Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weddings are stressful. Just be gracious and leave it alone.
Hosting holidays is stressful too yet I never bow out.
Anonymous wrote:Team OP. That's rude to invite other cousins and not the one who has them for Thanksgiving. If it was all so above board they they wouldn't have tried to keep it secret. Your cousin should have told you from the onset that the guest list was going to be limited.
Unfortunately, not much you can do about it that wouldn't be petty. But you're certainly entitled to your feelings.
Anonymous wrote:Weddings are stressful. Just be gracious and leave it alone.
Anonymous wrote:Are all of the other cousins who are invited the siblings of the groom's parents? Do you have siblings who were invited even though you were not? Just trying to figure out why they singled you out? Because I agree it does seem very odd to not invite you and not even mention it.
Anonymous wrote:That sucks OP but honestly if they all came to your place for Thanksgiving I think you ARE close to them.
They are paying for the wedding themselves. Maybe there are space contraints. How many first cousins once removed (that is what you are to the groom) do they have? Maybe they just don't have room. Maybe the bride's parents have fifty first cousins so they decided not to invite parents' first cousins.
Don't blow up your relationship over this.
Anonymous wrote:Weddings are stressful. Just be gracious and leave it alone.
Anonymous wrote:In this case I would try to figure out why because that seems like such a selective and personal exclusion. Can your mom poke around? I would probably go to the cousin and just be really open and say 'I just found out about Larla and Tom's wedding and that we seem to be the only people not invited. I'm not angry but I'm a little confused and hurt and mostly want to understand why because I thought we all had a good relationship. Did something happen?'
So they aren't on the defensive about the wedding and you can just get to the meat of the matter.