Anonymous wrote:My niece (maid of honor) rented an airbnb at the site. She and her husband flew his Dad and his StepMom to watch her 4 year old, 2 year old, and 6 week old baby.
Children were not invited.
It was hard on my niece as there were 3 days of events.
Happy hour the night before the wedding from 7-10pm.
Wedding next day from 3:00- 10:00 pm at venue.
Wine tasting day 3 from 11:00 am - 3:00 pm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could you fly out one of your parents for this role?
They are also invited to the wedding.
I think PP meant in laws.
Yes, my parents (DH’s in laws) are also invited to the wedding and all associated events.
Anonymous wrote:What are all these events that you can't bring the kids? You've only mentioned the brunch besides the wedding itself. Why can't the kid sit with any of the grandparents during the ceremony? And you can watch the kids yourself at the brunch. What else is going on?
Anonymous wrote:What are all these events that you can't bring the kids? You've only mentioned the brunch besides the wedding itself. Why can't the kid sit with any of the grandparents during the ceremony? And you can watch the kids yourself at the brunch. What else is going on?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They can very much expect you all to attend and participate, but that's not an order and you don't have to do it all.
If you can't find child care or it's too expensive to pay for your family of four plus someone for child care, find a compromise. Maybe you can't be in the wedding or maybe they help with expenses.
Since it's a year away, talk to them now about your dilemma and see if they'll compromise. Anyone can ask for anything, but that doesn't mean they get it.
Best wishes, OP. I don't mean to be harsh, but I think they're asking too much.
And if it was a no kids wedding, everyone would be complaining about that too. It’s OP’s brother’s what wedding and they want to include the brother, his wife, and the kids. It’s a beautiful thing, it’s taking place at an apparently nice place, it’s a year away, and OP has a nanny.
Start planning and saving now, bring the damned nanny, and go and enjoy the nice wedding of a close relative already.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe talk with your nanny--see what her expectations would be for pay for that type of thing. She may like the idea of a paid vacation and not require full compensation/overtime for the hours because of the other benefits.
I flew with and stayed for a week with a family I used to babysit for at a popular domestic tourist location. We didn't specify a specific # of hours of care, because I didn't "work" the whole time and got to enjoy the locale plenty. It was like a paid vacation (as a 20-something). I think I earned $500 for the week. Probably about minimum wage at the time.
Anonymous wrote:Rotate childcare to different family members.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could you fly out one of your parents for this role?
They are also invited to the wedding.
I think PP meant in laws.
Yes, my parents (DH’s in laws) are also invited to the wedding and all associated events.
To DH's brother's wedding - love this - such an inclusive family!
OP, no advice except to maybe skip one or two things. I really don't know why couples expect families to these multi-day events, because people have commitments and responsibilities of their own. Are couples getting more selfish?
Anonymous wrote:So, your 1 year has no role in the wedding, right? I realize the bride and groom may want you to be at all the festivities, but I would only commit to the wedding day itself and if possible, leave the 1 year old with a family member or your nanny at home. Not knowing where you are traveling to, I would fly in at the last minute and leave the day after. If your DH wants to stay the entire weekend, that would be fine with me.