Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should tell your parents. DH and his siblings planned a quasi-surprise party for his parents, but his parents planned a cruise for their anniversary without an inkling that anything else would be going on. SIL had to rescind all the invites and cancel the party.
+1. Before kids, we loved to travel for our anniversary. Once we are empty-nesters, we hope to rekindle that tradition. Most people aren’t waiting around for someone to plan how they are going to spend their anniversary day.
Anonymous wrote:You should tell your parents. DH and his siblings planned a quasi-surprise party for his parents, but his parents planned a cruise for their anniversary without an inkling that anything else would be going on. SIL had to rescind all the invites and cancel the party.
Anonymous wrote:Tell her you can contribute x amount and leave it at that.
Anonymous wrote:She booked the venue. She probably hasn’t planned the actual details, yet. She likely chose a date on or very near their anniversary so even the date can’t be much of a shock. Booking ahead like this likely will get you a popular venue that may not be available if your sister has waited.
Just be glad this part has been handled. Trying to plan something like this long distance, much less in a different country, would be a nightmare. If you want input as to the food served, the flavor of the cake, the music played, the decorations, etc tell your sister.
Anonymous wrote:This is a year out, not in the next few weeks. The idea of beat dates is laughable, because most people don’t have dates for things a year out.
A 50th is a big deal, and it should be celebrated!
I think, OP, your issue is that your sister moved ahead with this and you feel like she gets “credit” and you don’t.
A party of this time is online with a big wedding. If one or two guests, including you, can’t attend - oh well. This is 50
Years of history..
Anonymous wrote:Tell her you can contribute x amount and leave it at that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve found these big anniversaries bring out a ton of emotions. My in-laws had a huge fight the week of their celebration and my FIL spent part of the week saying he wasn’t going to come. Needless to say, it was awkward and annoying.
I told my DH that we’re planning our celebrations and not putting our kids through this nonsense.
Yeah my sister insisted on throwing a huge party for my parents 50th and it was such a joke. They’ve never really had a happy marriage, there were separations and infidelities, they almost divorced a couple times but would have been too expensive since my mom SAH so many years. They were bickering the morning of about random sh-t as usual and I was just like, why are we celebrating these unhappy people sticking together?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the expectations are that you all chip in for the cost, then you absolutely have grounds for feeling frustrated that she did not consult you about the date or the venue. If you pay, you get a say.
That said, sometimes a group can't pull an event together because of "death by committee". Everyone has an opinion about how to do it and disagree with others, and things fall through. If you suggest that you all take a step back and plan it from scratch, how do you envision the process? What is your idea for a proper celebration? Who's going to do the majority of the research and planning, logistics, etc? If you don't have clear ideas and can't offer to take on the lead role to make it happen, then perhaps it's a good thing that your sister is taking charge.
OP here. Yeah that's a fair point that her taking charge means I probably won't have to do anything other than show up and pay my share, lol. It just wouldn't occur to me to plan something like this without consulting sibling co-hosts! I guess I expected her to at least check on school schedules before setting a date, but shrug, maybe that's too much to expect.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve found these big anniversaries bring out a ton of emotions. My in-laws had a huge fight the week of their celebration and my FIL spent part of the week saying he wasn’t going to come. Needless to say, it was awkward and annoying.
I told my DH that we’re planning our celebrations and not putting our kids through this nonsense.