I should not have posted this on a public message board. I know that now. It is just too emotional I guess. I just wanted to vent. I did that. Im moving on.
let me clear a few things up:
Wanting my parents there in no way equates to me not wanting to marry my fiance. I cant even believe some people would say something that hurtful or draw that conclusion out of nowhere. I have wanted to marry him since our first date. Our relationship is wonderful. The only hitch thus far has been how to accomplish the wedding we both want since we cant seem to find a middle ground.
It just seems so wrong to have my parents and not invite his. I guess we can do this and hope his mom never finds out. But if she does, man is it going to be ugly.
It has nothing to do with the wedding being more important than the marriage. I am not looking for ann elaborate party here or trying to be a spoiled brat I just know it will hurt my father to not be present when I get married and i really want my parents there.
Only one side of the family (my father's and not my mother's) was at their wedding. All my life, my mother told us they eloped. I even knew the tiny local chapel they were married in. When I got married, if I asked for her input, she'd say, "What do I know abou planning a wedding? I eloped." Very shortly before she died, she let something slip that made it clear that some of my father's family had been at the wedding.

None of my older siblings had EVER had a clue about this. When I pinned her down for more info and pointed out that for over 50 years, she had told all her children she and Daddy had eloped and that it was pretty late in the day to be changing the story, she finally confessed that it was a "half elopement."
Meaning, his immediate family (parents and siblings) were there, but her side knew nothing about it. When I asked why, she said she couldn't bring herself to tell her father because she knew he wouldn't take it well. True enough, since her sister later reported he spent the next month crying daily at the loss of his baby.

But her side got over being left out.
So "half elopements" do exist. If you want to get married and can't do it without your family, go to your family and have an affordable wedding. Let your fiance decide whether he wants his family there or not.
Truly, that's his call. I'm of the "the marriage is more important than the wedding" camp. We had a nice, but affordable wedding. To me, it was a means to an end. The wedding got me to the marriage. Simple wedding, fancy wedding, whatever. The marriage was what mattered. Just like a car gets you to your vacation destination. Sure, it's nice to drive a luxury car instead of an economy car. But it's the vacation that really matters.
Personally, there's no way on God's green earth I'd wait 4 years. From what you've said, the situation will never be ideal and you'll never have the "right" conditions for the wedding you want. Meaning, you can't have both sides of the family attend and have a joyful, peaceful event take place. Ain't gonna happen. Face reality even if it's not pretty. As my wise mother said, "Wish in one hand and spit in the other and see which one gets full first."
Seriously, I'm not trying to be harsh. I'm saying that conditions will never be right for what you desire, so work with what you have and make the best of it. Ask yourself what you want most out of your relationship. Only you can answer that. Just know that a small wedding with no parents or only one set of parents is okay. Or a JP service for that matter. You can save and have a bash later to celebrate your marriage. Or you can put money away and take a dream trip on a special anniversary when the pressure has lessened. Heck, you may get more enjoyment out of that anyway.
For me, I would want to get on with the next phase of my life. As someone pointed out, legally, you are nothing to him now. If he's ever hurt, or God forbid dies, you're out in the cold. Everything will be up to his parents. Is that what you want? Sit down and ask yourself what's most important to you and act on it. Don't look back.
Good luck.