Anonymous wrote:I once accidentally brought a kid to a child free wedding. I was invited to my cousin's wedding, I wasn't going to go but my uncle and aunt (who were paying for the wedding) kept pushing it and specifically kept pushing bringing my kid. I got pressure from my mom to go as well. I later got told my kid hadn't been invited, and I guess in whatever page of the wedding website they said no kids (I hadn't seen it). My kid was good at the wedding fwiw and wasn't the only kid there.
To be honest, I was pissed. I got pressured heavily to attend specifically by family and they kept saying they wanted my kid there. The whole thing felt like I'd been used as a pawn into some kind of fight between my aunt and uncle and cousin.
Anonymous wrote:Just don’t go. Don’t go no contact, that is a crazy overreaction. Just get them a crappy present and move on. Nothing here worth getting so upset about. People can choose whatever kind of wedding they want. It isn’t about you.
Anonymous wrote:Just don’t go. Don’t go no contact, that is a crazy overreaction. Just get them a crappy present and move on. Nothing here worth getting so upset about. People can choose whatever kind of wedding they want. It isn’t about you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guarantee that there will be other kids at that wedding. Someone will probably even bring a baby. Seriously, just ignore and take him. You're close family not some distant acquaintance they have to reciprocate wedding invites to.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just take your son anyway. It won't be a big deal.
No, please don't do this. If they have a seating arrangement where will he sit? Listen a 10 year is going to be bored at a wedding and he would rather be hanging out with boys his own age. I don't think you can leave a 10 year old alone at a hotel. I think that OP should just decide is this the hill she wants to die on for family? Child-free weddings are now the norm. Yes, but the bride and groom had a cutoff. But I can feel her pain. And she has a right to have her feelings hurt. What she plans to do is up to her.
Good luck. And I seriously mean this OP, please wish the bride and groom a very happy future.
What entitlement.
Anonymous wrote:I guarantee that there will be other kids at that wedding. Someone will probably even bring a baby. Seriously, just ignore and take him. You're close family not some distant acquaintance they have to reciprocate wedding invites to.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just take your son anyway. It won't be a big deal.
No, please don't do this. If they have a seating arrangement where will he sit? Listen a 10 year is going to be bored at a wedding and he would rather be hanging out with boys his own age. I don't think you can leave a 10 year old alone at a hotel. I think that OP should just decide is this the hill she wants to die on for family? Child-free weddings are now the norm. Yes, but the bride and groom had a cutoff. But I can feel her pain. And she has a right to have her feelings hurt. What she plans to do is up to her.
Good luck. And I seriously mean this OP, please wish the bride and groom a very happy future.
Anonymous wrote:They'll find a chair. It won't ruin the wedding. OP not going will sour it, the young cousin being excluded will sour it. One extra 9 year old guest will turn out to be pretty fun. Then, wish the couple well and go home early.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guarantee that there will be other kids at that wedding. Someone will probably even bring a baby. Seriously, just ignore and take him. You're close family not some distant acquaintance they have to reciprocate wedding invites to.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just take your son anyway. It won't be a big deal.
No, please don't do this. If they have a seating arrangement where will he sit? Listen a 10 year is going to be bored at a wedding and he would rather be hanging out with boys his own age. I don't think you can leave a 10 year old alone at a hotel. I think that OP should just decide is this the hill she wants to die on for family? Child-free weddings are now the norm. Yes, but the bride and groom had a cutoff. But I can feel her pain. And she has a right to have her feelings hurt. What she plans to do is up to her.
Good luck. And I seriously mean this OP, please wish the bride and groom a very happy future.
I guess he can just sit on her lap at the assigned table. Great idea!
Anonymous wrote:I guarantee that there will be other kids at that wedding. Someone will probably even bring a baby. Seriously, just ignore and take him. You're close family not some distant acquaintance they have to reciprocate wedding invites to.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just take your son anyway. It won't be a big deal.
No, please don't do this. If they have a seating arrangement where will he sit? Listen a 10 year is going to be bored at a wedding and he would rather be hanging out with boys his own age. I don't think you can leave a 10 year old alone at a hotel. I think that OP should just decide is this the hill she wants to die on for family? Child-free weddings are now the norm. Yes, but the bride and groom had a cutoff. But I can feel her pain. And she has a right to have her feelings hurt. What she plans to do is up to her.
Good luck. And I seriously mean this OP, please wish the bride and groom a very happy future.
Anonymous wrote:General thought: When I was a kid, many people had weddings where they invited lots of people. At the reception, they served punch, mints, tea sandwiches and wedding cake. No DJs, no plated meals — just people happy to support the new couple.
I’m curious. Usually the bride’s family is more active in planning things than the groom’s, and, unless something has changed, you know that the groom’s family isn’t in a position to provide much financial assistance. Given that this wedding would involve travel, would you be happier if your son had been included, along with maybe a dozen other kids close to the couple, and the reception was a short one, in the church hall, with platters of tea sandwiches and glasses of punch?
I’m asking this seriously. If that’s what their budget would allow them to provide for a larger guest list, would your next post be about how lovely this was and how pleased your son was to be included? Would it be grumbles about how you paid for plane tickets, hotel rooms, a rental car and a nice gift — only to be served a few small sandwiches and nonalcoholic punch? Something else?
Anonymous wrote:They'll find a chair. It won't ruin the wedding. OP not going will sour it, the young cousin being excluded will sour it. One extra 9 year old guest will turn out to be pretty fun. Then, wish the couple well and go home early.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guarantee that there will be other kids at that wedding. Someone will probably even bring a baby. Seriously, just ignore and take him. You're close family not some distant acquaintance they have to reciprocate wedding invites to.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just take your son anyway. It won't be a big deal.
No, please don't do this. If they have a seating arrangement where will he sit? Listen a 10 year is going to be bored at a wedding and he would rather be hanging out with boys his own age. I don't think you can leave a 10 year old alone at a hotel. I think that OP should just decide is this the hill she wants to die on for family? Child-free weddings are now the norm. Yes, but the bride and groom had a cutoff. But I can feel her pain. And she has a right to have her feelings hurt. What she plans to do is up to her.
Good luck. And I seriously mean this OP, please wish the bride and groom a very happy future.
I guess he can just sit on her lap at the assigned table. Great idea!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I traveled from Seattle to Princeton NJ for my first cousin's wedding. We actually lived together as kids for a few years. My mother had money, his did not, so we took them in so we were more like brothers than cousins
I only learned we werent invited to the rehearsal dinner about 3 hours before it started.
So, my wife and I traveled 2386 miles, and three time zones, to literally sit in our hotel room while the dinner went on.
We went to the wedding the next day and took the first flight back the next morning. I sent them some towels and never spoke to them again. That was 2000.
They did reach out about 6 or 7 years ago asking if their son could stay with us while touring UW. I never answered him.
You expected to be invited to your cousin’s rehearsal dinner (even though you had no role in the wedding) because your mom had helped his mom out when you were young? Some of you really need to get some help for your pettiness and main character syndrome.
DP. I don't know your culture but in middle class whitebread weddings, out of town family that travelled great distances are ALWAYS invited to the rehearsal dinner. Rehearsal dinners have not been just for the wedding party since about 1982.