Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. Most brides AND grooms parents pay half. It’s sexist to only pay for a daughter’s wedding IMO. I’m 32 and that’s what most of my friends parents did. (My parents gave us a flat amount and in-laws gave nothing)
Oh and whatever you do don’t just say “we’ll pay for alcohol” or “we’ll pay for food” because so many places have it all combine. Give them a concrete number to work with and give it 6 months before the wedding. One friend had parents promise to pay and then parents gave nothing until 3 months after the wedding. It went on a credit card instead because it was a 5k expense they didn’t anticipate. Awesome way to start married life.
. This. And it can have a huge cultural component too. So there is no one size answer hereAnonymous wrote:This is a decision you should make by yourself and not because of how popular the custom is.
Anonymous wrote:Do people who live together before marriage really do the whole big tacky party & white dress thing?
Anonymous wrote:OP here, haha - wellll.... the fiance probably could do a little better.![]()
I love both my daughter and fiance very much. But I think they're both very irresponsible. It's such a long story, but in short my husband and I spent several thousands of dollars on her secondary education, vocational training, bad financial decisions, bad decisions in general. Granted, we spent less overall on her education than we did for her sister (since her sister completed her MS), but most of it was a waste as she's now in another vocational program to learn "what she really wanted to do this whole time". While we've made amends and I do see growth in her decision making, I think it's irresponsible to marry while still living with family. (Her fiance is still a year away from a nursing degree.)
We have never once, believe it or not, had a conversation with either her or her sister about their weddings. In retrospect, I even think "wow, how has this never come up?!", but it just hasn't.