Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today for DCUM to weigh in on:
I'm thinking about not attending my cousin's wedding since children are not allowed.
Details:
-- This is my only cousin.
-- My children are 14 and 16, well behaved, and have been to formal events before (you already guessed: It's black tie).
-- My kids are my aunt's and uncle's only great-niece and great-nephew.
-- The kid-free thing is driven by the cousin's fiancee, the bride.
-- This is a 250-person wedding in Greenwich, CT, and bride's family, who is paying, is exceptionally affluent and from NYC society.
-- We live in Chicago and will need to travel in for the full weekend by plane
-- We have one local relative on our side who could watch our kids for the weekend, my husband's mom, who is 86 and can't drive after a stroke.
In other words, this is not a scenario where allowing siblings or cousins to bring their kids as an exception to the no-kids thing would mean 40 extra plates or something, or a wedding where headcount costs are sensitive.
Yes, it's their day. It's just so ... tacky.
Yes, the bride is 30, all of her friends are already married, she had the custom cocktail menu picked out two years ago, and she put my hapless cousin on a skincare routine.
If it weren't for potentially hurting the feelings of my aunt and uncle -- this is their only child -- I wouldn't attend at all. I'm just here to vent.
Can you go alone? I sort of understand the no little kids thing at a formal event, but I don’t get it for teens. My 16 year old is invited to a cousin’s upcoming wedding, but not to the rehearsal dinner. Which is fine—they can do what they want—but when my whole family has already traveled to be there, I’m just supposed to leave my kid alone in a hotel to have dinner by herself? It’s weird. I think I’ll send my husband to that alone and I’ll hang out with my kid.
Anonymous wrote:So basically people are allowed to decide who they invited to ANY party. Any. Why do people think it’s different for weddings. It is THEIR party. They decide. period.
Anonymous wrote:Today for DCUM to weigh in on:
I'm thinking about not attending my cousin's wedding since children are not allowed.
Details:
-- This is my only cousin.
-- My children are 14 and 16, well behaved, and have been to formal events before (you already guessed: It's black tie).
-- My kids are my aunt's and uncle's only great-niece and great-nephew.
-- The kid-free thing is driven by the cousin's fiancee, the bride.
-- This is a 250-person wedding in Greenwich, CT, and bride's family, who is paying, is exceptionally affluent and from NYC society.
-- We live in Chicago and will need to travel in for the full weekend by plane
-- We have one local relative on our side who could watch our kids for the weekend, my husband's mom, who is 86 and can't drive after a stroke.
In other words, this is not a scenario where allowing siblings or cousins to bring their kids as an exception to the no-kids thing would mean 40 extra plates or something, or a wedding where headcount costs are sensitive.
Yes, it's their day. It's just so ... tacky.
Yes, the bride is 30, all of her friends are already married, she had the custom cocktail menu picked out two years ago, and she put my hapless cousin on a skincare routine.
If it weren't for potentially hurting the feelings of my aunt and uncle -- this is their only child -- I wouldn't attend at all. I'm just here to vent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today for DCUM to weigh in on:
I'm thinking about not attending my cousin's wedding since children are not allowed.
Details:
-- This is my only cousin.
-- My children are 14 and 16, well behaved, and have been to formal events before (you already guessed: It's black tie).
-- My kids are my aunt's and uncle's only great-niece and great-nephew.
-- The kid-free thing is driven by the cousin's fiancee, the bride.
-- This is a 250-person wedding in Greenwich, CT, and bride's family, who is paying, is exceptionally affluent and from NYC society.
-- We live in Chicago and will need to travel in for the full weekend by plane
-- We have one local relative on our side who could watch our kids for the weekend, my husband's mom, who is 86 and can't drive after a stroke.
In other words, this is not a scenario where allowing siblings or cousins to bring their kids as an exception to the no-kids thing would mean 40 extra plates or something, or a wedding where headcount costs are sensitive.
Yes, it's their day. It's just so ... tacky.
Yes, the bride is 30, all of her friends are already married, she had the custom cocktail menu picked out two years ago, and she put my hapless cousin on a skincare routine.
If it weren't for potentially hurting the feelings of my aunt and uncle -- this is their only child -- I wouldn't attend at all. I'm just here to vent.
I wouldn't go. And, I'd tell the aunt and uncle why.
Anonymous wrote:Today for DCUM to weigh in on:
I'm thinking about not attending my cousin's wedding since children are not allowed.
Details:
-- This is my only cousin.
-- My children are 14 and 16, well behaved, and have been to formal events before (you already guessed: It's black tie).
-- My kids are my aunt's and uncle's only great-niece and great-nephew.
-- The kid-free thing is driven by the cousin's fiancee, the bride.
-- This is a 250-person wedding in Greenwich, CT, and bride's family, who is paying, is exceptionally affluent and from NYC society.
-- We live in Chicago and will need to travel in for the full weekend by plane
-- We have one local relative on our side who could watch our kids for the weekend, my husband's mom, who is 86 and can't drive after a stroke.
In other words, this is not a scenario where allowing siblings or cousins to bring their kids as an exception to the no-kids thing would mean 40 extra plates or something, or a wedding where headcount costs are sensitive.
Yes, it's their day. It's just so ... tacky.
Yes, the bride is 30, all of her friends are already married, she had the custom cocktail menu picked out two years ago, and she put my hapless cousin on a skincare routine.
If it weren't for potentially hurting the feelings of my aunt and uncle -- this is their only child -- I wouldn't attend at all. I'm just here to vent.
Anonymous wrote:I never bring my children to weddings.
Anonymous wrote:Kids (family and friends) were invited to my DD's wedding. Most parents had checked in the hotel where the wedding took place and they managed their kids very well. No one cried, no one misbehaved. C'mon, they are there with their parents and relatives. They were precious and my DD danced with all the kids at the dance floor.
I love weddings where you have kids, babies, teens, old people.
Anonymous wrote:Kids (family and friends) were invited to my DD's wedding. Most parents had checked in the hotel where the wedding took place and they managed their kids very well. No one cried, no one misbehaved. C'mon, they are there with their parents and relatives. They were precious and my DD danced with all the kids at the dance floor.
I love weddings where you have kids, babies, teens, old people.
Anonymous wrote:No kids at a wedding is a relatively new thing.