| Slip out of the reception on the early side, but also view it as a growth opportunity for your tween. Kids need to learn to do things that make them uncomfortable. |
This! |
+1 Excluding 10+ year olds is very different from excluding babies and toddlers. There's something off about adults who can't even tolerate a big kid or teen. |
+1 It's giving enmeshed. |
Babies and toddlers get disinvited because they cry and whine too much. Valid. Tweens get disinvited because because the bride and groom are maladjusted weirdos who spend too much time on the childfree subreddit, an insane asylum. |
So RSVP no and don't go. But you don't get to decide that Larla is invited on your own accord, even though she is not. |
| do people really invite the children of work colleagues to their weddings? it is one thing to invite the children of family members but the older children of work colleagues? that seems unnecessary. |
| All of the people castigating OP for not leaving her tween daughter alone are the same people who would be castigating her if she left the daughter alone and some accident, injury, or crime befell her. |
Nope. My tween has been home alone for a few hours, including over dinnertime. In OP's position, I wouldn't necessarily stay until the end of the reception, but I'd absolutely go. |
It doesn't have to be alone, it could be with a babysitter. But either way, not being able to leave your child for a maximum of 5 hours is creepy and helicoptering. |
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Why didn’t you secure child care prior to your RSVP to this wedding ?
You should just not attend. |
Agree. It's generally the helicopter "any risk is too much risk" group worrying about random kidnappings and other outlier events who point the finger when something bad happens in part to justify their own parenting choices and that whatever tragedy would NEVER happen to their kid. |
| This is the origin story for all the offspring in the adult child forum who moved back home because they don't like working and their apartments |
There's not! It's usually a question of numbers. Most people do not invite kids to weddings. If OP had four kids, that would be four additional plates. Many of their guests probably have kids -- where do you draw the line? |
| Years ago I went to a childfree wedding where the bride had tantrum because her widowed cousin brought her 14 year old daughter as her +1 to the ceremony and reception. A little different from OP's situation, but goes to show you that people who insist on childfree weddings can be quite insane and you shouldn't agitate them. |