Anonymous wrote:You need to be an adult. Invite your father "plus 1" and invite your mother "plus 1." They are both adults and will deal. Seat them at separate tables, far from each other. They'll handle it maturely.
If your father wants to be an idiot and invite the new woman, let him. He'll look like an ass, and you'll look like the mature person you are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First, congratulations on your engagement. You seem like a nice guy, and I would probably feel the same way if some "woman" basically stole my family from me.
Regardless, I think what you need to understand is that it's very, very rude to ask someone to attend a wedding without their significant other. This is your father. Your mom and dad need to put their differences away for one weekend, put on their big boy/girl panties and be civil to each other for your wedding.
Put them at different tables across the room from each other.
Afdair partners don't get the respect of good manners.
Their treatment should reflect their crime against the family.
Anonymous wrote:First, congratulations on your engagement. You seem like a nice guy, and I would probably feel the same way if some "woman" basically stole my family from me.
Regardless, I think what you need to understand is that it's very, very rude to ask someone to attend a wedding without their significant other. This is your father. Your mom and dad need to put their differences away for one weekend, put on their big boy/girl panties and be civil to each other for your wedding.
Put them at different tables across the room from each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know that this is difficult but I really think that you should invite your dad and his girlfriend (she could be a grandma to your future kids) and your mom and let them decide whether to come. If you really hate the idea of the girlfriend that much, invite your dad alone and your mom alone. If your dad doesn't attend, that's on him. It's a painful situation, but I think your job is to try to rise above it and issue the invitations.
I have nothing to do with the woman who cheated with my dad. If my dad insisted on bringing her to a family event, he would not be invited.
You are responding to me...I would want my parent there more than I would want the Other Person not there. But I guess this is the sort of thing where you have to figure out where you are (I am totally against ending family relationships unless there is physical or emotional danger involved), draw your line in the sand, and deal with the consequences, whatever they are. Good luck, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know that this is difficult but I really think that you should invite your dad and his girlfriend (she could be a grandma to your future kids) and your mom and let them decide whether to come. If you really hate the idea of the girlfriend that much, invite your dad alone and your mom alone. If your dad doesn't attend, that's on him. It's a painful situation, but I think your job is to try to rise above it and issue the invitations.
I have nothing to do with the woman who cheated with my dad. If my dad insisted on bringing her to a family event, he would not be invited.
Anonymous wrote:I know that this is difficult but I really think that you should invite your dad and his girlfriend (she could be a grandma to your future kids) and your mom and let them decide whether to come. If you really hate the idea of the girlfriend that much, invite your dad alone and your mom alone. If your dad doesn't attend, that's on him. It's a painful situation, but I think your job is to try to rise above it and issue the invitations.