Anonymous wrote:I am squarely with your husband. I would not have RSVP'ed yes without asking if all guests were required to be vaccinated. Seems like the first question anyone would ask!
You need to let your mother and hosts know ASAP that you are reconsidering coming to the wedding if they don't have a vaccination policy in place. Insist. Perhaps you'll make them do it. If they don't, and cases are still high, or there is a new variant, don't go. If cases are really low, perhaps you can take that risk.
But really, you shot yourself in the foot by not asking this before agreeing to come. Lesson learned for future events, I hope.
The fact is 6 months out OP thinks the hosts are not requiring full or any vaccination. If there's 1 there could be more. Or the OP sister might be delusional and the brides family or bride/groom might give her a hard reality check. Weddings can trend smaller in the time of Covid-19 so hosts know the general status. The fool might be getting a courtesy invite to a vaccination required wedding and then be bumped when it rsvp's yes.
Some wanting anti-vaxxers to be invited and allowed to attend a wedding can abruptly end the quest when confronted with a hypothetical on seating. By that I mean you want them you will be sitting a table with them and any similar people for a long wedding dinner. We know belligerant anti-vaxxers who range from young adults who go to bars etc to old. A reluctant person might get 1 J+J in Sept 2021 because of a work requirement and call itself vaccinated for a July 2022 wedding.
OP's sister wants her to escort the 80 year old mother for air travel and everything else associated with the wedding. I guess the plan was to then do it all in reverse along with DH+kids and then go to visit the DH old parents. Or is it go from the fly to wedding to DH parents? If so what about the OP old mother?