Anonymous wrote:Every single wedding I have been invited to in the last two years (at least five) has included a written invitation (or save the date) with information on the wedding website, and every single wedding website has included a link for a "honeymoon fund" or something similar that essentially redirects to a Venmo link. The most popular wedding websites, like Zola, are preset to default to a Venmo or credit card link. My friends and I - several of whom have recently or are hosting weddings in the next 18 months - talked about this and they ALL preferred to have the link. They said they like to give registry gifts for the shower/engagement and cash for the wedding. They actually changed my mind. FWIW, these women are all in their 50s and 60s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5 years ago I would have really gotten upset and muttered endlessly about it being tacky. I think now I'm just beaten down and tired. If the young people would rather have money via Zelle than serving spoons, who am I to judge? I'm going through a nasty divorce and my heart breaks looking at some of the things that people lovingly chose for us. It's all just meaningless in the end, so you might as well give them cash so they can choose their own meaningless stuff.
That's what Asian people give at wedding, CASH !!! Average is $400 per couple.
Ironically you're replying to me and I married into an Asian family and oddly so many of our guests on that side of the family didn't give us anything. Maybe because I'm white so they couldn't decide on what tradition to follow? I've never figured it out. But at least I don't have to feel mad at his side of the family because there aren't any gifts to look at or give away from them and we've spent or saved what they did give us.
Nah, because you're white they weren't worried about maintaining face to non-Asian in-laws.
I'm so sorry, it's still very poor form that the Asian side did not gift anything. Maybe they are used to being invisible immigrants to white folks, I dunno.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5 years ago I would have really gotten upset and muttered endlessly about it being tacky. I think now I'm just beaten down and tired. If the young people would rather have money via Zelle than serving spoons, who am I to judge? I'm going through a nasty divorce and my heart breaks looking at some of the things that people lovingly chose for us. It's all just meaningless in the end, so you might as well give them cash so they can choose their own meaningless stuff.
That's what Asian people give at wedding, CASH !!! Average is $400 per couple.
Ironically you're replying to me and I married into an Asian family and oddly so many of our guests on that side of the family didn't give us anything. Maybe because I'm white so they couldn't decide on what tradition to follow? I've never figured it out. But at least I don't have to feel mad at his side of the family because there aren't any gifts to look at or give away from them and we've spent or saved what they did give us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5 years ago I would have really gotten upset and muttered endlessly about it being tacky. I think now I'm just beaten down and tired. If the young people would rather have money via Zelle than serving spoons, who am I to judge? I'm going through a nasty divorce and my heart breaks looking at some of the things that people lovingly chose for us. It's all just meaningless in the end, so you might as well give them cash so they can choose their own meaningless stuff.
That's what Asian people give at wedding, CASH !!! Average is $400 per couple.
Every single wedding I have been invited to in the last two years (at least five) has included a written invitation (or save the date) with information on the wedding website, and every single wedding website has included a link for a "honeymoon fund" or something similar that essentially redirects to a Venmo link. The most popular wedding websites, like Zola, are preset to default to a Venmo or credit card link. My friends and I - several of whom have recently or are hosting weddings in the next 18 months - talked about this and they ALL preferred to have the link. They said they like to give registry gifts for the shower/engagement and cash for the wedding. They actually changed my mind. FWIW, these women are all in their 50s and 60s.