Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm so confused by the sexes in this scenario. Do you have a dd or a ds? Are they engaged to a fiance? or a fiancee?
Yeah, these acronyms are so stupid.
Does it really save any time to type DS instead of son???
Are you people really so dense that you couldn't figure it out from context. Plus, why does the gender matter? The question asked was straightforward.
Are you so dense you didn't read it? OP called the person getting married both a DD and a DS. Which is it? Please clear up the confusion.
You tell your daughter how much you can afford to contribute to the wedding. If the couple wants a wedding that costs more, they can ask his parents. This is not your problem to solve.
Anonymous wrote:I think the first step is to talk candidly with your daughter. Start getting a feel for the size/type of wedding and what the real numbers are, and then decide if it makes sense to broach the subject of her future in-laws contributing, and if so, the best way to go about that. Of course your future son in law should have input, too, but probably best to let your daughter handle.
Have the future in-laws offered to pay for anything? Typically if the bride's parents are paying for the wedding, the groom's family will pay for the rehearsal dinner and the honeymoon. And many rehearsal dinners end up being mini weddings given the size of the wedding party, inviting out of town guests, etc. That's how my parents and in-laws divided it.
Prior comments that the bride and groom should pay are silly. They are just finishing college and have no money. The bride's parents can afford it and are obviously happy to contribute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm so confused by the sexes in this scenario. Do you have a dd or a ds? Are they engaged to a fiance? or a fiancee?
Yeah, these acronyms are so stupid.
Does it really save any time to type DS instead of son???
Are you people really so dense that you couldn't figure it out from context. Plus, why does the gender matter? The question asked was straightforward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm so confused by the sexes in this scenario. Do you have a dd or a ds? Are they engaged to a fiance? or a fiancee?
Yeah, these acronyms are so stupid.
Does it really save any time to type DS instead of son???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm so confused by the sexes in this scenario. Do you have a dd or a ds? Are they engaged to a fiance? or a fiancee?
Yeah, these acronyms are so stupid.
Does it really save any time to type DS instead of son???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You tell your daughter how much you can afford to contribute to the wedding. If the couple wants a wedding that costs more, they can ask his parents. This is not your problem to solve.
THIS is your answer.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have a decent backyard? Or you can use a room at your House of Worship for refreshments after the nuptials. There is no need for an expensive wedding even with a large family.
Anonymous wrote:Just noting here that one problem with the parents offering what money they can afford -- while making sure that it should cover all the guests that they might want to invite -- is that the parents will not be prioritizing the money in the same way as the kids will be. So they might think $20K is plenty to cover their 100 family members, but actually the kids think it's more important to have the wedding in a fancy location and get a special band to play the reception, which will cut down on the amount of money left to cover a large guest list. Just realize going in that your priorities will be different and you can't get what you necessarily expect. That might be something you want to discuss with the kids -- whether or not you can give the money with certain strings attached re guests. Not sure you can even really do this, but otherwise there is a lot of room not to get what you expected.
Anonymous wrote:I'm so confused by the sexes in this scenario. Do you have a dd or a ds? Are they engaged to a fiance? or a fiancee?
Anonymous wrote:You tell your daughter how much you can afford to contribute to the wedding. If the couple wants a wedding that costs more, they can ask his parents. This is not your problem to solve.