Anonymous wrote:I think it brings up a lot of complicated feelings. Weddings have always been traditionally family event with two families coming together and a new family starting. But a few years ago, there was a change to make everything perfect, Instagram worthy and aspirational so out with imperfect kids. I also think it goes hand-in-hand with parents, not parenting their kids which is a huge incentive to not have kids at a wedding.
Personally, I would rather have kids at my wedding, then have a perfect wedding, and I would definitely rather be inclusive of kids than lose and alienate family members.
Likewise family members should understand when a couple chooses to only have an adult only ceremony and not break relationships because they can’t bring their kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are South Asian and of course had kids at our wedding. But my cousin's kid wailed throughout my ceremony and my cousin didn't have the sense to take the kid outside of the hall. Years later, that same cousin's other kid almost ruined a couple's first dance bc the parents couldn't be bothered to keep their kid away from the dance floor for a few minutes.
This is to say, I understand why people exclude kids from weddings. It's not about the kids, it's about the entitled/clueless parents of said kids that don't remove their kid or correct their behavior.
See, a lot of people would find it really cute that a kid occupies the dance floor during the first dance. If I were the bride, I would love it and cherish those pics. Sadly, no kid came up to us during the dance, but I do have hilarious pics of kid shenanigans during other parts of my wedding - they're the best! I'm French, had my wedding in a castle in France, and all the kids were running around, petting the horses of the horse-drawn carriage (under supervision), running into the garden or the fields... it was carefree and exactly what I thought should happen.
The root of the problem is a fundamental difference in how certain adults view the presence of children, who naturally understand the world differently from adults. Childhood is so short and precious. Most of the world understands that this is a time to be understanding of their needs, not try to straight-jacket them into unnecessary decorum. The decorum gets learned every day. My kids are now young adults and teens. They and their cousins have absorbed all the required mannerisms to be courteous adults. They are none of the worse for being invited to weddings and being allowed to express themselves.
Anonymous wrote:I am not a fan of “absolutely no kids- period!” weddings, but I think being “mad” about this (especially to the point it damages relationships) is weird.
I’d be very annoyed if my kids were not allowed/invited at a wedding of a close family member. Fortunately this has never happened. If it did, I would not say anything about it however.
On the other hand, I’d never expect our kids to be invited to weddings of old friends/acquaintances (colleagues etc)- they dont even know our kids!- and usually the kids are not invited. Which is of course fine!
I think the issue with family weddings is the VERY strong expectation/obligation that you must attend- but then not allow you to bring your kids? Especially if travel is involved. Flying across the country just to leave small kids with a stranger (sitter) in the hotel room would be extremely unappealing. If the wedding is local- I truly do not see the issue with leaving the kids barring unusual circumstances (EBFing a newborn, for example).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get why people who leave their kids all the time to go to work, other parties, the gym, etc, get so worked up against this.
I had no kids OTHER than family at my wedding. I did invite related kids. I am glad they were there. But I don't feel like it's offensive if relatives don't invite my kids.
Because they want to show off their kids to family/friends who don't see them all the time - whether they will admit to this reason or not.
"Show off" is an odd word choice; I don't think anyone is impressed by my eight year old. I do like when my kids get to see their family and friends, though. It helps build social bonds, which are important. I've never fought with anyone over kids at weddings, but I think weddings are better with kids.
Sounds like you want a family reunion. Plan and pay for one yourself.
Anonymous wrote:I am not a fan of “absolutely no kids- period!” weddings, but I think being “mad” about this (especially to the point it damages relationships) is weird.
I’d be very annoyed if my kids were not allowed/invited at a wedding of a close family member. Fortunately this has never happened. If it did, I would not say anything about it however.
On the other hand, I’d never expect our kids to be invited to weddings of old friends/acquaintances (colleagues etc)- they dont even know our kids!- and usually the kids are not invited. Which is of course fine!
I think the issue with family weddings is the VERY strong expectation/obligation that you must attend- but then not allow you to bring your kids? Especially if travel is involved. Flying across the country just to leave small kids with a stranger (sitter) in the hotel room would be extremely unappealing. If the wedding is local- I truly do not see the issue with leaving the kids barring unusual circumstances (EBFing a newborn, for example).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get why people who leave their kids all the time to go to work, other parties, the gym, etc, get so worked up against this.
I had no kids OTHER than family at my wedding. I did invite related kids. I am glad they were there. But I don't feel like it's offensive if relatives don't invite my kids.
Because they want to show off their kids to family/friends who don't see them all the time - whether they will admit to this reason or not.
"Show off" is an odd word choice; I don't think anyone is impressed by my eight year old. I do like when my kids get to see their family and friends, though. It helps build social bonds, which are important. I've never fought with anyone over kids at weddings, but I think weddings are better with kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had an evening wedding, adults only. Way before instagram. I was paying, so didn't want rando kids. We provided babysitting. It wasn't a problem for anyone as far as I know. My sister got mad because "her kids love weddings and they are well behaved". It was really her DH who wanted them there because he can't converse with adults and uses the kids as a crutch. He ended up in the bar watching the ballgame the whole reception anyway.
Nieces and nephews are different. If any of our sisters didn't invite our kids, I likely would not show up and it would start a war in our families. It's such a show of disrespect. We only have one sister each though. I think people expect nieces and nephews to be invited even when no other kids are.
Bigotry and intolerance are worth breaking up a family over; parties are not. Your priorities are out of whack. Imagine how you would feel getting the phone call that one of your sisters had died, and you had wasted time and emotions and squandered the gifts of family and sisterhood over a party. A party.
I think the sister is the one who is squandering the gifts of family. What kind of monster wouldn't invite their nieces and nephews? My kids are very close to their aunts and would be incredibly hurt to be excluded.
Anonymous wrote:We are South Asian and of course had kids at our wedding. But my cousin's kid wailed throughout my ceremony and my cousin didn't have the sense to take the kid outside of the hall. Years later, that same cousin's other kid almost ruined a couple's first dance bc the parents couldn't be bothered to keep their kid away from the dance floor for a few minutes.
This is to say, I understand why people exclude kids from weddings. It's not about the kids, it's about the entitled/clueless parents of said kids that don't remove their kid or correct their behavior.
Anonymous wrote:We are South Asian and of course had kids at our wedding. But my cousin's kid wailed throughout my ceremony and my cousin didn't have the sense to take the kid outside of the hall. Years later, that same cousin's other kid almost ruined a couple's first dance bc the parents couldn't be bothered to keep their kid away from the dance floor for a few minutes.
This is to say, I understand why people exclude kids from weddings. It's not about the kids, it's about the entitled/clueless parents of said kids that don't remove their kid or correct their behavior.