View Full Version : Life advice - Wedding drama
grdawg
06-10-2015, 04:19 PM
I don't post much, but this message board has been invaluable in the past when dealing with life issues so here goes again:
A really good friend of my wife got engaged in February and told us her wedding will probably be in Sept/Oct with Labor Day weekend a good possibility. She has known her for 20+ years. Fast forward to about 2 weeks ago and out of the blue my brother calls to tell me he got engaged and he was looking at Sept/Oct. We didn't really understand the urgency on their part to get married anyway. I immediately tell him about my wife's friends wedding. A few days later my wife's friend confirms that the wedding is Sunday of labor day weekend. I call my brother and tell him again that we can't do that day and that we will make any other day work. My wife sends his fiance an email as well. A week later my brother goes ahead and books that same day for his wedding and my wife get's a response back that they are OK if we don't come to their wedding, but that was the "only" day that would work for them. My wife is upset because she feels that it should matter to them that we are there and they picked the one day that we told them would be an issue. We told them we'd make any other day work and if it was on a different day of that weekend we could try to make both.
A little background - my brother is 5 1/2 years older and we are very different people and have had our issues. He and his ex wife caused a lot of drama at our wedding so there is already tension there.
My feeling is that it is one day and wouldn't be the end of the world to miss my brother's wedding and go to my wife's friends since we knew about it 1st and gave them ample notice. But I know I'll get guilt from my mom.
Both are in completely different states and we don't want to split up as we told them from the beginning that her friends is not close to an airport.
Thanks in advance for reading my drama
Chief Rum
06-10-2015, 04:44 PM
Have you asked your brother why that was the only day which worked for them?
digamma
06-10-2015, 04:51 PM
My advice: you are going to think about this way more than either of them will. Do what is best for you and your wife and go from there.
Swaggs
06-10-2015, 05:00 PM
I think it sounds like you and/or your wife would rather go to the friend's wedding. Maybe it will be more fun or you all are closer to the friend. I cannot imagine not going to a brother's wedding unless you are not on speaking terms or this is like his fifth wedding or there is some other unusual family dynamic.
Wedding planning is (probably unnecessarily) stressful, so I think it is not real practical to try to get them or expect them to schedule around your other plans. I think you have to go to the brother's wedding (barring one of the above reasons) unless you truly value the relationship with the friend over your family. Other than knowing about it first, you can justify missing the friend's wedding for all the reasons you listed for missing your brother's, plus any good friend is going to understand putting family first (even if it is disappointing to them).
corbes
06-10-2015, 05:05 PM
My advice: you are going to think about this way more than either of them will. Do what is best for you and your wife and go from there.
+1
Abe Sargent
06-10-2015, 05:09 PM
My advice: you are going to think about this way more than either of them will. Do what is best for you and your wife and go from there.
+2
Edward64
06-10-2015, 06:05 PM
I think split up and go to both. Each wedding party will understand and (should appreciate) the situation and how you tried to handle it.
Chief Rum
06-10-2015, 06:12 PM
I think split up and go to both. Each wedding party will understand and (should appreciate) the situation and how you tried to handle it.
Without further information about why the brother had to have that date, this is how I would go. It's your wife's friend. It's your brother.
This shouldn't say anything about the two of you with each other. It's just acknowledging the situation and dealing with it.
Izulde
06-10-2015, 06:36 PM
My advice: you are going to think about this way more than either of them will. Do what is best for you and your wife and go from there.
+3
Izulde
06-10-2015, 06:42 PM
To further expand on that, your wife is someone you live with every day. Your brother, from the information we have here, isn't. I also find it odd/suspicious that they scheduled the *exact* same day after knowing that was the one day you had a prior commitment.
And in terms of the schedule thing that Swaggs mentioned, we're talking about one day. ONE. that didn't work for Mr. and Mrs. grdawg. It's not like we're talking about a week, or even a weekend. It's one flipping day.
stevew
06-10-2015, 07:03 PM
Tiebreaker criteria
1.Who has been married fewer times. If tied.
2. Who has been living together shorter amount of time. If tied.
3. Who is younger.
JonInMiddleGA
06-10-2015, 07:19 PM
My wife is upset because she feels that it should matter to them that we are there ...
I say this without any criticism of your wife (or anybody else for that matter) intended but ... not much gain I've ever found about worrying over what "should" matter to people.
There's every bit as much of the same sort of logic/reasoning that could find your brother (and/or his fiance) saying they should matter enough to you to be there.
*FTR, I ain't saying either is right or wrong, just pointing out what I see as a similarity in the sort of reasoning being used.
My two cents being, I suppose, let them do what they choose & ya'll do what you choose and just ... do, and be. People prioritize what they prioritize, feel what they feel, and care about what they care about. Worrying much about whatever those realities are is a bad investment afaic.
Dodgerchick
06-10-2015, 07:23 PM
It depends. Who's hotter your brother's fiance, or your wife's friend?
Sorry, had to be asked.
PilotMan
06-10-2015, 07:32 PM
Whatever decision you make you'll want a united front and a complete agreement from your wife. It sounds like the two of you had already made, at the very least, a partial commitment to her friends wedding. You were also very clear with your brother that you had 1 day that was an issue. Now your brother has decided to not use that information for his planning and you already laid it out to him that you had reasons. It seems to me that your best bet is to stick by your original decision, reiterate that you made it clear that day wouldn't work and go to your wife's friends wedding.
In any way, none of this is about you, but the your brother does need to respect the information that you had given him and if he, or anyone else in your family objects you fall back on your original statement that you already had a commitment that you had to honor and you were right up front with it. Your wife's feelings should trump those of your mother's anyway.
finkenst
06-10-2015, 08:30 PM
Whatever decision you make will be wrong.
Racer
06-10-2015, 08:52 PM
My two cents being, I suppose, let them do what they choose & ya'll do what you choose and just ... do, and be. People prioritize what they prioritize, feel what they feel, and care about what they care about. Worrying much about whatever those realities are is a bad investment afaic.
+1
TroyF
06-10-2015, 09:26 PM
I say this without any criticism of your wife (or anybody else for that matter) intended but ... not much gain I've ever found about worrying over what "should" matter to people.
There's every bit as much of the same sort of logic/reasoning that could find your brother (and/or his fiance) saying they should matter enough to you to be there.
*FTR, I ain't saying either is right or wrong, just pointing out what I see as a similarity in the sort of reasoning being used.
My two cents being, I suppose, let them do what they choose & ya'll do what you choose and just ... do, and be. People prioritize what they prioritize, feel what they feel, and care about what they care about. Worrying much about whatever those realities are is a bad investment afaic.
This, this, and more this.
Don't try to worry about what everyone else was thinking, they had their reasons. Make a decision and move on. People get so pissed off. At my wedding, one of my family members was pissed off where they were seated and they didn't invite us to see my cousin graduate college.
It bothered my wife to no end. I just brushed it off. Whatever. We all have to do what we have to do. Do what you and your wife want to do and don't look back. They had their reasons, you have yours.
bhlloy
06-10-2015, 09:50 PM
I'm gonna go against the grain here, but I can't imagine a scenario where I wouldn't choose the brother assuming your relationship hadn't broken down completely. I can understand why you might be annoyed that he chose the one day you had another wedding but he's your brother.
I'm not even really a big family person or really close to my family (6k miles will do that) but if my sister is getting married I'm dropping everything else in my life to make it there. Sorry if my wife's friend is missing out - and if it's that good of a friend then my wife will go separately.
law90026
06-10-2015, 10:00 PM
I honestly wouldn't second-guess why your brother picked that day. It's his wedding and it's really his right to pick the day that works best for him and his soon-to-be wife. Suggesting that he pick any other day seems unfair to me because it isn't your wedding.
Even if his intentions aren't pure, it doesn't change the fact that its his wedding and his choice.
For you, it just boils down to which wedding you would prefer to attend. You won't be wrong for picking one over the other.
JPhillips
06-10-2015, 10:01 PM
I'm gonna go against the grain here, but I can't imagine a scenario where I wouldn't choose the brother assuming your relationship hadn't broken down completely. I can understand why you might be annoyed that he chose the one day you had another wedding but he's your brother.
I'm not even really a big family person or really close to my family (6k miles will do that) but if my sister is getting married I'm dropping everything else in my life to make it there. Sorry if my wife's friend is missing out - and if it's that good of a friend then my wife will go separately.
This.
I want to agree with Jon, but in the end I'd be there for my brother even if it pissed me off a little.
grdawg
06-10-2015, 10:12 PM
Thanks for everyone's comments.
We've asked why they had to choose that day and the reasons have been its cheaper, the venue they wanted was available that day and she is a teacher and says she couldn't take any days off and if they didn't do it then then it would Have to wait until next June. We don't really believe that was the only day. It was the day they wanted and nothing was changing their minds. If it was the day after we would have made it work. I told them I would have cancelled a trip the prior weekend.
TroyF
06-10-2015, 10:56 PM
Thanks for everyone's comments.
We've asked why they had to choose that day and the reasons have been its cheaper, the venue they wanted was available that day and she is a teacher and says she couldn't take any days off and if they didn't do it then then it would Have to wait until next June. We don't really believe that was the only day. It was the day they wanted and nothing was changing their minds. If it was the day after we would have made it work. I told them I would have cancelled a trip the prior weekend.
I agreed with Jon on this and still do, but I have to say I wouldn't have explained myself if I was your brother.
I'd have said, "it's this day, you are invited, come or don't" He and his wife are adults, they don't have to justify their decisions to you. If his decision was because he wanted to cause a complication for you and your wife, it's his right. How you deal with it is your business.
I mean even the start. Unless a friend or family member asked for my opinion, I wouldn't have sent the emails or talked to them BEFORE they officially booked it. If they asked your opinion and you told them you couldn't make it and they still did it? So what. They took all of the factors into account and did what is best for them. Sorry their special day doesn't fit into your schedule, but it's their special day, not yours.
I don't mean to be a jerk, but this one sent it over the top for me. If your brother and his fiance really explained all of that to you, they are better people than I.
Dutch
06-10-2015, 10:59 PM
Have you considered that you go to your brother's wedding and your wife go to her friend's wedding? Might be a valid possibility here.
grdawg
06-10-2015, 11:07 PM
Have you considered that you go to your brother's wedding and your wife go to her friend's wedding? Might be a valid possibility here.
Yes, but there are logistic issues so it is a little more challenging to do that and we really don't want to split up.
grdawg
06-10-2015, 11:10 PM
I agreed with Jon on this and still do, but I have to say I wouldn't have explained myself if I was your brother.
I don't mean to be a jerk, but this one sent it over the top for me. If your brother and his fiance really explained all of that to you, they are better people than I.
I wouldn't say they explained all this. We heard from my mother some of it.
Desnudo
06-10-2015, 11:13 PM
+3
+4
Amazing coincidence but don't make the decision all about you which is basically the way you are describing it. Take them at their word and go where you were invited first which is the correct thing to do anyway.
Dutch
06-10-2015, 11:26 PM
A really good friend of my wife got engaged in February and told us her wedding will probably be in Sept/Oct with Labor Day weekend a good possibility. She has known her for 20+ years. Fast forward to about 2 weeks ago and out of the blue my brother calls to tell me he got engaged and he was looking at Sept/Oct. We didn't really understand the urgency on their part to get married anyway. I immediately tell him about my wife's friends wedding. A few days later my wife's friend confirms that the wedding is Sunday of labor day weekend. I call my brother and tell him again that we can't do that day and that we will make any other day work. My wife sends his fiance an email as well. A week later my brother goes ahead and books that same day for his wedding and my wife get's a response back that they are OK if we don't come to their wedding, but that was the "only" day that would work for them. My wife is upset because she feels that it should matter to them that we are there and they picked the one day that we told them would be an issue. We told them we'd make any other day work and if it was on a different day of that weekend we could try to make both.
TBH, I read this as "Brother/His Fiance" almost don't want you to go...or could care less...I know that may not be accurate but this is how this reads. You gave them great info to help coordinate the wedding date and they gave you a pretty shitty option in return...even if circumstances dictated it. But to make your wife miss here long-time friends wedding because "it was cheaper" is weak at best.
If you and the wife must stay together, then I agree with the others that you just go to your wife's wedding and just apologize and say that you really wanted to be there and are sad it couldn't work out. Good luck, sorry to hear this.
Pyser
06-10-2015, 11:46 PM
split up
Fidatelo
06-11-2015, 12:16 AM
split up
This.
judicial clerk
06-11-2015, 12:54 AM
In these situations I tend to apply the " Happy Wife, Happy Life" principle. Ask your wife what she thinks you should do and then agree to do that. Now, don't just tell your wife it's her decision because that might make her feel like she is being forced to be the bad guy and that might make her "Unhappy." Nobody needs that shit over this issue. Just ask your wife what she thinks and then decide together to do that. Then go to her friends wedding and enjoy the hotel after-reception sex.
Also, Dodgerchick raises a good question. Some might even say this thread is useless without pics.
1. I feel like this is a super common wedding date so I wouldn't assume any ill intent from your brother just from that. I'd probably be on the side of splitting the weddings unless there's some drastically terrible stuff between you and your brother not mentioned here.
2. I first read this as wrestling drama and was prepared to be much more entertained by this thread.
miked
06-11-2015, 07:07 AM
Bros before hoes.
Dutch
06-11-2015, 07:10 AM
Bros before hoes.
Which bro are you applying this to?
Marmel
06-11-2015, 07:39 AM
Bros before hoes.
Junk before Trunk
Balls before Dolls
Compadres before I sleep with two madres
Brad Pitt Before Grab clit
These nuts before skinny sluts
masturbate before ask her to date
Beef stew before watching the view
Male erection before one direction
Mario and Luigi before Thelma and Louiseeee
Bert and Ernie before squirt and spermy
Man purses before regular purses
Sports before genital warts
John Madden before Jasmine from Aladdin
Dutch
06-11-2015, 07:43 AM
That pretty much gives OP his options. Thanks for visiting Dr. FOFC!
Logan
06-11-2015, 07:43 AM
I'm not sure why they felt like they had to ask about availability in the first place. Maybe they wanted to see if there were dates that were 100% off limits (family vacation booked/paid for, etc) and they don't think a friend's wedding qualifies. How do you know that the day before or the day after wouldn't be off limits to the bride's sister, for example?
Honestly, reading your OP and responses makes it seem like you're either way too upset about this, or you're not very understanding of their situation. "We didn't really understand the urgency on their part to get married anyway"...sorry but that has nothing to do with you. It's their decision and it seems like they are being very understanding of others' situations that may make attending difficult/impossible.
My wife and I got married in Mexico two years ago. We decided to do this because not only did we want to get married in such a beautiful place which also happened to be much cheaper for us, but we wanted to be able to spend a few days with our friends and family instead of 6 hours or whatever. We knew the place we picked would be a great time for those who decided to come. We did all this knowing it was selfish...it's expensive and time-consuming for others after all, but it was our decision. We had a few friends and cousins who were on the fence about making it and we were sure to tell them that we totally understood and there would never be any hard feelings.
There are people who would hold it against others with these types of decisions, and those people are pricks. It really doesn't sound like your brother and his fiancee are those types of people.
Dutch
06-11-2015, 07:46 AM
I dunno, I think a life-long friend does qualify.
Logan
06-11-2015, 07:51 AM
I dunno, I think a life-long friend does qualify.
You do, maybe they don't. It doesn't matter. They said they understood the OP and his wife choosing that wedding over theirs. Sometimes people worry so much about what people really mean behind what they say that they forget sometimes people do actually tell the truth and aren't going to be talking shit behind their back.
Butter
06-11-2015, 08:02 AM
Yeah, you have to take the statement "we're ok if you don't come to our wedding" at face value. Maybe you're not ok with it, but if they are that should make the decision easier.
And it's not your wedding, it's their wedding.
If you don't have a good relationship with the brother and the wife has caused drama for you before, you have to actually consider the possibility that they may have made this decision specifically because you said "that date won't work for me, but literally any other date will." Maybe they chose that date so that you wouldn't come?
Dutch
06-11-2015, 08:11 AM
You do, maybe they don't. It doesn't matter. They said they understood the OP and his wife choosing that wedding over theirs. Sometimes people worry so much about what people really mean behind what they say that they forget sometimes people do actually tell the truth and aren't going to be talking shit behind their back.
The OP was asking for individual opinions, so I dont think I was out of line. I'm working with the information given. Personally, if my sister and my wife's best friend were getting married on the same day, I would go to my sisters wedding...but we have strong relationship. But every scenario is different.
Logan
06-11-2015, 08:22 AM
The OP was asking for individual opinions, so I dont think I was out of line. I'm working with the information given. Personally, if my sister and my wife's best friend were getting married on the same day, I would go to my sisters wedding...but we have strong relationship. But every scenario is different.
Sorry, didn't mean to imply offering your own opinion wasn't allowed. I was just trying to show what might have been their own perspective for "ignoring" what OP told them.
Dutch
06-11-2015, 08:25 AM
Ah, gotcha!
grdawg
06-11-2015, 08:56 AM
My wife and I got married in Mexico two years ago. We decided to do this because not only did we want to get married in such a beautiful place which also happened to be much cheaper for us, but we wanted to be able to spend a few days with our friends and family instead of 6 hours or whatever. We knew the place we picked would be a great time for those who decided to come. We did all this knowing it was selfish...it's expensive and time-consuming for others after all, but it was our decision. We had a few friends and cousins who were on the fence about making it and we were sure to tell them that we totally understood and there would never be any hard feelings.
We actually got married in Mexico as well for the same reasons. We asked our close friends and family before hand if they would be open to coming and told everyone we invited that we understood if they couldn't make it. Everyone that came had a great time except my brother who caused all kinds of drama up to and during the few days there.
I understand everyone's comments that its their day and they can do it whenever they choose. My wife meant well because she was looking out for me, but nobody took it that way in my family and now this became a lot bigger than it needed to be.
grdawg
06-11-2015, 09:01 AM
It depends. Who's hotter your brother's fiance, or your wife's friend?
Sorry, had to be asked.
Obviously my wife is hotter than both :)
timmae
06-11-2015, 09:04 AM
Gr... It is a tough situation no doubt. I have had severe issues with my brother and his wife and have been in the same situation you are in albeit with slightly different details. I highly recommend viewing each situation and then deciding which to attend based on what is right for you and your wife. If either group holds it against you that you attended the others event that is telling in and of itself. Ultimately you want to look back on the day with fondness and not regret. Make a decision and communicate as clearly as possible with all parties. They will decide how to react and what is appropriate to them.
For what it is worth my wife and I chose to side with our friends on the issue we had and my brothers real intentions came out. Please PM me if you want any additional advice or information on my situation and how we handled things. It has been tough but my wife and I are content with how we handled the situation.
Chief Rum
06-11-2015, 10:14 AM
I find it funny that some of you actually seem to be taking umbrage with grdawg for his actions. I don't see anything wrong with seeking out information or asking some questions about the decision making, no matter who's day is what.
molson
06-11-2015, 10:22 AM
I'd go to the friend's wedding in these circumstances, and then give my brother a great wedding gift, and visit them and take them out for nice dinner and/or weekend trip sometime down the road. I'm sure he and his fiance had a really good reason for the date they choose, and there's about zero chance that has anything to do with grdawg, even though it can be tempting to feel like there's something "odd" about it. The important thing is to not express any resentment, passive or otherwise, to anyone. Don't be a wedding drama adder. One way to ensure that is to take this all as an opportunity to spend a little quality time with your brother and his wife after the wedding. I bet they'd appreciate that.
grdawg
07-23-2015, 09:10 AM
So a little update. I thought this was all resolved. My brother and his fiance said it was fine and that they understood that we wouldn't make it. I saw them a few weeks ago and his fiance again was totally understanding and said she would do the same thing in my situation. Fast forward to a week ago, I get a text from my brother if I had changed my mind yet as well as the guilt trip from my mom that people are wondering why I wouldn't be there (as if anyone would even know if I'd be there unless someone specifically told them). In addition more passive aggressive stuff like your daughter would have loved being a flower girl (which I know she would so that is upsetting)
We already booked our trip to the friend's wedding so our decision was made, but it just sucks that both weddings had to be on the same exact day.
Logan
07-23-2015, 09:40 AM
My read is that your mom is guilt tripping/putting the drama on your brother which is why it's back on you. No one is wondering why you wouldn't be there without her first trying to get "ahead of it" by bringing it up to them. Or probably more likely, no one is wondering this at all and she's making it up.
Have a frank conversation with him. "You said you understood. Why are you asking me if I changed my mind? We booked everything." Maybe he reveals what's really behind it.
rowech
07-23-2015, 10:20 AM
I'd simply tell them -- look -- it's one day that's messed up. Let's not keep going back and forth like this so that it becomes years that are messed up.
Is it possible that somebody could somehow just skype the ceremony so you can at least "be there" if the weddings aren't at the same time?
Subby
07-23-2015, 10:24 AM
Sucks, but you have to go to your brother's wedding. Blood is thicker than the mud said Sly.
molson
07-23-2015, 10:32 AM
I don't think a three-month engagement is the kind of situation where marriage attendance is "mandatory." There's nothing wrong with a short engagement, but you're basically saying, "if you can make it, great." People have their travel and vacations and other wedding commitments setup by then.
I understand too that some people see it completely differently if its family, but all families aren't the same. I like my brother, but I barely know him, I'd never cancel attendance as a close friend's wedding or a vacation plan to go to his wedding, and he wouldn't expect me to.
grdawg
07-23-2015, 11:08 AM
Is it possible that somebody could somehow just skype the ceremony so you can at least "be there" if the weddings aren't at the same time?
Yes, I was thinking of this the other day. They are at different times.
Chief Rum
07-23-2015, 11:14 AM
I'll admit I don't really understand not splitting for the weddings on this one (you go to your bro's, your wife goes to her friend's), but I respect you have your reasons there.
grdawg
07-23-2015, 02:04 PM
I'll admit I don't really understand not splitting for the weddings on this one (you go to your bro's, your wife goes to her friend's), but I respect you have your reasons there.
I know that seems the most logical, but we really don't want to split up and her friends wedding is a 3 hour plane ride, then 2+ hour car ride and my brothers would most likely involve driving 18 hours round trip with 2 young kids. Both aren't really optimal for doing them alone.
Also, her friend's wedding is like a whole weekend of events (rehearsal dinner, wedding, day after breakfast) whereas my brothers is just one day. Not to digress, but had he just done it Saturday instead of Sunday, we could have made it work and gone to both.
If they were close by it would be much easier to pull that off.
SteveMax58
07-23-2015, 02:21 PM
I missed this one the first time through but just my 2 cents as I didnt see anybody hit this point fwiw (not much)...
It seems like you already told your brother he is your 2nd choice by telling him "this day won't work". Now, you might not be very close to your brother & it seems like there is some annoyances with him from past events, but I'm not sure how you could expect him to receive that statement any better than (it seems) he has. So....he went off and scheduled what worked for him & his new wife and said "I won't make concessions for somebody who already has me as his #2 choice".
I'm not very close with my brothers or sisters either, but I have no reason which would prevent me from making it to their wedding (even if its a 2nd marriage for my sibling). And if it lands on the same day as my wife's close friend for 20 years...whether I knew first or last...I'd have to split up no matter the hassle or my own preference as it is my brother and I will be there on his big day.
Not saying you're wrong for doing what you're doing. Just giving my opinion and rationale for it.
grdawg
07-23-2015, 02:45 PM
I missed this one the first time through but just my 2 cents as I didnt see anybody hit this point fwiw (not much)...
It seems like you already told your brother he is your 2nd choice by telling him "this day won't work". Now, you might not be very close to your brother & it seems like there is some annoyances with him from past events, but I'm not sure how you could expect him to receive that statement any better than (it seems) he has. So....he went off and scheduled what worked for him & his new wife and said "I won't make concessions for somebody who already has me as his #2 choice".
I'm not very close with my brothers or sisters either, but I have no reason which would prevent me from making it to their wedding (even if its a 2nd marriage for my sibling). And if it lands on the same day as my wife's close friend for 20 years...whether I knew first or last...I'd have to split up no matter the hassle or my own preference as it is my brother and I will be there on his big day.
Not saying you're wrong for doing what you're doing. Just giving my opinion and rationale for it.
I wouldn't say we said you are our 2nd choice. We basically gave them a heads up that we already had a wedding scheduled for that day and it would be a very tough situation for us and if they did it any other day we'd make it work because we really want to be there.
If you were planning your wedding and a sibling asked you to avoid 1 DAY because of a prior commitment, would you still go ahead and schedule it that day if you really wanted them there?
JonInMiddleGA
07-23-2015, 03:41 PM
If you were planning your wedding and a sibling asked you to avoid 1 DAY because of a prior commitment, would you still go ahead and schedule it that day if you really wanted them there?
Yeah, 'cause I really can't compute the hypothetical all that well in the first place. I got married a couple thousand miles from anyone I knew ... on purpose, with planning aforethought.
I know we aren't on the same wavelength all that often but I swear I'm giving you good advice here: do not get sucked into rehashing this in your head. It is, for all intents and purposes, a done deal. Let it go ... and don't fall victim to anyone/anything trying to drag you back into it.
molson
07-23-2015, 03:46 PM
I know we aren't on the same wavelength all that often but I swear I'm giving you good advice here: do not get sucked into rehashing this in your head. It is, for all intents and purposes, a done deal. Let it go ... and don't fall victim to anyone/anything trying to drag you back into it.
This is great advice. Wedding and family drama have a way of exponentially multiplying and spreading like a bad plague. No need to feed it at this point. You know your brother and wife and the situation better than anyone else here, and you made a decision.
grdawg
07-23-2015, 04:00 PM
This is great advice. Wedding and family drama have a way of exponentially multiplying and spreading like a bad plague. No need to feed it at this point. You know your brother and wife and the situation better than anyone else here, and you made a decision.
I agree. The decision was made. I don't want to be dragged back into the drama.
stevew
07-23-2015, 04:21 PM
the appropriate response is always, we already gave someone an STD and can't come.
Butter
07-24-2015, 06:26 AM
It is, for all intents and purposes, a done deal.
Hey, you misspelled "intensive" there.
YOU'RE WELCOME.
rowech
07-24-2015, 06:56 AM
Hey, you misspelled "intensive" there.
YOU'RE WELCOME.
Can't tell if you're serious or not but his phrasing is correct.
Chief Rum
07-24-2015, 10:38 AM
Can't tell if you're serious or not but his phrasing is correct.
I'm pretty sure Butter wasn't being serious.
SteveMax58
07-24-2015, 01:48 PM
If you were planning your wedding and a sibling asked you to avoid 1 DAY because of a prior commitment, would you still go ahead and schedule it that day if you really wanted them there?
It isn't my intention to make you rehash your decision at all, but was just offering my 2 cents in case it is helpful in understanding how some other person might interpret being told that this one day doesn't work. And perhaps why his behavior since might be the way it is (if he were to see things that way as people don't always come out & say they are emotionally hurt by something...especially men).
But to answer your question...I think your question already supposes the priority you give to my wedding/relationship. Maybe I'm just reading it differently or something.
I see one's wedding day as their day, not their day at my convenience. And the level of inconvenience I would go through certainly has limits as well. Obviously I don't know the details around your relationship and your brother/his wife's work situation/vacation times/availability of the reception hall stuff, etc. So yes, there are consequences to it as well. Like deciding to get married half way around the world on Christmas day and finding that nobody shows up.
My only point is that I think telling your brother that this one day doesn't work for you already begs the question of priority (whether he stated that or not). And that your brother could be interpreting that just as I read that and hence his behavior to you sounds like some hurt feelings or something.
In the end, I think you & your wife should do what you feel is best and most appropriate based your own moral codes, ethics, and emotional connection to the parties here. I was just offering up something that I noticed and nobody had really commented on it.
bulletsponge
07-24-2015, 02:06 PM
It depends. Who's hotter your brother's fiance, or your wife's friend?
Sorry, had to be asked.
no, who has the hotter bridemaids. if your brothers fiance then suggest to your wife you spit up and she goes to her friends while you go to your brothers ;)
NobodyHere
07-24-2015, 02:30 PM
All you need is a double to go to your brother's wedding. What could go wrong?
Chief Rum
07-24-2015, 02:48 PM
I know that seems the most logical, but we really don't want to split up and her friends wedding is a 3 hour plane ride, then 2+ hour car ride and my brothers would most likely involve driving 18 hours round trip with 2 young kids. Both aren't really optimal for doing them alone.
Also, her friend's wedding is like a whole weekend of events (rehearsal dinner, wedding, day after breakfast) whereas my brothers is just one day. Not to digress, but had he just done it Saturday instead of Sunday, we could have made it work and gone to both.
If they were close by it would be much easier to pull that off.
I'm kinda with SteveMax on this one. I just don't see missing a brother's wedding as an option. If I were you, I would have found someone who could watch the kids for the weekend, and then split up, with you going to your bro's wedding.
But that's only what I would do in that situation. I understand why you went the way you did.
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