Anonymous wrote:Could it truly be a money thing? Is the couple and family strapped for cash?
I once attended a wedding where DH went up to get drinks at the bar and he was expected to pay. We thought it was so odd. Everyone at our table was surprised and talking about how it was a cash bar. I personally would rather have a cheaper wedding, maybe just at a church, than have my guests pay for their own at my wedding. Horrible!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could it truly be a money thing? Is the couple and family strapped for cash?
I once attended a wedding where DH went up to get drinks at the bar and he was expected to pay. We thought it was so odd. Everyone at our table was surprised and talking about how it was a cash bar. I personally would rather have a cheaper wedding, maybe just at a church, than have my guests pay for their own at my wedding. Horrible!
I come from a working class background. Every wedding I went to as a kid or a young person had a cash bar. Beer, soda, coffee and (sometimes) wine were included with the reception. If you wanted something else, you were paying.
Not everybody has as much money as you do.
This is very uncommon in the Northeast. I have been to many church weddings where I don't think any alcohol was served. I think that is fine too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could it truly be a money thing? Is the couple and family strapped for cash?
I once attended a wedding where DH went up to get drinks at the bar and he was expected to pay. We thought it was so odd. Everyone at our table was surprised and talking about how it was a cash bar. I personally would rather have a cheaper wedding, maybe just at a church, than have my guests pay for their own at my wedding. Horrible!
I come from a working class background. Every wedding I went to as a kid or a young person had a cash bar. Beer, soda, coffee and (sometimes) wine were included with the reception. If you wanted something else, you were paying.
Not everybody has as much money as you do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its poor manners, in the same way a cash bar is poor manners, or invites to the wedding but not reception are poor manners.
But I am surprised at the number of people that would forbid their spouses from going. Its a day, its his friend. Go let him "celebrate"
No, it's actually more rude than those. Inviting one half of a married couple to a wedding is unacceptable.
I wouldn't forbid my spouse from going, but he wouldn't go, because he knows how totally uncool that is.
Anonymous wrote:Could it truly be a money thing? Is the couple and family strapped for cash?
I once attended a wedding where DH went up to get drinks at the bar and he was expected to pay. We thought it was so odd. Everyone at our table was surprised and talking about how it was a cash bar. I personally would rather have a cheaper wedding, maybe just at a church, than have my guests pay for their own at my wedding. Horrible!
Anonymous wrote:Who did DH cheat with?
Someone whom the groom knows?
Get to to couples counseling stat or kick him out.
Anonymous wrote:PP here who said inappropriate but maybe not totally husband's fault.
After OP's latest responses (I KNEW there was more to the story, somehow), my guess is that either the former AP will be at the wedding, or DH's friends all knew about it, or met her and liked her, and DH and the friend getting married thought it would be better if OP didn't attend because people might talk/ask/whatever about AP.
Anonymous wrote:Its poor manners, in the same way a cash bar is poor manners, or invites to the wedding but not reception are poor manners.
But I am surprised at the number of people that would forbid their spouses from going. Its a day, its his friend. Go let him "celebrate"
Anonymous wrote:The poster that suggested bringing this up in counseling is right.
To my mind, the partner who cheated--if they are truly committed to rebuilding the relationship--would be bending over backward to reassure the wronged spouse about their level of commitment, about trustworthiness--one way in this strange situation to reassure would be to insist that either he brings his wife or he doesn't come--and to tell the wife, I do not want to go without you. You are important to me, and it is important to me that you are there.
This is not what your DH is doing. Whatever the rest of the situation with the friend, this alone would cause concern for me.