Anonymous wrote:My kids are almost all grown now and I haven’t been to a wedding in some time but I would simply say no. If it’s a really important occasion for you (a close family member or best friend) and you can’t leave your child due to distance or nursing, I would ask the bride if the venue has an extra room where a babysitter can stay with your child throughout but you are able to check in. We had this arrangement at a family members wedding and it worked out well. If it ends up not being an option, the couple will at least know you tried to make it work and then you don’t need to feel at all guilty for not going. But for a standard wedding, no is absolutely fine.
We were invited to our nephews wedding last year but my 15 yo was not. If it had been local I would have had no issue but I wasn’t leaving my 15 yo home alone DH went without me. I didn’t feel at all guilty. My sense is couples know some people won’t make it when they elect to have a kid free wedding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we are not planning a child free wedding but I expect that the parents will look after them and remove them if they are too destructive.
You should adjust your expectations. It's highly unlikely the parents will do that.
Anonymous wrote:My favorite way to do this is to split parents. The parent who is related to the couple or knows them best goes, and the parent who doesn’t stays home with the kids. It’s great to have a solo night, it makes travel much easier and cheaper, and a wedding is a great place to go stag. You probably already know people and if not, you can always make friends at a wedding. We do this even if our kids are invited. I don’t want to wrangle my kids at a wedding unless I really have to.
I love getting away to a quick solo wedding, and so does my spouse. Try it!
Anonymous wrote:My sympathies. I can beat you! Dh and I are both in a wedding. Our kids are flower girls. And they aren’t invited to the wedding. Our baby isn’t invited at all. It’s insanity trying to figure this out. We basically have a series of babysitters working long hours. And the baby is headed hours away to grandparents. It kills me that they’re invited to the rehearsal but not the rehearsal dinner. Don’t they realize how impossible this is for parents? The reason they aren’t invited to the reception is cost and because everyone has kids, which I get. But our girls are pretty devastated at not getting to go. I sit then down before every meeting and forbid them from mentioning it at all. We aren’t local to the wedding.
I too had a childfree wedding but we also didn’t know any kids. Our flower girl did come.
Anonymous wrote:we are not planning a child free wedding but I expect that the parents will look after them and remove them if they are too destructive.
Anonymous wrote:My sympathies. I can beat you! Dh and I are both in a wedding. Our kids are flower girls. And they aren’t invited to the wedding. Our baby isn’t invited at all. It’s insanity trying to figure this out. We basically have a series of babysitters working long hours. And the baby is headed hours away to grandparents. It kills me that they’re invited to the rehearsal but not the rehearsal dinner. Don’t they realize how impossible this is for parents? The reason they aren’t invited to the reception is cost and because everyone has kids, which I get. But our girls are pretty devastated at not getting to go. I sit then down before every meeting and forbid them from mentioning it at all. We aren’t local to the wedding.
I too had a childfree wedding but we also didn’t know any kids. Our flower girl did come.
Anonymous wrote:My sympathies. I can beat you! Dh and I are both in a wedding. Our kids are flower girls. And they aren’t invited to the wedding. Our baby isn’t invited at all. It’s insanity trying to figure this out. We basically have a series of babysitters working long hours. And the baby is headed hours away to grandparents. It kills me that they’re invited to the rehearsal but not the rehearsal dinner. Don’t they realize how impossible this is for parents? The reason they aren’t invited to the reception is cost and because everyone has kids, which I get. But our girls are pretty devastated at not getting to go. I sit then down before every meeting and forbid them from mentioning it at all. We aren’t local to the wedding.
I too had a childfree wedding but we also didn’t know any kids. Our flower girl did come.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we had a child free wedding, and hired babysitters to watch the kids for the duration of the wedding and reception because we knew folks were coming out of their way to come to our wedding and some entire families were coming. i don't think its fair to have a child free wedding without offering a support - especially if folks are traveling - at least with the baby sitter set up families can spend their mornings together, do some sort of pre-date night routine, etc.
personally, looking back, i would have loved to have had the kids there (growing up all the weddings were come one come all -but may be an ethnicity thing - weddings are family events, and we want families to be there) but it was a numbers issue - we just didn't have the funds to pay for all the kids to have a seat at the time and babysitters were our compromise.
Was it really a money issue for you? When I got married, kids’ meals were about $10 while adult meals were about $30. It seems like paying for babysitters would be about the same.
Anonymous wrote:we had a child free wedding, and hired babysitters to watch the kids for the duration of the wedding and reception because we knew folks were coming out of their way to come to our wedding and some entire families were coming. i don't think its fair to have a child free wedding without offering a support - especially if folks are traveling - at least with the baby sitter set up families can spend their mornings together, do some sort of pre-date night routine, etc.
personally, looking back, i would have loved to have had the kids there (growing up all the weddings were come one come all -but may be an ethnicity thing - weddings are family events, and we want families to be there) but it was a numbers issue - we just didn't have the funds to pay for all the kids to have a seat at the time and babysitters were our compromise.