I appreciate that. The issues won't be resolved, but we will still enjoy the wedding.
I think like a lot of family relationships, it's complicated. My son is not OK with all of this but he just wants to get through the wedding and move on. Here's an example, the fiancé wants to have a dance off with me and my son vs her and her dad. She's a professional dancer and has a lot of professional dancer friends that are going to the wedding. My son absolutely does not want to do this any more than I do, but he's not going to say no to her. I would be doing him a favor by refusing (because he doesn't want the drama with the mother) but I don't want to cause issues. Did I mention we are expected to take dance lessons for this performance? Ugh!
This is all why I've always been more about couples paying for it themselves. And I've been a lot less for parents being like "I'm paying for it so I get to decide". I've often been the odd one out though on wedding opinions on the DIS. I'm much more about what the couple wants.I think it comes down to my son feeling like he doesn't have a say because he is not paying for the wedding. So it's all being done by the bride and her mother. At one point early on, my husband told my son and his fiancé that it didn't matter what either of the parents want. That the wedding needs to be about the two of them only. The fiancé told her mother this and she got very very offended. I'm not sure what's so controversial about that but she is adamant that if she pays, she decides. This is her wedding as much as her daughter's. And to be truly honest with everyone, I see the mother's point. If my son cares about the wedding, he should pay for it himself. I'm not one that would ever give money with those expectations.
And with that, we will show up and enjoy ourselves even if we are stuck in the very backI will take the dumb dance lessons and participate in a dance off even though it should be 2 minutes of the wedding that is about my son and me.
I had this happen also. We gave the couple a budget for rehearsal and told them that it was also covering the honeymoon. They could spend the money how they wanted - big rehearsal and simple honeymoon or small rehearsal and elaborate honeymoon. What they didn't spend, we'd give them in cash for spending money on their trip.The father-of-the-bride is working another 2 years past retirement to pay for the wedding. Everything must be perfect for the bride and her mother. They threw a huge tantrum when we said we'd only give 5k towards the rehearsal dinner. They wanted all 350 people invited.
OP, I'll ship you my walking boot if you want to go this routeMay I suggest a tragically unexpected "foot/ankle injury"?
Yeah, I am not ever doing a dance off and lessons so I can look less stupid as they dance circles around my middle-aged ***. Just me.
Omg! At this point, I’d be more worried about their marriage than the wedding.I appreciate that. The issues won't be resolved, but we will still enjoy the wedding.
I think like a lot of family relationships, it's complicated. My son is not OK with all of this but he just wants to get through the wedding and move on. Here's an example, the fiancé wants to have a dance off with me and my son vs her and her dad. She's a professional dancer and has a lot of professional dancer friends that are going to the wedding. My son absolutely does not want to do this any more than I do, but he's not going to say no to her. I would be doing him a favor by refusing (because he doesn't want the drama with the mother) but I don't want to cause issues. Did I mention we are expected to take dance lessons for this performance? Ugh!
I think the soon to be father-in-law is an alright guy. He just keeps his head down and golfs a lotYour son's future soon to be in-laws sound like a bunch of whackos.
Omg! At this point, I’d be more worried about their marriage than the wedding.
What does your son and his bride prefer?
I have learned with weddings.
Defer to the person paying. If you want it done differently, pay for it yourself. If you don't want to pay, thank the host graciously and tell them how wonderful it is, while waiting until you're home and in private to download your real thoughts to your spouse (who can't rat you out).
Demur on all requests if you don't want to do them. There's no reason for you to be angry about the dance and then have the host be angry at the effort in the dance. Just make yourself happy at least - there's less drama.
If you need an excuse - "I'm sorry, I have performance anxiety/agita and really just want to stay in the background and enjoy the wonderful event you are hosting. Thank you for trying to include me, but I really must pass on all requests. Thank you for understanding."
PS - And have set seats for your side of the family.
Several things came to mind.
1. People like to know where to go/where to sit so reserved tables for sure. This shouldn't even be a question at a wedding with 350 guests. I do placecards for Thanksgiving dinner LOL.
2. Your son is in for a rough road. I can't even imagine having railroaded my now husband and disregarding his family during the wedding planning like this. She clearly doesn't care much for his input which doesn't bode well. It was our wedding. Not my wedding. And certainly not mine and my mother's wedding?!?!?!
3. We were grateful that although we were adults, our sets of parents each contributed a bit to our wedding, but if any of it came with conditions that we weren't comfortable it would have been "thank you but no thank you". Again, this isn't a great sign for where their relationship is headed and God help you if/when there are grandchildren.
Best of luck!
I'm truly sorry this is what your son has chosen for his future. I hope you can enjoy the day and that there is some salvageable relationship at the end of this selfish disaster.We already know what this means for future grandkids. We were sad about it at first and have come to accept that there's really nothing we can do except try and remain friendly and open to a relationship. Thankfully, we have two other sons who are in serious relationships and we love their families. We get together regularly with their parents and it's really nice.
Also, I'm sorry. I didn't mean my comments to be glib or hurtful. I'm sure it is a very difficult situation and it doesn't feel great to be left out of the planning or not really given any consideration. You have a great attitude and hopefully after the wedding planning things come back around a little bit for you. I hope my comments didn't make you feel any worse than I'm sure you already feel.We already know what this means for future grandkids. We were sad about it at first and have come to accept that there's really nothing we can do except try and remain friendly and open to a relationship. Thankfully, we have two other sons who are in serious relationships and we love their families. We get together regularly with their parents and it's really nice.