Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are your son's family and this is his special day. It sounds like you are purposely not including any of Dad's family and that is not a good example for your son. You email Dad saying you'd love to have them and that the cost of the meal is XXX and if they'd like to come, he can pay for the meal. Stop putting your child in the middle of your divorce. Allow him to celebrate with all his family, not just yours. If you are saying "our" families are going, then what exactly does that mean? You and your husband only? It should include Dad's family too.
OP: I am very well including his father's family. Grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, they are all coming. He's known them for years. But he has never met his stepmother's family, he doesn't know them. Why should he be forced to have them at one of the most important days of his life? He hasn't bothered to introduce them to him, they've been here for months and now this?
I should not be forced to pay for people my child doesn't know. This will put me into another pay bracket, reception place has limited seating.
Anonymous wrote:They are your son's family and this is his special day. It sounds like you are purposely not including any of Dad's family and that is not a good example for your son. You email Dad saying you'd love to have them and that the cost of the meal is XXX and if they'd like to come, he can pay for the meal. Stop putting your child in the middle of your divorce. Allow him to celebrate with all his family, not just yours. If you are saying "our" families are going, then what exactly does that mean? You and your husband only? It should include Dad's family too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My hunch is that these relatives are just pretending to be excited and would rather not go.
But putting that aside, if you can still change the head count, I suggest you allow them to come provided ex DH pays for them.
The person who was most supportive to me during the reading of my haftorah was a catholic Italian woman who was my dad's (jewish) best friend's wife. Every time i looked out into the congregation, she was beaming at me, and it gave me so much confidence. When they later had sons, she made sure they went to hebrew school and got bar mitzvah'd. Some people genuinely DO get excited and interested and are happy to go and be supportive.
Anonymous wrote:My hunch is that these relatives are just pretending to be excited and would rather not go.
But putting that aside, if you can still change the head count, I suggest you allow them to come provided ex DH pays for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the venue can accommodate the extra people he needs to pay for them. I wouldn't die on the hill of not inviting them but I would not pay for it.
This is what I'd do too. Consider that the new wife will probably be uncomfortable if the only ppl she knows are the kids and your exDH, so bringing these people will make her feel better. You can suck it up for 8 hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My hunch is that these relatives are just pretending to be excited and would rather not go.
But putting that aside, if you can still change the head count, I suggest you allow them to come provided ex DH pays for them.
Pp here. I forgot to add that it is of course ridiculous for him to make this demand two weeks before an event that you were paying for. I suggest the above because I think sang know will be more work for you, emotional energy wise.
Anonymous wrote:My hunch is that these relatives are just pretending to be excited and would rather not go.
But putting that aside, if you can still change the head count, I suggest you allow them to come provided ex DH pays for them.
Anonymous wrote:If the venue can accommodate the extra people he needs to pay for them. I wouldn't die on the hill of not inviting them but I would not pay for it.