Your reasons for having a wedding in a particular place don't really matter. You and your family threw a party, and you included your husband's family. Having bitterness about anything nearly ten years later is nuts. To me this smacks of needing to control and guilt other people, which is not a healthy way to manage relationships.
I just found out
Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with a destination wedding?
Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with a destination wedding?
Anonymous wrote:OP I'm wondering who let this slip now and WHY?
Anyway, the only reaction is to burst out laughing at that imagined slight. It's a place of privilege they are coming from if this is all they have to complain about. I've also experienced a weird chip on the shoulder from some people about California... especially related to the military... like 'that California girl took you and now you are too good for us and are never coming back.' Just laugh.
Anonymous wrote:OP, if you had married in the DC area, your family would have had to travel from the west coast out here for the wedding. With the families on opposite coasts, someone is going to have to travel. It's the unfortunate flip of the coin of life that your family was out that way and that it was more convenient to host it out there. You did nothing wrong. The only thing you might have done to make it easier was to have a second reception dinner out on the East Coast soon after the wedding for the East Coast family to attend and convey their well wishes. But that's expensive and not at all required.
I think you need to have your husband talk to his family and explain (again!) that with the two families on opposite coasts that someone was going to have to travel. Since you were living on the west coast, it was easier for you to plan on that coast rather than plan a wedding 3000 miles away so you chose that location. They need to grow up and he needs to tell them that.
At this point, the only thing to consider is maybe having a 10 year anniversary renewal of vows and a big party in the DC area to host that family. Talk to your husband and see if this is the type of gesture that would make them calm down. Otherwise, just move on.
Anonymous wrote:They're mad he never came home. He's the missing face at all the family events. But he's their son/brother, so instead they're projecting it on you.
Marrying a girl who lived on the West Coast just cemented the fact he was never coming back, and that's what they're upset about.
Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with a destination wedding?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH needs to shut this down. Couples get married where they live.
Their argument is that DH did not actually live in LA or San Diego (he was in the military and had been in LA less than two years when we married). Did I accidentally hold a destination wedding? I'm so humiliated at the idea.
Aha! Now we know the truth. They hated that the military sent him so far away, but thought he'd come back home after he'd served. Instead, he married a girl in SoCal, cementing the fact that he was never coming back.
Yep.
This.
Tale as old as time in military circles.