Come 1.30 in the morning the floor was full with guests from 3 to 73 and thats the way we wanted it. But it is a personal choice and people should just respect the couple and how they want their day.
Are they having this day to make others happy or to ask others help them celebrate their day ??
If it is a friend wedding, I don't mind if my kids are not invited but if it is a family wedding, I would be upset if they are not invited because the kids are part of their family as well, friends not!!!
This is a really interesting point. I think a lot of times it ends up being the former, unfortunately. I'm probably going to get married in the next few year to my long term boyfriend and we have already talked about having a very small wedding abroad - I know if the wedding was here (in Ireland)that I would be "required" to invite family members who I don't get on with and rarely see. And that his mother would want to be heavily involved in the organisation to the point of it being easier to give in to her than do it the way I want ( - based on info given my boyfriends two sisters in law).
I once said to my sister that I wouldn't want a sit down dinner at my wedding, that I would prefer a barbeque or something similar, and she said I could forget about getting a €100 "present" from her as this was cheap...not sure if she was joking!! And that's the next thing - I hate the obligatory cash presents that have become part of wedding culture. I know they are a necessary evil and are practical but I think they really cheapen the day.
Who supervised the kids at the funfair?Did anyone watch "Brides by Franc" on RTE on Sunday night? The couple getting married had 4 children and wanted a "child friendly" wedding. The best thing they did, I think, was to send all the kids off on a bus to a funfair while the dinner was going on. The cost of this wasn't discussed though but it would be interesting to know if the couple paid or if the parents all chipped in.
Who supervised the kids at the funfair?
As a parent, I'd be very cagey about sending off my child with unknown babysitters.I don't think it was made clear in the programme who supervised them - I imagine "volunteers" or babysitters were hired. I really like this programme but I think it's a pity they have dropped the discussion about budget at the start of each episode (which used to be done in previous series).
i think people get so wound up about this... its costs little to invite children, they don't need extra entertaining and the only thing i think guests hate (myself included) is when their parents bring them and expect someone else to mind them, you bring them then you know when they are flagging and need to be put to bed, when you need to say no to that drink incase you need to drive in an emergency etc. That said my own wedding was child friendly and its the one flowergirl that sold the show on the dancefloor, and no i didn't feel upstaged by her!Weddings should be mainly children free events and pushy parents who think otherwise are deluded!! They only want to bring the kids along to show them off and bore everyone of tales about nurseries, schools and until recently the price of houses!!! Parts of this are meant in jest so please dont get offended....
i think people get so wound up about this... its costs little to invite children,
ithe only thing i think guests hate (myself included) is when their parents bring them and expect someone else to mind them, you bring them then you know when they are flagging and need to be put to bed, when you need to say no to that drink incase you need to drive in an emergency etc.
quote]
The problem though is that if you invite all of your friends' kids there is bound to be at least one couple who let their children shout and scream in the church, run around the dining room tripping up the waitresses, and throw tantrums and bawl throughout the meal. Some parents just cannot realise that their children are not the centre of everyone else's universe and that not everyone is as besotted with them as they are. Other parents take the view that they're having a rare day out and they're 'entitled' to enjoy themselves without worrying about the effect their kids are having on other guests.
In any event, the real point is that its the bride and groom's special day, they are footing the bill and it should be entirely up to them whether they want a child free wedding, nieces and nephews only, no kids under 12 or whatever. People, in my view, have no right to throw hissy fits because their children haven't been invited, or to try and put a gun to the bride or groom's head and force their children to be invited whether they're welcome or not. That is just plain rude and brass necked in my opinion.
ithe only thing i think guests hate (myself included) is when their parents bring them and expect someone else to mind them, you bring them then you know when they are flagging and need to be put to bed, when you need to say no to that drink incase you need to drive in an emergency etc.
quote]
The problem though is that if you invite all of your friends' kids there is bound to be at least one couple who let their children shout and scream in the church, run around the dining room tripping up the waitresses, and throw tantrums and bawl throughout the meal. Some parents just cannot realise that their children are not the centre of everyone else's universe and that not everyone is as besotted with them as they are. Other parents take the view that they're having a rare day out and they're 'entitled' to enjoy themselves without worrying about the effect their kids are having on other guests.
In any event, the real point is that its the bride and groom's special day, they are footing the bill and it should be entirely up to them whether they want a child free wedding, nieces and nephews only, no kids under 12 or whatever. People, in my view, have no right to throw hissy fits because their children haven't been invited, or to try and put a gun to the bride or groom's head and force their children to be invited whether they're welcome or not. That is just plain rude and brass necked in my opinion.
Couldn't agree more!
I suppose it's ok to be in the company of drunken relatives then ..?
....there is usually a lot of screaming/crying/falls/knocking drinks over.....
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?