Anonymous wrote:Sorry, but eating ramen so you could blow $45,000 on a wedding ten years ago is ridiculous. Did your mother refuse to help you plan the wedding or did you not ask for help? The chip you have on your shoulder was placed there by you, not someone else.
Anonymous wrote:This would bother me too. OP, have your own shower. Make it no gifts, but invite your friends for a belated bridal shower. We don’t do games at showers in our family, but if you do, do all the games, have a cake, mimosas, etc.
And I would 100% correct my mom.
“We paid for Jenny’s wedding. It’s what parents do!”
“Actually, mom and dad paid for close to half of the wedding expenses. John and I saved to pay for the bulk of the expenses.”
I am sure that makes me a small person, but whatever.
Anonymous wrote:If I was you, OP, I would drop the whole cost of the wedding conversation. Like other PPs have said, your mother likely thinks the $15K covered it (and I also got married 10 years ago in DC, with a huge close family with 200 guests and our entire wedding-- open bar/dinner/beautiful venue cost ~22k, so her thought is not unreasonable).
I do not see a problem, however, in saying something about this pressure and expectation that you throw showers for everyone when no one thought to throw you a shower for your wedding or a baby shower.
I think I would be hurt that in that situation, too.
It might be they just didn't think of it, or maybe you are viewed as the party planner in the family and thus no one thought to throw one for you, etc. At the very least, if you are still feeling so hurt by it a decade later, it might be a good idea to discuss it in a non-accusatory way.
I would just think carefully about what you want out of the conversation-- do you want them to apologize? Do you want them to stop pressuring you to throw showers for others? etc
I would also consider what you would do if they get defensive. Are you willing to drop it to avoid a fight or hard feelings? etc.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. This thread actually helped me a lot. I spoke with my mom and she said I was too young to need anything when I was getting married and that she told my aunt not to throw me a shower (I didn’t know my aunt evenoffered to throw one). She said a 23 year old didn’t need fancy china like a 30 year old does who hosts family holidays.
I did know that my parents thought I was getting married too young but dh and I were happy together (and still are!) and wanted to get married before buying a house and moving in together.
My family is wealthy. We are not but are comfortably happy and I don’t regret any money spent on my wedding. I guess I just feel like people don’t support young marriages the same way they support older marriages, but that’s my opinion.

Anonymous wrote:I would let them say it and let others believe it. Much better than having people know you were dumb enough to waste 45k on a wedding.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. This thread actually helped me a lot. I spoke with my mom and she said I was too young to need anything when I was getting married and that she told my aunt not to throw me a shower (I didn’t know my aunt evenoffered to throw one). She said a 23 year old didn’t need fancy china like a 30 year old does who hosts family holidays.
I did know that my parents thought I was getting married too young but dh and I were happy together (and still are!) and wanted to get married before buying a house and moving in together.
My family is wealthy. We are not but are comfortably happy and I don’t regret any money spent on my wedding. I guess I just feel like people don’t support young marriages the same way they support older marriages, but that’s my opinion.