View Full Version : How Much Say So Should Mothers Have in Weddings?


RoryGilmore
02-07-2013, 03:48 PM
My mother is attempting to take everything over and it is driving me insane. My shower invitations are about to go out and my mother is all of a sudden going nuts over who is invited. I have family all over the States and the shower is being hosted by one of my bridesmaids in our college town. Which is about 30 minutes or so from my hometown. My mother thinks every female we've ever met should be invited o this thing and I disagree and have told her so. I want it to be a small intimate event and not invite some long lost great aunt that lives 1,000 miles away. Am I overreacting or should my mother have more control over things then she's getting?

JamesG
02-07-2013, 04:02 PM
I'd say it should be 100% yours and your future husband's say.

Sometimes things get complicated when the parents (on both sides) are flipping the bills so there might be some leverage involved. I don't know what the case is for you.

I'd say that the parents should be free to give advice, but to go and make demands is going too far. It's your wedding, not your mother's.

RoryGilmore
02-07-2013, 04:05 PM
I'd say it should be 100% yours and your future husband's say.

Sometimes things get complicated when the parents (on both sides) are flipping the bills so there might be some leverage involved. I don't know what the case is for you.

I'd say that the parents should be free to give advice, but to go and make demands is going too far.


Shes helping pay for the wedding but my bridesmaids are doing the shower one their own.

My mother is very forceful and has gotten used to getting her way most of her life and is having issues with the fact that she doesnt always get her way when it comes to my fiance and my's life.

JamesG
02-07-2013, 04:10 PM
Shes helping pay for the wedding but my bridesmaids are doing the shower one their own.

My mother is very forceful and has gotten used to getting her way most of her life and is having issues with the fact that she doesnt always get her way when it comes to my fiance and my's life.

That's something she has to deal with and learn to accept. You have to be firm and say that you have your own lives.

If you don't try to put a stop to it now, then your mother will probably try to take control over every major future event for you and your family.

Penny Lane
02-07-2013, 04:11 PM
What I did was to have 2 bridal showers. One for friends(given by a friend of ours from church) and the other for relatives(given by my aunt). That worked out fine. That way each shower was more intimate with fewer guests at each.:)

RoryGilmore
02-07-2013, 04:13 PM
What I did was to have 2 bridal showers. One for friends(given by a friend of ours from church) and the other for relatives(given by my aunt). That worked out fine. That way each shower was more intimate with fewer guests at each.:)

If I didnt live 6+ hours away from all my friends and family I would've done that but there's only so many of those trips I can make in one year with my own wedding and 2 cousins weddings all being in the same year

shotzette
02-07-2013, 05:09 PM
My mother is attempting to take everything over and it is driving me insane. My shower invitations are about to go out and my mother is all of a sudden going nuts over who is invited. I have family all over the States and the shower is being hosted by one of my bridesmaids in our college town. Which is about 30 minutes or so from my hometown. My mother thinks every female we've ever met should be invited o this thing and I disagree and have told her so. I want it to be a small intimate event and not invite some long lost great aunt that lives 1,000 miles away. Am I overreacting or should my mother have more control over things then she's getting?

Your wedding day belongs to you and your fiance; period, end of story. However, if you let someone pay for things you are giving them permission to butt in.

If you and your fiance want control of your wedding, you need to have a ceremony/reception/honeymoon/whatever that you two can afford to pay for on your own.

Best wishes!

catlover79
02-08-2013, 03:49 AM
I'd tell her as gently as I could to BACK OFF!! It's your wedding day, not hers.

I hope and pray all goes well with you and your intended. :bighug:

P.S. Your wedding is exactly one week before my brother's. How cool is that? :D

RoryGilmore
02-08-2013, 11:30 AM
I'd tell her as gently as I could to BACK OFF!! It's your wedding day, not hers.

I hope and pray all goes well with you and your intended. :bighug:

P.S. Your wedding is exactly one week before my brother's. How cool is that? :D

I did and it went surprisingly well considering my mother. One of the people she wanted to invite was my grandpa's ex and I didnt want any drama and the other was a grandmother that is going through intense chemo 12 hours from the shower location and I dont want to send her a shower invitation knowing that she wont be able to get away for it because I feel it will depress her.

The Flying Dutchmans
02-08-2013, 12:01 PM
I say none. It is your day to be happy. She had hers already and now it's your time. She can by all means make suggestions, but the final decisions should be yours. And if she were a caring mother, she would respect that. If you let her make the decisions, than its her wedding, not yours.

Coffeecup
02-08-2013, 05:35 PM
I would say 50% for you and your husband to be. 25% his mother, 25% your mother. Well maybe thats too much. 80% you and husband to be and 10% each for the mother. They are your family.

Janice
02-08-2013, 06:19 PM
It's your wedding, and everything should be you and your fiancee's decision. It is customary to allow both sides of the family to invite people they want to attend. Perhaps you can give them a certain number to limit their list to. Beyond that, just remember that it's your day.

I got married many years ago. My mother was cool, but my husband's mother had too much to say. We had a night wedding, and I didn't want children there. There were a bunch of kids on my husband's side, and it would have looked like a daycare if I invited them all. His mother drove me nuts about this. Finally, I told her that only his sisters' kids could attend, and that was still a lot. Still, it was a compromise.

Another issue was having wine at each table. I didn't think it was necessary. We had an open bar for an hour with hor'dourves before sitting down. We also had a champage toast at each table. We felt that was enough. It would cost an extra $800 to have red and white wine at each table, and I told her that we couldn't afford it. Next thing I know, she sent us a check for $400 with a note saying this was for her half of the wine. I just sucked it up and had the wine. Lots of other things, but those two examples were the biggest.

I wish I did what I wanted, and I think you should. Give a little on some areas that really don't matter. Good luck. :)

Retro4Life
02-08-2013, 06:23 PM
I say none. It is your day to be happy. She had hers already and now it's your time. She can by all means make suggestions, but the finals decisions should be yours. And if she were a caring mother, she would respect that. If you let her make the decisions, than its her wedding, not yours.


EXACTLY! :nod:

JamesG
02-08-2013, 07:32 PM
I was thinking about something... I understand every family is different (different beliefs, traditions, etc...), but isn't it up to the party's host to be in charge of everything?

I know of some people who had surprise bridal showers arranged by their friends meaning that the bride and groom, and their families, were not involved w/ anything.

Retro4Life
02-08-2013, 08:31 PM
I was thinking about something... I understand every family is different (different beliefs, traditions, etc...), but isn't it up to the party's host to be in charge of everything?

I know of some people who had surprise bridal showers arranged by their friends meaning that the bride and groom, and their families, were not involved w/ anything.

The tradition I'm familiar with has the groomsmen responsible for the bachelor party and the bridesmaids responsible for the bridal shower.

I think the bride's family traditionally pays for the reception, but that's getting a bit more lax what with changing economics, etc. My brother's wedding reception in 1972 was at the local VFW, and there were probably around 75-100 people there. Now that would no doubt be looked down upon, as it seems like spending tens of thousands of dollars on a wedding and party are 'required' if you are to be respected. It's crazy; even people who don't have anywhere near that kind of money are forking it over just to keep up with the Joneses. My friend paid $10,000 for his wedding in 1993...I can just imagine how expensive it all ends up being now!