hornedfrog
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Oct 30, 2006
- Messages
- 159
I'm sorry? I most certainly think that I am my own person and that I should not always be attached as an appendage to my parents. My "guest", whoever that may be, does not live in this household? So what of that? Why was "guest" tacked on to this invitation? What is the explanation for that? "Guest" is MY guest, so most certainly should be added to my invite. But "guest" has nothing to do with my parents, so shouldn't be on their invite. "Guest" cannot be sent their own invitation as they are, MY guest, and "guest"'s identity has not been written in stone. So what would YOU do here?
I'm not going to decline an invitation to my grandparents *surprise* 50th wedding anniversary party because my aunt wrote it out incorrectly. This may work in other scenarios, but not in mine.
What you think is pretty clear. And irrelevant to the person addressing the invite. And, in many peoples' opinions, incorrect.
You are part of your parents' household. It was nice of the addressee to include you by name (could have gone with "and family" and been okay). It was exceptionally nice of them to give you the allowance of a guest. The person will be your guest. You are part of the household of your parents. Thus the invite goes to your parents, you and the guest (in that order). I don't see why any of this makes a difference? You're right...your guest doesn't live in your household. They are not listed by name on the invite. That is the only area where any of this is relevant...it would be a breach of etiquette if they DID live in your household and weren't addressed by name. Where the guest lives (since its not in the house) doesn't make a difference. And has nothing to do with you getting your own invite.
What would I do? Apologize to my aunt for starters.
How you handle the invitation is totally up to you. You've made that decision. Others will make theirs based on yours. That's how life works.