Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually love the idea that they would do it bc they believe it is a highly personal and private commitment they would be making between themselves. They would throw a party afterwards down the road to celebrate with friends and family.
I was with you until this part. Inviting people to your fake wedding is lame.
A: stop using "lame" -- it's ableist
B: it's entirely possible to have a party to celebrate a marriage without doing it as a fake wedding
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually love the idea that they would do it bc they believe it is a highly personal and private commitment they would be making between themselves. They would throw a party afterwards down the road to celebrate with friends and family.
I was with you until this part. Inviting people to your fake wedding is lame.
Anonymous wrote:We did, my MIL was crispy fried about it, and the whole relationship is different than it would have been as a result.
We have no regrets about eloping.
Anonymous wrote:I actually love the idea that they would do it bc they believe it is a highly personal and private commitment they would be making between themselves. They would throw a party afterwards down the road to celebrate with friends and family.
Anonymous wrote:My in laws fought over how many guests from each side would be at BIL’s wedding. It got so bad that they just eloped. Knowing this we also eloped. It’s sad they still are so proud that they didn’t get “cheated” by that wedding when in reality it means they’ve missed out on both their sons’ weddings. And they will probably never have DIL goodwill. Penny wise and pound foolish. Try to use money to control your kids and it will backfire. They are wealthy, but usually alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We eloped, and I've strongly encouraged my kids whenever the topic of marriage came up to elope--should they decide to get married.
Weddings are just about the most trite, scripted, boring events.
Not the Indian ones.
dittoAnonymous wrote:I'd really like to be there. I don't care about anything else about the wedding but I'd be sad to not be there. I wouldn't get fried crispy about it though.
Anonymous wrote:Main problem with eloping is that it misses the ritual of public commitment in front of your community, which can make it a less serious commitment.
Ofc if you don't have a community, then eloping acknowledges that reality as you start your married life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, you can elope, but your father and I will be attending. Give me a time and a place.
I agree with you. I would be really sad if I didn't get to be at the wedding (even a courthouse ceremony is fine!!!). All the people I know that eloped were either on a 2nd+ marriage and nobody really cared, or have a lot of issues.
Anonymous wrote:I’d be sad not so much to to miss the ceremony, but that any of my kids thought their wedding would be better without me there. I’d get over it, but I’d feel sad about that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Forget the party afterwards. Big gift grab.
I can bet you it costs more to throw the party. You cannot recoup the cost through the gifts.
Anonymous wrote:Forget the party afterwards. Big gift grab.
I can bet you it costs more to throw the party. You cannot recoup the cost through the gifts.