CarolAnn856
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 11, 2016
- Messages
- 2,006
I thought you were from New Zealand?
I thought so, too.
I thought you were from New Zealand?
First, does the son really want his mum to accompany him to the florist and dress shop?
Personally, I'd just try to sit down with everyone, find out what each of their "dream weddings" looks like and coordinate with the parents of whomever's marrying my child, so that we can divide up the labour and everyone gets what they need. Two weddings? That's fine, we've got four parents! Not to mention which, it's not like the brides and grooms are incapable of doing anything for themselves.
After all, it's not like I'm the only human being on the planet capable of running around to dress shops (although, actually, if my son DID want to wear a dress to his wedding, I might allocate him more of my precious dress-shopping-time, just because it'd be ever so much more entertaining).
I may be biased, however, because my experience dress shopping with my mum was NOT a heart-warming bonding experience. It was tense and fraught and I ended up unhappy and resentful with a dress that was not to my taste and not even remotely my style. I would have been SO much happier if my mother had just let me do it myself, instead of trying WAY too hard to be a "good mother". And it may be that the son would be happier, too, with a bit less of his mum's attention. Once again, "equal" does not mean dragging BOTH your children off to dress shops, when only one actually wants to go to a dress shop with you.
I thought you were from New Zealand?
But comparing a parent reserving equal funds for their children's birthdays to a parent being prepared with sufficient funding to equalize the support of two weddings in two months time when the timing of the second was quite obviously surprising qualifies as analogous and germane to the question at hand? Watching the parameters flex is, interesting.
It's entirely plausible MOG had an entirely different expectation from information she got directly from her son, an expectation that was completely derailed when the priority was placed on the bride's sister's needs, perhaps over those of the groom himself. Would not be one bit surprised to find the groom later regrets accepting the wedding date before his graduation and so soon after his sister's, simply because I suspect the timing will seriously impact his ability to be present in the moment for both weddings and add pressure to the end of his education.
I'm sorry you dress shopping was not a lot of fun, my mom was a bit like that she would buy me the one she wanted but not the one I wanted that was $1000 cheaper, so I just paid for my own dress.
I wasn't implying the MIL should go dress shopping with the groom (or the sons bride) but that many posters had said that the son and his fiancé can't complain if they don't get any help from the mother as she had already said she wants to focus on the daughter, my point is that it's over a year away, the mother can still be very involved with her daughter without ignoring her sons wedding. It may mean that you go to the florist with your son instead of your daughter because you are already doing 5 other appointments with your daughter.
I am a Canadian that lives in NZ.
You do know the weddings are not in two months time right? They are in a year, with 2-3 months between them.
I have said before that the mother shouldn't renege on money promised to the sister (although people keep saying the MIL has only asked them to postpone by 2 months, I don't see how someone who can afford it with 15 month notice is going to scrape it together in another 2)
But I do think if she has overextended herself with promises to the sister that there are ways to "sort it out" as best you can, maybe she has promised to pay for all of the reception but hasn't bought or told the bride they were going to give them their honeymoon as their wedding gift-that gift could instead be given to the groom with a smaller gift going to the sister.
Again though you seem focused on Money, I am talking about a mother that doesn't seem to be willing to split her time(whatever amount of it she has) between her two children
Again though you seem focused on Money, I am talking about a mother that doesn't seem to be willing to split her time(whatever amount of it she has) between her two children
On a smaller scale, it's the same sort of concept as a Christmas budget. You budget & plan accordingly. And, then, after you've spent your allocated funds & every gift is wrapped & under the tree, your daughter comes home & tells you she needs to buy each of her fellow cheerleaders a present for the Christmas party that's just been scheduled. Okay, but you've spent all your Christmas money already. Plus, you've used up all the wrapping paper. Oh, & she needs a ride to the party which will be a problem because your son's holiday concert is scheduled for the same time.
)Most of us are NOT saying the bride & groom MUST change their wedding date. However, MOST of us are saying that we can emphasize w/ the mother of the groom & don't find her "difficult" because we can see how it could be hard to plan & prepare for 2 weddings within a short time frame.

Wow.............
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When my son and daughter in law were planning their wedding I imagine that my DDIL and her family thought that I was difficult. You see, DDIL and her bridesmaid decided that a Jack and Jill was in order. Now we had a jack and jill shower for my youngest son, but it was the old fashioned one that was basically a couples shower, no raffles, no entry ticket. Our relatives life at least 2 hours away, so we thought a nice dinner and dancing would be fun, and it was a way to be able to have the family together for a more informal party. What my DDIL and her friend wanted was one of the blowout parties, tickets, raffles, and a DJ. My son had attended about 3 stags in his life, had never bought a ticket to the ones that were held and he was not attending. His best man, my youngest son does not drink and he and his wife would not be attending. DH said there was no way he could bring tickets to work...Donny never went to one for his coworkers. The date that they were looking at was harvest in my family. Are you kidding me???? The brides family was on the west coast. And she wanted me to "reach out" to the bridesmaid....the only one who was in the area and would be able to attend....No. I am not doing this. No amount of discussion would sway her.
I guess I'm totally out of the loop, I don't have kids, and I live in a very rural area, so I had no clue this was a thing. I am thinking a Jack and Jill is like a combined and a shower not only for the bride, but the groom, too. What the heck is with the tickets and raffles? Ticket into the event, or you buy raffle tickets, for like prizes? This is so weird. Never heard of this. With a DJ and a party like that, it doesn't sound like a shower to me, but this sounds more like a bachelor party or girls night out before the wedding.
Where I live, I never heard of doing this. A lot of people here, just have simple showers, at someone's home, or maybe a church or social hall. Occasionally a restaurant with a dedicated room, if they have more money to spend.
Around here there are these J&J that involve ticket sales. The ticket include a DJ, beer and wine, and food. There are raffles as well. They are parties. They can be instead of a shower and stag, but many times they are in addition to one. WE have gone to plenty, and DH and I generally enjoy them. We do pick and choose which ones we go to though, but DH buys tickets whenever a coworker has someone getting married. They are intended to help the couple.
When I was a kid we used to have Jack and Jill showers but they were in place of a Stag and a SHower and therre were no tickets sold, IIRC.
Strange that you keep bumping a thread you claim you want to see sink into oblivion. Personally, I think it's been interesting, so bump away!
Maybe I'm old, or maybe this isn't a thing here, but I have never heard of this, either, and I think this sounds incredibly tacky?
Charging admission to a party? Are you also expected to bring a gift? A fundraiser to help the couple pay for their wedding?
Not to sound like an old fuddy-duddy but I would never attend one of these. 1st because I think that it is the height of bad taste to charge admission to a party, and 2nd, you plan the wedding you can afford. If you have to fund raise for the wedding you are spending beyond your means.
I'm with you, but I think I'm just too old for all of this **** LOLI guess I'm totally out of the loop, I don't have kids, and I live in a very rural area, so I had no clue this was a thing. I am thinking a Jack and Jill is like a combined and a shower not only for the bride, but the groom, too. What the heck is with the tickets and raffles? Ticket into the event, or you buy raffle tickets, for like prizes? This is so weird. Never heard of this. With a DJ and a party like that, it doesn't sound like a shower to me, but this sounds more like a bachelor party or girls night out before the wedding.
Where I live, I never heard of doing this. A lot of people here, just have simple showers, at someone's home, or maybe a church or social hall. Occasionally a restaurant with a dedicated room, if they have more money to spend.
Are guys for real.
I didn't bump a thread.
I happened to see that this crazy thread was already back up on the top of page one.
Two threads earlier today by the resident 'horse-beaters'.
I have not ever made a reference to 'red flags' etiher.
That one is just genius!!! Gotta hand it to you!!
Maybe you all are incapable of actually looking at posts and times and dates.
But you are excellent at creating total and complete fiction.
Certainly experts at hurling personal attacks!!!
Gotta love it, because to me, the DIS is a great source of entertainment!
I'm with you, but I think I'm just too old for all of this **** LOL
Charging admission and raffles and tickets for an engagement has me lol-ing.
They sure do. Generally out for a meal and then a load of drinking. Usually the groom to be doesn't pay a cent for meal and drinks, his mates do.It is a pretty normal thing here, so I guess it is regional. No gift at a J&J. I have no idea what couples do with the money and I don't care. I figure my $20 ticket helps a little, as do the tickets I buy for raffles. I never win anything.
It is bad taste to go outside of what is acceptable in your area. It is not bad taste to do what is an acceptable wedding event in your area. What is tacky here may not be be tacky in your area, but if the number of J&J I have either attended or bought tickets to is any indication of what is normal here, I guess it's not considered tacky. I did not want to participate in one for my DS because my family does not have them. Not that way they are in my area.
So let me ask you? Do you folks have stags in your neck of the woods? We do here and the guys buy tickets. They have raffles, and they are meant to raise cash for the wedding couple. My DH buys them for just about every coworker who has a family member getting married although he attends few now. Just about everyone I know who has gotten married has one, along with a shower for the bride. My DDIL tols my son they do nto have them where she was raised.