I hope you don't think your aunt did a good thing. Your cousin had every right to have the type of wedding he wanted, and clearly could follow instructions (leaving kids home) in the future. Your aunt sounds petty and small, and that's not a compliment. |
| OP, for clarification: an invitation is not a summons. If their request doesn’t work for you, you simply don’t attend. There is no reason to be irritated. |
There was no adult in the room with the children when she was abducted; that is a completely different scenario than having an adult present. |
| Seeing the way most kids behave these days, I wouldn’t want them at my wedding either. I see lots of adults only weddings nowadays and am more than fine with it. |
She wasn’t left with a sitter, and therefore your point is moot. |
PP here. Only 2-3 kids were under the sitter's charge at our wedding--can't remember the ages. However, most people didn't have young kids at our wedding--a couple women were pregnant with their first, and a lot of guests were our parents' friends/older family members with no young kids. Our wedding festivities actually ended around 10-10:30, from what I remember (not a huge wedding, maybe 85-90 guests). If we were taking our now 6yo to an no-kids wedding, I think I'd leave her with the babysitter until 9ish, and then call it an early night. |
Of course I don’t agree with what she did. I just get why OP is so worked up, she may be use to a similar culture. |
Wow, that’s low. I hope she’s proud of herself. What an ugly person. |
A culture of manipulating family members to do exactly what you want them to do, and punishing them for years if they don’t comply? |
Ah no. Ive never been to a quickie wedding like you describe Didn't even know such a thing existed. WTH??? We didn't take our kids to out of town weddings when they were that little. We left them at home with a weekend babysitter - sometimes a family member, sometimes a hired sitter. Why in the hell would you fly your kids to an out of town wedding they aren't even invited to just to leave them in a hotel room. Leave them at home. |
Close. Mexican Catholics. |
| Where there is a wedding, there will be much bellyaching among family & friends. There is no way to make everyone happy. Ideally the guests would not complain on what the hosts decide to offer, and the hosts would not complain if the guests opt not come. |
| Had the same situation a few years ago, except the couple do not have kids. We understand that they want the ceremony to be solemn, and also had a hard time to pick who to invite. We initially said yes, but when we found out that kids are not allowed we responded no, and sent a gift. It was an out of state wedding so there is no way for us to go there without tagging the kids along, it's also an expensive airfare for all of us, when possibly only one can attend because the other will have to tend to the kids. Cousin's parents are probably upset, but I think they just need to understand that it's not going to work with that kind of set up. Never got a thank you note. |
She and her twin siblings were left without a sitter, with the door AJAR. I do not understand the logic that went through her parent's heads. So awful. |
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We are mid 30s. We are doing "no kids" at our wedding this August because (1.) so many of our friends have kids that it could easily double our guest list and turn the event into a play date, (2.) we are paying for our wedding ourselves and don't have family help, and (3.) we want a more adult affair and the venue isn't really that kid friendly.
We will have our nieces at the wedding and they will be the only children in attendance as flower girls. I totally understand if our friends can't make it and send their regrets. We also don't expect gifts from them. |