Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This reminds me of my husband's cousins wedding. She wrote no kids on the invite. So I stayed home with the kids while he flew out for the wedding. Guess what he saw when he arrived at the wedding? Kids running around the place. We felt offended.
Yes - I’ve been to weddings that say “no kids” but really it just means “no kids we don’t want.”
Anonymous wrote:Has the OP responded with what the invite said? I have been waiting for that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This reminds me of my husband's cousins wedding. She wrote no kids on the invite. So I stayed home with the kids while he flew out for the wedding. Guess what he saw when he arrived at the wedding? Kids running around the place. We felt offended.
Yes - I’ve been to weddings that say “no kids” but really it just means “no kids we don’t want.”
Or it could mean that rude guests brought their kids anyway- we had this happen at our wedding.
Anonymous wrote:I am pro kids at weddings but this is a ridiculous question. No kids means no kids. It means that when the invitation came to you it probably said, 'Mark and Susan Smith' and did not say 'The Smith Family' or 'Mark and Susan and Tommy and Shelly Smith'.
It says no kids, you have kids, your kids are not invited, come or don't come. How did OP only realize that after RSVPing as you generally put number of guests on your RSVP? The only weird thing here is that no kids wasn't on the invitation itself.
Kids are kids in the context of weddings until they live in another household and would receive an invitation to a wedding on their own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This reminds me of my husband's cousins wedding. She wrote no kids on the invite. So I stayed home with the kids while he flew out for the wedding. Guess what he saw when he arrived at the wedding? Kids running around the place. We felt offended.
Yes - I’ve been to weddings that say “no kids” but really it just means “no kids we don’t want.”
Anonymous wrote:This reminds me of my husband's cousins wedding. She wrote no kids on the invite. So I stayed home with the kids while he flew out for the wedding. Guess what he saw when he arrived at the wedding? Kids running around the place. We felt offended.
Anonymous wrote:I would decline because I would not fly across the country during a pandemic and I also would not attend a wedding right now.
The interpretation is that under 21s are not welcome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our kids are teens -- 13 and 16. After twice delaying, our niece has finally settled on a wedding date in September. We bought the tickets, RSVPed, and tonight I was looking for her wedding registry when my eyes came accross their no-children policy: "Also, because our celebration will be at a brewery we request no children during the event. "
So... is this mean as nobody under 21? Nobody under 18? No young kids? yes for the older teen but no for the younger one?
The wedding is on the west coast, and it would be our first travel since covid. Kids are not in need of babysitting, but are old enough to be disappointed for not being able to attend their cousin's wedding. Not old enough to leave them home for a few days, but do we fly accross the States through the remains of the pandemics just for half the family to not be able to attend?
We have a large extended family, and have always cherished graduations, weddings or annual celebrations as ways to get together with loved ones. We have not had a chance to do any one of those things post covid, and this is a first event in our family. We are the youngest, and our children are the youngest among the cousins, all of whom are drinking age. So they will be, along with the younger generation of toddlers, the single ones of their cousins uninvited.
Would you politely decline?
Yes, no children means your children aren't wanted. Why is this so hard to understand? It doesn't mean "no children, unless your children really, really want to come": you are being an a**hole if you try to guilt trip your niece into allowing you to bring your kids by asking her to clarify whether "no children" means that you can't bring your children. God, some people...
Anonymous wrote:No children means no one under 18. How tf would a 13 or 16 year old qualify?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our kids are teens -- 13 and 16. After twice delaying, our niece has finally settled on a wedding date in September. We bought the tickets, RSVPed, and tonight I was looking for her wedding registry when my eyes came accross their no-children policy: "Also, because our celebration will be at a brewery we request no children during the event. "
So... is this mean as nobody under 21? Nobody under 18? No young kids? yes for the older teen but no for the younger one?
The wedding is on the west coast, and it would be our first travel since covid. Kids are not in need of babysitting, but are old enough to be disappointed for not being able to attend their cousin's wedding. Not old enough to leave them home for a few days, but do we fly accross the States through the remains of the pandemics just for half the family to not be able to attend?
We have a large extended family, and have always cherished graduations, weddings or annual celebrations as ways to get together with loved ones. We have not had a chance to do any one of those things post covid, and this is a first event in our family. We are the youngest, and our children are the youngest among the cousins, all of whom are drinking age. So they will be, along with the younger generation of toddlers, the single ones of their cousins uninvited.
Would you politely decline?
No one under 21. It's at a brewery.
You can attend without your kids or you can politely decline. Whatever.
We take kids to brewery’s all the time.
Yes, no surprise that your type takes kids to "brewery's" all the time.