Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brides parents paying all of the costs is not a thing anymore.
When I got married (my parents and dh’s are well off) our parents split the major vendors down the middle- venue/catering, liquor, flowers, orchestra/band, etc. then they each paid for their guests per head because my family had a larger guestlist.
If you are making a more extravagant wedding than they are comfortable with, they should chip in what they’re willing/able to.
Yes, Boomers changed all the rules. They were quick to expect their own parents to pay for college, weddings, glory hole boxes, and house down payments. Now – unsurprisingly – these traditions have conveniently fallen out of favor. Even newlyweds that were expecting to get the shaft are left with nothing but an empty sack!
Speak for yourself. My boomer parents were broke as a joke when they got married. My mom never went to college. They had a very simple wedding. Their parents didn't give them squat. I know a lot of people like that.
Same. But people with rich parents forget we exist at all.
They live in a very tiny insulated bubble and then make these vast sweeping ridiculous generalizations. My boomer parents are comfortable now considering they were descended from a bus driver and teamster who had nothing themselves and therefore nothing to pass on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brides parents paying all of the costs is not a thing anymore.
When I got married (my parents and dh’s are well off) our parents split the major vendors down the middle- venue/catering, liquor, flowers, orchestra/band, etc. then they each paid for their guests per head because my family had a larger guestlist.
If you are making a more extravagant wedding than they are comfortable with, they should chip in what they’re willing/able to.
Yes, Boomers changed all the rules. They were quick to expect their own parents to pay for college, weddings, glory hole boxes, and house down payments. Now – unsurprisingly – these traditions have conveniently fallen out of favor. Even newlyweds that were expecting to get the shaft are left with nothing but an empty sack!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that each side should offer a check, and let the couple figure it out from there.
I got married 9 years ago, and my mother in law announced after our engagement that "she would be paying for the weddings of her daughters, and not for her son."
FIL, divorced from MIL, asked if he could pay for the welcome dinner, and invite a larger number of his extended family. I thought that was fair and thoughtful of him.
MIL refused to give a penny, and continued to add to the guest list even after we set a cut off date.
My parents happily gave us an amount that they felt comfortable giving, and DH and I contributed the rest.
I lost a ton of respect for MIL from that process, which was informative. It showed that she was interested in taking and never contributing. It proved true for the duration of our marriage.
Why did she refer to herself in the third person?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brides parents paying all of the costs is not a thing anymore.
When I got married (my parents and dh’s are well off) our parents split the major vendors down the middle- venue/catering, liquor, flowers, orchestra/band, etc. then they each paid for their guests per head because my family had a larger guestlist.
If you are making a more extravagant wedding than they are comfortable with, they should chip in what they’re willing/able to.
Yes, Boomers changed all the rules. They were quick to expect their own parents to pay for college, weddings, glory hole boxes, and house down payments. Now – unsurprisingly – these traditions have conveniently fallen out of favor. Even newlyweds that were expecting to get the shaft are left with nothing but an empty sack!
Speak for yourself. My boomer parents were broke as a joke when they got married. My mom never went to college. They had a very simple wedding. Their parents didn't give them squat. I know a lot of people like that.
Same. But people with rich parents forget we exist at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brides parents paying all of the costs is not a thing anymore.
When I got married (my parents and dh’s are well off) our parents split the major vendors down the middle- venue/catering, liquor, flowers, orchestra/band, etc. then they each paid for their guests per head because my family had a larger guestlist.
If you are making a more extravagant wedding than they are comfortable with, they should chip in what they’re willing/able to.
Yes, Boomers changed all the rules. They were quick to expect their own parents to pay for college, weddings, glory hole boxes, and house down payments. Now – unsurprisingly – these traditions have conveniently fallen out of favor. Even newlyweds that were expecting to get the shaft are left with nothing but an empty sack!
Speak for yourself. My boomer parents were broke as a joke when they got married. My mom never went to college. They had a very simple wedding. Their parents didn't give them squat. I know a lot of people like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brides parents paying all of the costs is not a thing anymore.
When I got married (my parents and dh’s are well off) our parents split the major vendors down the middle- venue/catering, liquor, flowers, orchestra/band, etc. then they each paid for their guests per head because my family had a larger guestlist.
If you are making a more extravagant wedding than they are comfortable with, they should chip in what they’re willing/able to.
Yes, Boomers changed all the rules. They were quick to expect their own parents to pay for college, weddings, glory hole boxes, and house down payments. Now – unsurprisingly – these traditions have conveniently fallen out of favor. Even newlyweds that were expecting to get the shaft are left with nothing but an empty sack!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BG: our DD and her fiancée are both seniors in college and recently got engaged. DD is accepted into medical school and the fiancée into a top MBA school. Neither has debt from college. We will pay for DD medical school and his parents will pay for MBA school. Both families are well off with family all in the US.
The fiancée’s parents are going to traditional route and want us to pay for our DD’s wedding. While we can, we also have a second DD and their’s is an only child. We also feel we are keeping the young couple out of debt (but so are they). I want to suggest we split the costs but I don’t want to offend them.
DS says he and the fiancée will contribute but they don’t have much to contribute and we don’t want them to.
The fiancée doesn’t want a fancy wedding but we both have big families.
Should we ask the fiancée’s parents to contribute? How should we word it?
It is 100% the responsibility of the bride’s parents to pay for the wedding, irrespective of family size and wealth. Our son got married about ten years ago and his fiancée’s parents didn’t offer to pay a thing. Yes, we own a successful business, have a 15,000 sqft home, a NW of $150M, and own $1M+ in automobiles, but this shouldn’t have mattered. We had to step up and foot the bill and what a total embarrassment and irrevocable loss of face that was for the father of the bride. He was a proud military man that was dishonorably released, demanded respect, but did nothing to earn it. My son and DIL are now completely estranged from her side of the family. We rightfully own all holidays, birthdays, and priority time with the grandchildren.
So you would have been fine with cake and punch at the VFW hall, if that’s what they could have afforded?
Seriously. The 150M net worth PP is a complete douchebag.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that each side should offer a check, and let the couple figure it out from there.
I got married 9 years ago, and my mother in law announced after our engagement that "she would be paying for the weddings of her daughters, and not for her son."
FIL, divorced from MIL, asked if he could pay for the welcome dinner, and invite a larger number of his extended family. I thought that was fair and thoughtful of him.
MIL refused to give a penny, and continued to add to the guest list even after we set a cut off date.
My parents happily gave us an amount that they felt comfortable giving, and DH and I contributed the rest.
I lost a ton of respect for MIL from that process, which was informative. It showed that she was interested in taking and never contributing. It proved true for the duration of our marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Brides parents paying all of the costs is not a thing anymore.
When I got married (my parents and dh’s are well off) our parents split the major vendors down the middle- venue/catering, liquor, flowers, orchestra/band, etc. then they each paid for their guests per head because my family had a larger guestlist.
If you are making a more extravagant wedding than they are comfortable with, they should chip in what they’re willing/able to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BG: our DD and her fiancée are both seniors in college and recently got engaged. DD is accepted into medical school and the fiancée into a top MBA school. Neither has debt from college. We will pay for DD medical school and his parents will pay for MBA school. Both families are well off with family all in the US.
The fiancée’s parents are going to traditional route and want us to pay for our DD’s wedding. While we can, we also have a second DD and their’s is an only child. We also feel we are keeping the young couple out of debt (but so are they). I want to suggest we split the costs but I don’t want to offend them.
DS says he and the fiancée will contribute but they don’t have much to contribute and we don’t want them to.
The fiancée doesn’t want a fancy wedding but we both have big families.
Should we ask the fiancée’s parents to contribute? How should we word it?
It is 100% the responsibility of the bride’s parents to pay for the wedding, irrespective of family size and wealth. Our son got married about ten years ago and his fiancée’s parents didn’t offer to pay a thing. Yes, we own a successful business, have a 15,000 sqft home, a NW of $150M, and own $1M+ in automobiles, but this shouldn’t have mattered. We had to step up and foot the bill and what a total embarrassment and irrevocable loss of face that was for the father of the bride. He was a proud military man that was dishonorably released, demanded respect, but did nothing to earn it. My son and DIL are now completely estranged from her side of the family. We rightfully own all holidays, birthdays, and priority time with the grandchildren.
So you would have been fine with cake and punch at the VFW hall, if that’s what they could have afforded?
Seriously. The 150M net worth PP is a complete douchebag.