Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Biggest offenses
No children allowed. This is sad. Weddings are for celebrating vows with family and friends.
Registry takes you to a website that the bride and groom will accept cash only gifts. This is tacky and gauche and a money grab. Many people will give cash gifts voluntarily but demanding cash only gifts is beyond tacky.
Nope.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the hate for no kids weddings on this site. All etiquette experts say no kid weddings are absolutely fine, while many of the other items are faux pas.
I’m 45 and have been to a lot of weddings, and I think only two ever invited kids. Every other wedding I’ve attended is no kids.
I understand that sometimes people can’t attend a wedding if it’s no kids, because they don’t have childcare in a different city. No judgment if you can’t attend. DH and I have done some trade off weddings where only one of us attended because getting childcare was too much drama. It’s fine. We’ve also flown in family to watch the kids while we’ve gone out of town for weddings. And we’ve also used the hotel arranged babysitter for some weddings. All of these are fine options.
But for people who are like unilaterally writing off no kids weddings…. I feel sorry for them. They often refuse to separate from their kids, have never had a babysitter, or are highly anxious. It’s one thing to decline a no kid wedding because you’re unable to make it work (or you’re not close enough to the couple to put a ton of effort into making it work). But it’s another thing to refuse to make it work.
+1.
The weddings without kids are generally better anyways (food/alcohol/entertainment). If you can't leave your kid for a few hours do everyone else a favor and stay home
+2
+3
No one cares about your kid as much as you.
+4
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Worst: No +1, destination wedding. Couples will often say they don’t want random people at their wedding but offer plus ones for spouses and significant others they’ve never met. Just give all adults a plus one.
Also bad: No open bar — don’t host a party you can’t afford. Along those lines I would add an expectation that gifts cover the per person cost for the wedding.
Neutral: No kids, dry wedding, asking for cash gifts
Isn't a dry wedding worse than no open bar? At least there's alcohol!
No way! I don’t care if I drink or not. I’d prefer it, but if the couple doesnt drink or can’t afford to pay for the alcohol, then a dry wedding is fine. What’s NOT fine is asking your guests to pay for things at YOUR PARTY
I agree. All this shade on dry weddings is awful. Many people don’t drink - for religious or addiction or health reasons. I am delighted to share their big day with them while also being respectful of their culture or individual preferences. Can people *really* not go one night without booze??? (And I drink a lot - so I’m not a teetotaler)
I agree that cash bar is way worse than dry wedding. You don't host a party and then have your guests pay for food/drinks!! The only thing worse is doing a potluck where guests BRING FOOD as well!
What if the people getting married are poor, but they want to share their joy and exchange of vows with friends and loved ones?
The level of snobbery and entitlement on this forum is thru the roof.
The only way to share the joy is to invite your friends to a party then ask them to pay for it? You must be the type to not provide food at kids parties. The worst.
The PP was saying that people complaining about dry weddings are the worst. She was not talking about cash bar weddings.
No she wasn't. We're both saying the guests don't pay for the food drinks. Then PP said it was snobby because poor people apparently can't pay for food/drinks (which isn't even true). It's the cheapskates who aren't even poor who do this kind of thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised so many posters are offended by destination weddings. I have never been to one but I thought people typically kept them smaller and didn’t expect everyone to attend. It’s not like you’re required to go, it’s just an invitation.
I don't really get it either, unless all of your friends and family live in the same area, it's going to be a destination wedding for some people even if that destination is your hometown. I'm in DC and almost all of the weddings I have attended have required travel.
I think there's a big difference between traveling to a wedding and a destination wedding. My niece lives in Austin and is getting married next year in...Austin. My SIL referred to it as a destination wedding. Sorry- a destination wedding would be if she is getting married in a completely random place like Cabo.
+1
Exactly! Why do some people want to make the meaning something it is not? It basically means "random place" - more than an hour plane ride, no ties, etc. It does NOT mean "somewhere the rude guest complains about". LOL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Worst: No +1, destination wedding. Couples will often say they don’t want random people at their wedding but offer plus ones for spouses and significant others they’ve never met. Just give all adults a plus one.
Also bad: No open bar — don’t host a party you can’t afford. Along those lines I would add an expectation that gifts cover the per person cost for the wedding.
Neutral: No kids, dry wedding, asking for cash gifts
Isn't a dry wedding worse than no open bar? At least there's alcohol!
No way! I don’t care if I drink or not. I’d prefer it, but if the couple doesnt drink or can’t afford to pay for the alcohol, then a dry wedding is fine. What’s NOT fine is asking your guests to pay for things at YOUR PARTY
I agree. All this shade on dry weddings is awful. Many people don’t drink - for religious or addiction or health reasons. I am delighted to share their big day with them while also being respectful of their culture or individual preferences. Can people *really* not go one night without booze??? (And I drink a lot - so I’m not a teetotaler)
I agree that cash bar is way worse than dry wedding. You don't host a party and then have your guests pay for food/drinks!! The only thing worse is doing a potluck where guests BRING FOOD as well!
What if the people getting married are poor, but they want to share their joy and exchange of vows with friends and loved ones?
The level of snobbery and entitlement on this forum is thru the roof.
Anonymous wrote:The worst offense for me is a combination of a destination wedding and the ask for money along with the destination wedding (or even a registry). If you’re already asking people to spend a ton of money to go to your wedding, that should be the gift. Asking people to get you stuff on top of it? Super tacky and entitled.
Anonymous wrote:Biggest offenses
No children allowed. This is sad. Weddings are for celebrating vows with family and friends.
Registry takes you to a website that the bride and groom will accept cash only gifts. This is tacky and gauche and a money grab. Many people will give cash gifts voluntarily but demanding cash only gifts is beyond tacky.
Anonymous wrote:What the f is a potluck wedding?
I would decline the s!!! out of that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Explanations optional.
No-kids weddings
No +1 weddings
Destination weddings
Dry weddings
No open bar weddings
Weddings of couples who ask for cash
1. Fine, just don't complain when people choose not to go.
2. Strange if you know a guest is in a relationship
3. Just elope
4. I'm okay with it. I've been to one. The groom's sister was in her first year of recovery.
5. I've been to a lot of weddings where every guest was given however many drink tickets. After that it was a cash bar. It never bothered me.
6. I give cash anyway, but it is tacky to ask.
The worst to me is no meal for guests.
Anonymous wrote:Explanations optional.
No-kids weddings
No +1 weddings
Destination weddings
Dry weddings
No open bar weddings
Weddings of couples who ask for cash
Anonymous wrote:Explanations optional.
No-kids weddings
No +1 weddings
Destination weddings
Dry weddings
No open bar weddings
Weddings of couples who ask for cash
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None actually.
People can have any kind of wedding and guests can choose not to attend. I also always give a check as a wedding gift and if the wedding is very tacky and cheap,I will give less money.
This makes no sense. If the couple is stopped for funds and does a quaint or small affair you give less money versus someone that does not need it you give more?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None actually.
People can have any kind of wedding and guests can choose not to attend. I also always give a check as a wedding gift and if the wedding is very tacky and cheap,I will give less money.
This makes no sense. If the couple is stopped for funds and does a quaint or small affair you give less money versus someone that does not need it you give more?
Yes. I am not funding their future. I am giving according to what they put in their wedding cost and of course my relationship with them.
Gift giving is a complicated cultural and social phenomenon. I give only what will be appropriately reciprocated. If the person is too poor or too cheap, then I have to give what the poor person can easily reciprocate or what the cheap person has the heart to spend..
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/what-does-sociology-teach-us-about-gift-giving-180948181/#:~:text=Mauss%20identified%20three%20obligations%20associated,which%20demonstrates%20the%20recipient's%20integrity.
Your relationship with the couple and the amount you can afford to give should be the only calculus into the amount you give. Who gives a flip about how much the crappy chicken Chesapeake and chocolate fountain cost?