Anonymous wrote:OP here- i was planning to post on Facebook several days in advance of the wedding, basically as soon as I get my test results back. I would never make some big announcement at the wedding!
If I don't do the above, I will probably take the route of slipping it into conversation at the wedding when I see people, but I was hoping to put it on fb first so I wasn't talking about it very much at the wedding itself. Just trying to be sensitive to the bride. And no, not my sister, an extended family member who is getting married late in life (i.e. Not my generation).[/quote
She is getting married much later in life. Let her have this. If you announce on fb days before, people 's comments could go on for days and into the wedding. Wait until after the wedding before telling anyone!
If it were several weeks before he wedding, then that would have been ok, but not a few days.
Anonymous wrote:Why should you wait? It's not your sister, right?I would tell immediate family and then casually mention it to whoever you see at the wedding. I am assuming you were not planning to put on a slide show or steal the mic before the first dance. I 'announced' a pregnancy at a friend's wedding in that when mutual friends asked me how things were going I said they were going well, job was good, I'm pregnant, sister moved to the west coast, how's your dog? blah blah blah. Don't make a big deal about it and like you said, people won't really care.
Anonymous wrote:Would rather come clean before the wedding bc I look fat and won't be drinking. The problem is that I turn 12 weeks that week, and will get my genetic testing results back just a couple days beforehand. Could this be considered stealing the brides thunder in any possible way? I don't think so, but wanted to make sure. It's not my first child so not even particularly exciting or surprising news, as compared to someone who is pg with their first..
Anonymous wrote:Don't announce. Tell your immediate family as you usually do, but then let it work through the rumor mill or come up more naturally in conversation (why aren't you drinking? oh I'm pregnant again).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Slipping it in later during the wedding when most people will be suspicious when they see you is in some ways worse. People will be talking about you and your suspected pregnancy.
No they won't. It's not her day and no one cares about her that much.
No one cares About the bride and groom as much as they care about themselves. Weddings are not four hour affairs where people only think and tallk about the couple. They are family and friends affairs in which people catch up and gossip.
Anonymous wrote:OP here- i was planning to post on Facebook several days in advance of the wedding, basically as soon as I get my test results back. I would never make some big announcement at the wedding!
If I don't do the above, I will probably take the route of slipping it into conversation at the wedding when I see people, but I was hoping to put it on fb first so I wasn't talking about it very much at the wedding itself. Just trying to be sensitive to the bride. And no, not my sister, an extended family member who is getting married late in life (i.e. Not my generation).
Anonymous wrote:Why should you wait? It's not your sister, right?I would tell immediate family and then casually mention it to whoever you see at the wedding. I am assuming you were not planning to put on a slide show or steal the mic before the first dance. I 'announced' a pregnancy at a friend's wedding in that when mutual friends asked me how things were going I said they were going well, job was good, I'm pregnant, sister moved to the west coast, how's your dog? blah blah blah. Don't make a big deal about it and like you said, people won't really care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Slipping it in later during the wedding when most people will be suspicious when they see you is in some ways worse. People will be talking about you and your suspected pregnancy.
No they won't. It's not her day and no one cares about her that much.
Anonymous wrote:OP here- i was planning to post on Facebook several days in advance of the wedding, basically as soon as I get my test results back. I would never make some big announcement at the wedding!
If I don't do the above, I will probably take the route of slipping it into conversation at the wedding when I see people, but I was hoping to put it on fb first so I wasn't talking about it very much at the wedding itself. Just trying to be sensitive to the bride. And no, not my sister, an extended family member who is getting married late in life (i.e. Not my generation).