Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tradition is the groom pays FLOP- Flowers, liquor, orchestra, photographer and rehearsal dinner. Turns out to be about 50-50. We’re lucky in that neither of us had student loans so we were able to use our wedding gifts as part of our down payment.
Never in my nearly 50 years of walking on this earth have I heard this. Sounds like something made up by a Bride mag. Not saying it’s terrible; it’s certainly not “tradition”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think as an Indian parent, I have a certain dream of what the weddings of my kids will look like. I want to invite people that I have spent a lifetime connecting with. So I would want a certain minimum standard to be adhered to and I have my list of guests too. I certainly won’t want to pay for the other party’s guests. I am willing to pay for 20 people from other side but the other party can pay for who so ever else that they they want to invite.
In short, I will pay the same amount for my son’s and my daughter’s wedding and I will pay for events that I want to happen, customs that I want to be observed, and guests that I want to be invited. If the bride and groom and the ILs want to piggyback on the event, and invite their own guests, they will have to cough up the cash for additional guests. And I am certainly not paying for events and ceremonies that is not from my own faith.
If my kids would rather do their own stuff and pay for it themselves, we are more than happy to show up like guests. However, the current trend is that non-Hindus love to get a Bollywood wedding and not spend a dime of their own money.
Ugh.
My (Indian) in-laws did exactly this. We threw, and paid for, our own modest wedding, with our own small guest list. My in-laws insisted on a massive, elaborate wedding, with everyone they'd ever met in attendance. It was the most miserable evening of my entire life. It was all about them, them, them. They also lied through their teeth about what it was, because I asked for it not to be an obnoxious massive affair, and ignored any request I had to not push ceremonies I was uncomfortable with. Many years later, I have never fully forgiven them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To all those who wouldn't help the same for their sons as their daughters, I dearly hope we never become in-laws. If by chance we do, I will ensure a strict prenup that will ensure my daughters maintain full financial control over their assets and inheritance.
From very wealthy mom who has evolved past the stone age
This is odd. If we were on the other side we would have the same thing. Why is this news?
Look -- yes I would pay for daughter's wedding -- any amount and I would not allow them to pay a dime. That is dumb. I have money that will be subject to the Estate tax. They do not. I would not let other parents pay. Pay gives control to other parents and I would not do it.
For my son, I will do what most wealthy parents do -- pay for honeymoon. It will be less than the wedding but I am not concerned about coming out dime for dime with each kid. If one went to Harvard and Harvard Law full pay and one did not go to college -- the one that did not go is not getting $500,000 plus. Just the way it goes.
In terms of house -- sure help with down payments if needed. More likely would be gifting maximum every year and there are other ways to transfer assets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tradition is the groom pays FLOP- Flowers, liquor, orchestra, photographer and rehearsal dinner. Turns out to be about 50-50. We’re lucky in that neither of us had student loans so we were able to use our wedding gifts as part of our down payment.
Never in my nearly 50 years of walking on this earth have I heard this. Sounds like something made up by a Bride mag. Not saying it’s terrible; it’s certainly not “tradition”.
That is not the tradition. Groom family pays for rehearsal dinner and honeymoon.
Anonymous wrote:My aunt always says the mother of the grooms job at a wedding is to shut up and wear beige.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tradition is the groom pays FLOP- Flowers, liquor, orchestra, photographer and rehearsal dinner. Turns out to be about 50-50. We’re lucky in that neither of us had student loans so we were able to use our wedding gifts as part of our down payment.
Never in my nearly 50 years of walking on this earth have I heard this. Sounds like something made up by a Bride mag. Not saying it’s terrible; it’s certainly not “tradition”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Never in my nearly 50 years of walking on this earth have I heard this. Sounds like something made up by a Bride mag. Not saying it’s terrible; it’s certainly not “tradition”.
??? That's the way we handled it in my family growing up.
Fine, but that doesn’t make it traditional.
Anonymous wrote:My parents told each of us (4 kids - 2 boys, 2 girls) that they had $50k allocated to each of us that we could spend how we liked. I used half towards my wedding and half towards a down payment for a house. My sister used some for a wedding and some to help pay for grad school. My brother used it all to help pay for business school. I think it was a good approach on my parents’ part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Never in my nearly 50 years of walking on this earth have I heard this. Sounds like something made up by a Bride mag. Not saying it’s terrible; it’s certainly not “tradition”.
??? That's the way we handled it in my family growing up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tradition is the groom pays FLOP- Flowers, liquor, orchestra, photographer and rehearsal dinner. Turns out to be about 50-50. We’re lucky in that neither of us had student loans so we were able to use our wedding gifts as part of our down payment.
Never in my nearly 50 years of walking on this earth have I heard this. Sounds like something made up by a Bride mag. Not saying it’s terrible; it’s certainly not “tradition”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tradition is the groom pays FLOP- Flowers, liquor, orchestra, photographer and rehearsal dinner. Turns out to be about 50-50. We’re lucky in that neither of us had student loans so we were able to use our wedding gifts as part of our down payment.
Never in my nearly 50 years of walking on this earth have I heard this. Sounds like something made up by a Bride mag. Not saying it’s terrible; it’s certainly not “tradition”.
Anonymous wrote:Tradition is the groom pays FLOP- Flowers, liquor, orchestra, photographer and rehearsal dinner. Turns out to be about 50-50. We’re lucky in that neither of us had student loans so we were able to use our wedding gifts as part of our down payment.