Wedding Invitations & Paper

Inviting the Bio-logical Father

So I have a question that I am posting in here because I wasn't sure where else to post it. I had thought of posting it in Etiquette but I am not really looking for the response of what the “book” says you should do on the matter, but more what you fellow readers feel would be appropriate to do. Here is the scenario.

 

My fiancé’s real mother and father got divorced when she was 5 years old and she hadn’t seen her biological father in decades. Her mother remarried quickly after the divorce and moved the children away from their biological father. My fiancé became very close to her new adoptive father and has already decided that she will ask him to walk her down the aisle and do the FOB dance with her. Over the course of the last few years, my fiancé has gotten back in touch with her biological father over email and over the last 9 months they have had dinner together a few times, increasing in regularity. My fiancé now is questioning whether or not she should invite her biological father to the wedding. She has already decided that if she invites him, that he would be there as a guest and that she would not change the current plans of walking down the aisle with her step-father. Her biological father has already expressed wishes to come to the wedding.

 

I personally am all for inviting him. They have really gotten closer over the last year and I can see that her bio-father and new wife will be a large part of our new life together as they are down to earth and share the same values that we both share and we all get along great. I am also especially for him coming as my father passed away only a few months ago and I am very much into family at the moment and forgiving the past. My fear is that she won’t invite him and she will regret it in the future when we all continue to get closer with each other.

 

Here is the snag that is making the decision difficult, it’s the MOB. My fiancé is concerned that if she invites her biological father, that her mother will flip out at the wedding. She has already expressed her “issues” with my fiancé asking her step-father to walk her down the aisle. BTW, my fiancé’s mother and step-father are no longer married either. Her mother is on her 4th marriage at this point. The step-father was her second marriage, her bio-father being the first marriage. Her mother is one of those people too that really doesn’t care about anybody else either. She does what she wants and expects that everyone should do the same, what SHE wants. She is one of those people that expects respect automatically from her children because she gave birth to them but gives no respect in return and talks down to them. My Fiancé is 31 and yet her mother talks down to her most of the time and tears her down emotionally as well if she is in a bad mood. Her mother is also not too fond of me any longer either since I tore her a new one when she told my Fiancé that she would not be able to go shopping with her for her wedding dress because she didn’t want to re-arrange her work schedule, after telling us for 2 months that she would be there “No matter what”. Needless to say she came, but it was a very hectic time and a story for another time.

 

So back to the dilemma of if my fiancé should invite her bio-logical father. Her only real debate is questioning if her mother is going to pull something at the wedding if he is there. We wouldn’t put it past her to make a scene because she doesn’t care about who she hurts emotionally (even her children) and would turn it around in that she was being hurt and become the victim, BUT at the same time, we are getting closer and closer with her Bio-logical father and don’t want to exclude them from the wedding either. I told my Fiancé that if she decides to invite her bio-father that we would sit down and talk to her mother and tell her that he would be there (so she isn’t finding out AT the wedding). We can easily sit them away from each other at the wedding reception and even have them sit near the back of the ceremony seating (small wedding, only maybe 7 rows of seating).

 

So my question is what do you guys think? Should she follow her heart and invite her bio-logical father (as a guest) and just deal with what may happen with her mother, or would it be best not to invite them and just hope that her mother doesn’t make a scene because her step-father is walking her down the aisle whom which she doesn’t like either. I have my own opinion of which way we should do this, but I have already told my fiancé that I will do whatever she chooses as it is not really my decision to make. I was just curious what you guys would do if in the same position? Thanks.

Re: Inviting the Bio-logical Father

  • I think your fiancee (two -ee ending for a woman) should invite her biological father. I think she'll regret not doing it.

    I also think you and your fiancee need to have a sit-down, come-to-Jesus moment with her mother (perhaps after some counselling sessions in which your fiancee comes to term with how emotionally abusive and manipulative her mother is) in which you, as a united front say, 'Mom, we've decided to invite bio-dad to the wedding, with his new wife, and step-dad will be walking me down the aisle. This is not a question or open for debate, it's a statement of unalterable fact, so you need to accept it and move on. If you are unable to handle yourself at the wedding given these circumstances, then you are welcome not to attend. If you do attend, and anything untoward happens, you will be asked to leave -- by physical force if necessary -- and you will have irreparably damaged our relationship going forward.'

    Your FI's mother treats her this way because she lets her get away with it -- the sooner she starts standing up for herself (and for you and your new family unit), the better off you all will be.

    GL!
    Anniversary

    image
    I'm gonna go with 'not my circus, not my monkeys.'
  • Thanks and I completely agree. I have been working with my Fiancee to get her to stand up for herself, and she has started doing it thankfully, it has just taken a while for her to be able to see the abuse happening because she dealt with it for so long, she thought it was normal. Her mother wasn't the only one that did it either which didn't help. Her (now ex) best friend used to do it as well because she was insecure about herself, so she tore others down and my fiancee was the closest one to the firing range, so she got most of it. She finally stood up to her about 9 months ago and told her off and they haven't spoke since.
  • would bio father feel left out if he was just a guest would she consider having both of them walk her down the aisle one on each side of her?


    as for  mob if she causes a scene at the wedding it would look bad on her and everyone would laugh at her but as mob and her daughters special day she should be 100 on her best behavior
  • I don't think that he would feel bad if he was asked to just be a guest as opposed to sharing the FOB duties. With all reality, he was out of my fiancee's life for 20 some odd years and is just now re-entering it. I personally think it would mean more to him just being able to be there to witness the day in person than being an actual part of the ceremony.

    Also with all honesty if he did join in on the FOB duties, it would royally piss off the MOB beyond the point to where I think she may be able to remain calm for the day. I want him to be there, but I also don't want to piss my future mother-in-law off either to where she can't enjoy the day. As much as I dislike her, it is a day for her too to witness her eldest daughter getting married.
  • @nascar02zp I think you guys should invite him, it really sounds like she'll regret not inviting him. I agree both of you need to sit down with her Mother and say enough is enough - You're important, but this guy raised me - he's walking me down the aisle. This guy is my biological Dad and we're reconnecting, he is definitely going to be there. If you want to make a scene, do so, but know we will ask you to excuse yourself and settle down, if you can't we'd politely ask you to leave. The day is about us, family, friends and celebration, if you can't find it within you to be recognize that and be polite then we'd ask you to leave so those who are enjoying themselves can have a good time.

    I too am learning right now not to be walked on my Mother. It's tough and we had a few fights but we finally had a bit of a break through after I made it clear I will be happy this day, I will do right, polite and proper for my guests and I'm extremely grateful for their contribution to my wedding, but it's my wedding. My Dad had to calm me down once and tell it while yes it may feel messed up to be so selfish on this day, but Mom had her day too in 1973 where she did it too, and I'm sure I'll be as much a pain to my own daughter in the future.  She got her princess day, I get mine, and my daughter will get hers...it's paying it forward...  I can tell she disapproves with some of my ideas but generally she's piping down and not being mean anymore.
  • I say she should invite him. He is her father, no matter what. She should tell her mom that she is an adult and as her father he should be there. Also you should tell her beforehand just so there isn't a huge fight and meltdown that takes the focus off of it being your guys' wedding day. If she doesn't invite him she'll probably regret it if not at first at some point down the line.
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