Anonymous wrote:I hate kids on the dance floor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of the kid-free weddings I have been to have ended in divorce. I think it is because people who are so uptight and lack a family focused don’t do well long term.
We had a kid-free wedding except for my four first cousins, one of whom was the flower girl. We’ve been married for 21 years.
So you did have kids at the wedding. Maybe you haven’t been to a wedding in a while, but the recent trend is NO kids.
I don’t think anyone really believes that their friends from college should be bringing their kids. Get a babysitter or don’t come. Whatever. The issue is close relatives of the bride and groom, first cousins, nieces and nephews, etc. There are no longer flower girls or ring bearers, etc. And it is really inconvenient. Because when you are this close to the couple being married, 1) you have to go, 2) the people who would normally watch you kid will be there, and 3) you are expected to attend all of the pre-wedding rehearsals and things, so it’s a three day event, not an evening out.
Honestly, I think the OP is lucky that she had a set of grandparents willing to look after them. I had to cobble together three or four different people to cover during my sister’s wedding.
Anonymous wrote:We did not children at our wedding, not because we don’t like them but because we have one set of family members who have 3 children who act like wild animals and the parents don’t parent. Because of them, we banned all kids (there would have been 13 at a 100 person wedding).
If you are invited but your kids aren’t, check yourself!
Anonymous wrote:We did not children at our wedding, not because we don’t like them but because we have one set of family members who have 3 children who act like wild animals and the parents don’t parent. Because of them, we banned all kids (there would have been 13 at a 100 person wedding).
If you are invited but your kids aren’t, check yourself!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just RSVP no. I don’t understand the big deal. They get to make the rules for their event, you get to decide whether to go and follow them or stay home.
The last wedding we were invited to was DH’s out of state cousin and it was no kids for $$$ reasons. It was fine! We stayed home and sent a gift. No hard feelings on either side.
An out of state cousin is different from a sibling. You don’t think it would be a big deal if you didn’t go to your husbands sisters wedding because she didn’t invite your kids?
It would be a big deal in my family.
Depends if my sibling is in town where we have support or requires travel where there is no vetted babysitter to watch our special needs kid. If it was the latter, I’d go without souse and child. Again, I don’t see the big deal. My sister is across the country. If she has a no kids wedding, I’ll go and leave DH at home with DS.
And no one would say anything ever about how your DH wasn’t going to your sister’s wedding?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just RSVP no. I don’t understand the big deal. They get to make the rules for their event, you get to decide whether to go and follow them or stay home.
The last wedding we were invited to was DH’s out of state cousin and it was no kids for $$$ reasons. It was fine! We stayed home and sent a gift. No hard feelings on either side.
An out of state cousin is different from a sibling. You don’t think it would be a big deal if you didn’t go to your husbands sisters wedding because she didn’t invite your kids?
It would be a big deal in my family.
Depends if my sibling is in town where we have support or requires travel where there is no vetted babysitter to watch our special needs kid. If it was the latter, I’d go without souse and child. Again, I don’t see the big deal. My sister is across the country. If she has a no kids wedding, I’ll go and leave DH at home with DS.
And no one would say anything ever about how your DH wasn’t going to your sister’s wedding?
NP and so what if someone says something? Will you turn to dust? Burst into flames?
Anonymous wrote:I agree with you OP. I had kids at my wedding. It was a destination wedding with the continental US. I wanted family members to come so I said yes of course bring your kids! I also really love their children. I had a kids section at the wedding with little table and chairs. PB and J sandwiches and easy kid food ( which is super cheap....you don't have to serve lobster to 3 year olds). I had bubbles and a little area for them to play. I had a babysitter there to help. And then as the night progressed there was a movie indoors for kids to chill out. They were not in the way at all. I think children bring joy! Some of my favorite photos from the wedding are ones with kids doing funny things.
And now when I get invited to a wedding in Aspen that kids are not invited to, I politely decline. It's just way too hard and expensive to try and find a childcare situation and get myself to the wedding. And I have also noticed that attendance numbers are quite low at these weddings, but if that is what the bride wants then that is fine!
Anonymous wrote:I used to be firmly in the “no kids at weddings camp”. But then yesterday I took my two kids to a wedding where there were also lots of other kids and it was so cute and fun.
If I could do my wedding over again, I’d include all the kids. There was so much more warmth and laughter with the kids.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of people will agree with you, but a lot of people here won’t. When I was a kid, kids were invited to all the weddings my family was invited to. I’m not sure when this changed.
Weddings are in large part a celebration of the idea of family. Circle of life and all that conveys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just RSVP no. I don’t understand the big deal. They get to make the rules for their event, you get to decide whether to go and follow them or stay home.
The last wedding we were invited to was DH’s out of state cousin and it was no kids for $$$ reasons. It was fine! We stayed home and sent a gift. No hard feelings on either side.
An out of state cousin is different from a sibling. You don’t think it would be a big deal if you didn’t go to your husbands sisters wedding because she didn’t invite your kids?
It would be a big deal in my family.
Depends if my sibling is in town where we have support or requires travel where there is no vetted babysitter to watch our special needs kid. If it was the latter, I’d go without souse and child. Again, I don’t see the big deal. My sister is across the country. If she has a no kids wedding, I’ll go and leave DH at home with DS.
And no one would say anything ever about how your DH wasn’t going to your sister’s wedding?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is pretty weird, too, but people can do what they want. Don’t feel bad RSVPing no. They invite. You get to choose if you attend.
I agree with this. They certainly have a right to do and I have a right to say no with no judgement.
I see both sides.
I had a good girlfriend who came to my small destination wedding when she was single. Fast forward several years and she is now getting married OUT OF STATE which would require me to be gone probably 2 nights due to it's location, and expects me come - but no kids are invited. Um, I have 2 small children so I tell her regretfully I can't make it. She is upset. Say what???? She says "can't someone just watch your kids?" I was flabbergasted. Uh, no. We have no family in the area, they are LITTLE, like both under 3, and my husbands job is such that he works hours that make it impossible to care for 2 little kids, one of whom isn't even in daycare. The cluelessness and utter obtuseness were astounding. I sent a nice gift and didn't lose a moment of sleep over it.
Are you serious? You had a destination wedding and have the gall to complain that she got married “OUT OF STATE”? I hope she dropped you as a friend because this is such an incredibly entitled way of thinking and I can’t bekieve you’re painting her as the obtuse party. You are saying that because you had kids first, your time and presence is more sacred than hers. Ugh. I can’t stand people like you.