Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they slid no kids, it is fine to decline. You should not have find a stranger to watch them.?It’s rude to be be angry at people who won’t travel without kids or hire strangers to watch them.
What must it be like to live in such a binary world where those are your two options?
Spoiler alert - my husband and I are going to the Caribbean for 10 years with two other couples and no kids and yet a stranger isn't watching our children! (Neither is family, for those who want to complain about how it's so easy for those who have family who live close by - we do not).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH's extended family is very close. A cousin's child is getting married in the fall and the wedding happens to fall over a rare 4 day weekend for my kids. We'd planned on taking a long weekend trip together as family when the wedding invite arrived.
The dilemma - wedding is adults only. Can we skip the wedding and still go on a trip or would that be rude?
They’re “very close” to you guys but they aren’t inviting everyone in your nuclear family? That doesn’t scream “very close” to me and of course you should decline if you don’t want to leave your children behind. Very normal!
You people are so freaking dramatic. It's like not people who travel without their children are leaving them tied up at home with a bowl of kibble for a week or something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can always skip a wedding if you already have plans. It's not rude at all.
For all you people who get enraged by no-kids weddings, do you do anything without your kids? Are they allowed to go to sleepovers alone or to overnight field trips or camps? Do you ever go out to dinner without your kids? Why all the rage towards an adults-only evening?
You are projecting, no one is enraged in this thread. Weddings are a social obligation with bland food, bland music, expensive and a hassle. I try to minimize time without either parent, or a trusted family member, for my kids. A concert to my favorite band, i'll make an exception. An amazing weekend getaway to Napa, ok. My husband's cousin's kid's wedding, nope not prioritizing that over my kids - the B&G didn't so why should i?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Send regrets and a nice card with check. If anyone asks (in laws, parents of bride, etc) say apologetically that the kids have a 4 day weekend and you had planned a family getaway, and you respect that their wedding is no kids.
This has nothing to do with it. They have another trip planned. No need to mention the kids or not.
Anonymous wrote:You can always skip a wedding if you already have plans. It's not rude at all.
For all you people who get enraged by no-kids weddings, do you do anything without your kids? Are they allowed to go to sleepovers alone or to overnight field trips or camps? Do you ever go out to dinner without your kids? Why all the rage towards an adults-only evening?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH's extended family is very close. A cousin's child is getting married in the fall and the wedding happens to fall over a rare 4 day weekend for my kids. We'd planned on taking a long weekend trip together as family when the wedding invite arrived.
The dilemma - wedding is adults only. Can we skip the wedding and still go on a trip or would that be rude?
They’re “very close” to you guys but they aren’t inviting everyone in your nuclear family? That doesn’t scream “very close” to me and of course you should decline if you don’t want to leave your children behind. Very normal!
Anonymous wrote:Send regrets and a nice card with check. If anyone asks (in laws, parents of bride, etc) say apologetically that the kids have a 4 day weekend and you had planned a family getaway, and you respect that their wedding is no kids.
Anonymous wrote:Kids only weddings don’t work for families with kids, especially if it’s out of town.
It’s OK to decline, just send a good gift depending on the relationship.
A few years ago we declined a kids only wedding. Since it was family (and family we like), we sent a $3000 wedding gift. Fast forward 4 years and 2 kids later, the bride and groom completely get it now.
We still jokingly give them a hard time about a kids only wedding, though. I think they get it. Lol
Anonymous wrote:Same scenario but it’s parent’s weekend at my youngest college her first year there? I do not want her to be the only freshman with no parent there. Cousin’s wedding. No kids. Is it rude not to go to wedding?
Anonymous wrote:Same scenario but it’s parent’s weekend at my youngest college her first year there? I do not want her to be the only freshman with no parent there. Cousin’s wedding. No kids. Is it rude not to go to wedding?
Anonymous wrote:If they slid no kids, it is fine to decline. You should not have find a stranger to watch them.?It’s rude to be be angry at people who won’t travel without kids or hire strangers to watch them.
Anonymous wrote:DH's extended family is very close. A cousin's child is getting married in the fall and the wedding happens to fall over a rare 4 day weekend for my kids. We'd planned on taking a long weekend trip together as family when the wedding invite arrived.
The dilemma - wedding is adults only. Can we skip the wedding and still go on a trip or would that be rude?