Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In this case I would try to figure out why because that seems like such a selective and personal exclusion. Can your mom poke around? I would probably go to the cousin and just be really open and say 'I just found out about Larla and Tom's wedding and that we seem to be the only people not invited. I'm not angry but I'm a little confused and hurt and mostly want to understand why because I thought we all had a good relationship. Did something happen?'
So they aren't on the defensive about the wedding and you can just get to the meat of the matter.
Oh I did reach out to the parents. The response I got was that "the young couple are paying for the wedding". I could feel my cousin was uncomfortable. So it was OK for the young couple to be at my house many times but apparently we are not good enough for the wedding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there other “first cousins once removed” that are invited?
This is the key question OP has yet to clarify.
If there are ten first cousins once removed to the groom and OP was the only one not invited, that sucks.
If the "cousins" OP keeps referring to are OP's cousins but the groom's aunts and uncles, that's an entirely different story.
Other cousins were invited, yes.
Anonymous wrote:Were your siblings and their families invited?
So the parent of the groom who is your cousin - it sounds like their siblings were invited. That sounds normal and not exclusionary to you since you are not part of that family.
How many different families do you have on that side? One of your parents was the sibling of the parent of your cousin. How many siblings did your parent have?
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s strange that you would expect an invitation and be hurt that you weren’t invited. You aren’t an aunt or uncle to the groom. My SIL/BIL and I trade hosting Thanksgiving for DH’s extended family. Their grandmother had seven kids and has living cousins along with kids of cousins. There are cousins of their mother and siblings. It ranges anywhere between 40-60 people, thank god many people alternate years with the other sides of the family or it would be really large. I couldn’t imagine being invited to the weddings of MIL’s cousins kids even though many have come to my house for Thanksgiving. DH and I certainly wouldn’t attend all those weddings!
When you host for Thanksgiving beyond your spouse, kids, parents and siblings it’s no longer an intimate gathering. It certainly doesn’t mean that all attendees promote your family role into their next inner circle and you get invited to all their milestone events.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In this case I would try to figure out why because that seems like such a selective and personal exclusion. Can your mom poke around? I would probably go to the cousin and just be really open and say 'I just found out about Larla and Tom's wedding and that we seem to be the only people not invited. I'm not angry but I'm a little confused and hurt and mostly want to understand why because I thought we all had a good relationship. Did something happen?'
So they aren't on the defensive about the wedding and you can just get to the meat of the matter.
Oh I did reach out to the parents. The response I got was that "the young couple are paying for the wedding". I could feel my cousin was uncomfortable. So it was OK for the young couple to be at my house many times but apparently we are not good enough for the wedding.
No two ways about it - that's a slight. How you deal with it is up to you. At this point I wouldn't push it further, you got your answer. I'd probably treat the groom and his wife as a separate family unit going forward and include them less.