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Damn. Reading this thread, many of you would think the Italians in this area have really really bad etiquette.
I say who gives a crapper about etiquette. Follow the norm of your area. |
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Also, in each town or circle of friends, there simply has to be at least one blabber mouth who, when told where the couple is registered, will tell everyone else. They live for that stuff! And those with a computer have no excuse! The minute you receive a wedding invitation, you should immediately check the most likely registries - and if you still can't find them, a quick, "I don't want to keep you but would you mind telling me if Eunice & Heinrich are registered and where?" call would be most welcome! Do you really think that Eunice & Heinrich want to spend their first married days returning 18 toasters or dustbusters? |
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Maybe I just have less than perfect friends... thats OK too because I love them. I think it all comes down to the fact that your witnessing and celebrating a very special day with your friends. This fact is so very lost in the who production of planning and ettiquette of weddings today. |
I think it is awfully tacky to send registry information with your invitation. The last two wedding invitations I got had registry information and it just looked tacky compared to the beauty of the invitation itself. For those relatives that are not computer savvy, they're the ones who call anyway, so they can hear that way.
I have another wedding etiquette question. When should you expect a thank you note? I went to one wedding in late May and one in late September and have not gotten notes for each. The may bride sent a TY for her shower gift but the Sept bride hasn't sent anything. |
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That wedding was in July. I received the thank you just last week. To me, that's just too long. If you have to have a big wedding and get all these gifts, at least have the courtesy to thank people promptly. Particularly when someone purchases something and has it sent to your house- people want to know that you received it!!! Sometimes sales people aren't too swift, and you don't want your $125 vase never getting sent. sorry, rant there. |
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If you don't want to write the thank you's, don't expect any gifts! And if you're mature enough to get married, you should know to get those notes in the mail ASAP. When I got married (on a Friday), all of my thank you notes were in the mail by Monday. I realize that's a tad anal, but I didn't want to put it off until it was too late. |
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I've read that the latest it's considered polite to get a thank you card out is one month after the honeymoon. I just send them as soon as I get the gifts...or at least that is what I have been doing since I've started receiving them. It just seems rude to me to not send them out right away and thank the people that made the effort to be there and bring you something.
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It is rude not to send out a thank-you card within a few weeks.
When my husband and I got married, we wrote our thank-you cards out on the plane on our way to our honeymoon. You're just sitting there anyway, why not make the time productive? We didn't mail them until we returned to the US a week later, but even so, they got out in plenty of time. We attended a wedding last year and only just received the thank-you card... :rolleyes: This was the same wedding where they ran out of food with fully a quarter of the guests unfed. |
Back from the rehearsal dinner
OK so here's the situation. My sister is getting married on Saturday. Her fiancé's cousin was invited along with his wife; both are blind and use seeing eye dogs. Before they responded to the invitation, they called and asked if they could bring their dogs. My sister is asthmatic and highly allergic to dogs and cats. She carries an inhaler in case she has an attack. My mother is the same, and also carries an epi-pen for her allergies. Compared to them I am mildly allergic, and I only carry Benadryl just in case.
So after careful consideration and discussion, my sister said that she would love for them to attend, but without their dogs. This is not an option for them so they declined their invitation. So now the family gossip is that she hates blind people. People who had previously accepted their invitations have now declined as a sign of solidarity. They are also saying that she doesn't really have allergies. She just doesn't want blind people and/or dogs at her wedding. In fact, allergies aren't real; they are just in the person's head. They also said that she would go get shots to get rid of her allergies if she really wanted the couple there. She did that for three years before the doctor told her it was useless for her to continue since she wasn't improving. This has become a real problem for her and the groom's family. It is causing a rift. They don't even know her, and they have decided she is a liar who hates blind people and dogs. When she asked me what I thought before I heard about all the family gossip, I told her that she can't have something at her wedding that will make her ill. I still feel that way. I'm just disgusted that people who don't even know her have judged and misjudged her so harshly. I'm venting here, but I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions or advice. I generally don't give a crap what people think, but my sister does. I think that she did the best that she could do under the circumstances. She doesn't want to start her marriage by alienating and offending his family. The groom's parents said that they are fine with it, but if they really were, they wouldn't have brought this issue up at the rehearsal dinner tonight. Any advice? |
Re: Back from the rehearsal dinner
I dunno, maybe I am just intoxicated but I started laughing at your post Cream. You know I think you are great . . but it just stuck me as funny.
Ok ok ok. Your sister has allergies and asthma and dogs trigger her asthma attacks? Your mom is likewise allergic to dogs? She carries an Epi pen for dogs? ITs unusual to have anaphylactic reactions to that . . . is she more allergic to something other than animal dander? Anyway, this is what I would have said to the cousins: Its very important that you attend, we need you to be there. I am seriosuly allergic to animal dander, and my mom can have really serious reactions so tell me what i can do to make sure you are comfortable and we are safe. Anything you need I'll make sure you have. That way the onus would have been on them to make sure the dogs didn't bother you. As for the rest of it. I would just confront his parents and blow up at them. Its their responsibility to deal with their side of the family. If people are not coming, its their fault. If people think your sister is an idiot its their fault. If I were her I would call them up in a rage and tell them about her allergies and her mom's allergies and emphasize that they were invited and that its her fucking wedding anyway.. . . its like being allergic to pollen and inviting flowers. Its like being allergic to shellfish and serving shrimp because the in-laws like it. Its just moronic . . . Although, your sister could have been more clever in dealing with it. Quote:
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I think her fiance is the one who should handle his family and explain how allergic she is to dogs.
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I think it's childish and ridiculous on the part of the people pitching a fit about it. Says a lot about their character, IMO. |
It's her wedding, not theirs. I think that's absolutely ridiculous.
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