the cashier the registry to mark off items it saves me a trip to return everything... etc.... come on people it AINT ABOUT YOU.... they are simply telling you what they want for whatever the reason.. who are you to tell people what they need to get as a presnt.. or instead of cash you can give a gify card to a store you know they like for the reasoning that you are giving it to them.... hello people wake up!!! it aint about you! |
| I would bring fake money and stick it on the tree. Perhaps chocolate coins would be good? |
| A money tree is like a 'no gift' or 'donations only'. It is people feeling they have the right to dictate what is and isn't given to them. It is saying your gift will suck so we don't want it. In this case they saying..no gift shower please but bring money... |
| Hey OP, since this thread was resurrected from two,years ago, are you still around? Did you go? Was it awful? |
| I think it's tackier to turn down an invitation because your sensitivities are soooooo offended by the lack of etiquette of the inviter than to mention on the invitation that there will be a money tree at the shower. Geez, please do everyone a favor and don't go. You don't sound like any fun anyway. |
| I would go. It will probably be really entertaining. They might have strippers or somethIng. |
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It could be worst. It is a growing trend in my DH's home country to send out wedding invites with your bank account number on it for direct deposits.
I actually got questioned as to why our wedding invitations didn't include our bank account.
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Grrrrr. I meant it could be worse. |
I love how everyone agreed with this poster about how terrible this tradition was and no one took offense to her referring to the wedding as "ethnic". White people are so ridiculous. |
This is definitely a midwestern thing. I was in a wedding in Wisconsin and they had a dollar dance as well. Since I was close friends with the bride, I asked her about it and she acted like it was completely normal and was a little surprised that I'd never heard of such a thing. OP, is the mom-to-be Asian by chance? I know that in some Asian cultures (Chinese and maybe Japanese) money is given at weddings and for new babies so maybe they are combining Eastern and Western traditions? We had a traditional "American" wedding as well as a more "Chinese" reception since we are a biracial couple, and all of our Chinese family members handed us envelopes of cash. Just a thought. |
I'm not the PP but I think the bottom line to anything is motivation. If someone is having a potluck wedding shower and their attitude is one of wanting to celebrate with all their friends and family I'm not going to turn my nose up. If you are having a potluck shower and are asking me to bring cash or registered only for super expensive items and are asking me to bring a potluck dish and I don't know you that well - that's when it feels like a shakedown. A gift should be just that, something someone desires to give you and that you don't have any expectations of getting. I had to look up the definition of gift in the dictionary just to make sure I wasn't crazy. The definition says given voluntarily. Even if it is a cultural or regional thing, I would think that people that grew up with that tradition would do it gladly because they saw it growing up. There would be no need to be explicit. For guests that didn't grow up with that, they should have other options. At our wedding, for various reasons our relatives liked to give money as gifts. No way in heck would I ever think of pressuring anyone to give cash. But when we go to relatives weddings we give cash as a gift because we feel like it is passing on and remember that for us that may have been the difference in some of the honeymoon plans. |
+1 Well said. |
This summs it up well. This invitation is tacky. |
I'll bite. It's as stupid for someone to call out an group by race... for not calling out that somebody else calling somebody "ethnic". Fine, Sally Sensitive: "but it was a wedding from a different culture". Satisfied? |