Wedding Etiquette Forum

Italian family revolting about private ceremony

JerZNixJerZNix member
Fourth Anniversary First Comment
edited June 2014 in Wedding Etiquette Forum
i come from a very large, very controlling, roman catholic italian family.  my fiance and i would rather spend the money on our new home than a big wedding.  when i announced to my big fat italian family that we were having a private ceremony (just parents/grandparents) and having a BBQ for everyone afterward, my aunt accused me of being cheap, selfish and disgracing my deceased father's memory.  she immediately began attacking my fiance saying he was clearly brainwashing me and trying to cheat me out of a princess wedding.  since that altercation, i have put some distance between my extended family to let things cool down but now my aunt has taken to cornering my sister and mother (both of whom are on my side and just want me to be happy) to question them about our choices and even question my choice of fiance.  

we aren't getting married for another year and i dont really want to have this be the only topic of conversation for the next year.  part of why i dont want a big wedding is to avoid this kind of drama.

I feel that if my aunt has such a problem with my choices, then she shouldnt attend the BBQ and at the very least, she owes us an apology for all of the horrible things she said before she can attend.  she is the matriarch of my family and i'm afraid confronting her will force the entire family to choose sides and i'll lose all of them because the common practice in my family is to let her have her way rather than confront her or hold her accountable for her (many) mean outbursts.  everyone else is disappointed but are taking the "it's your life" approach.  I'm afraid sitting down with her to talk about it will turn into another attack and i'm not sure ignoring it is the right idea because eventually i'll have to invite her to the BBQ without the apology having been said.  i don't even know what would happen if I just didnt invite her- the entire family would probably revolt.

has anyone had a problem like this?  what's the right thing to do?  I'm so upset- the whole idea of eloping/private ceremony was to avoid all of this.  Help!
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Re: Italian family revolting about private ceremony

  • thanks everyone! we announced it because they kept badgering me with "have you picked a date? where is the registry? lets chat about the shower!" so i blurted out one day "we aren't doing any of that. we're eloping". probably shouldnt have, but i can't unring that bell. I wanted my grandparents at the elopement ceremony and then everyone go back to the house for the BBQ on the same day. we're building a pole barn and we wanted to have it in there but it won't be done til next spring (i think). you guys bring up a good point though- sooner might be better.
  • If your grandparents were going to be there, then you aren't eloping.


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  • So you're actually not eloping at all then. You're having a local ceremony, planned ahead of time, with just your grandparents, and then inviting everyone to a BBQ the same day. That's called having a private ceremony and then a reception.
  • phiraphira member
    5000 Comments 500 Love Its Second Anniversary 5 Answers
    Ah, that's not an elopement. Although it sounds like maybe you should elope.
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  • we haven't really worked it all out yet but we wanted to go away and elope but my fiance wants his parents/grandparents there so obviously mine will have to be there too. my grandparents cant travel so it'd have to be local. i figured better to just get it all done with in one day but with the way things are going, we may have to just go elope and figure out the party thing later. either way, my aunt sees it as an elopement since she won't be at the ceremony and she's flipping out.
  • phiraphira member
    5000 Comments 500 Love Its Second Anniversary 5 Answers
    JerZNix said:
    we haven't really worked it all out yet but we wanted to go away and elope but my fiance wants his parents/grandparents there so obviously mine will have to be there too. my grandparents cant travel so it'd have to be local. i figured better to just get it all done with in one day but with the way things are going, we may have to just go elope and figure out the party thing later. either way, my aunt sees it as an elopement since she won't be at the ceremony and she's flipping out.
    How quickly could you plan the ceremony and tiny reception (e.g. lunch dinner with parents/grandparents afterwards)? I definitely think you could get it done very soon/quickly, and then figure out the non-wedding reception later.
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  • Eloping means running away and not telling anyone until after you get back and are married.

    Planning a small, private ceremony for a year from now at which some people like your FI's parents and grandparents will be there followed immediately by a BBQ party for everyone is not eloping.

    Neither choice is wrong, but I understand your aunt's anger a little better now.

    I still suggest getting married ASAP, and having a true elopement, just the two of you.
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    I'm gonna go with 'not my circus, not my monkeys.'
  • I agree- that is not an elopement. I really eloped- didn't tell anyone and let them know after the fact. Therefore, there was ZERO drama leading up to the big day. If you are willing to not have anyone present, really, truly elope and then tell everyone after the fact that you're married. Have the BBQ as planned and invite everyone. If people have a problem with it, they can choose to not come.

    Unfortunately, you can't take back telling people about your plans. As soon as you involve other people, you have to deal with the support or backlash that comes along with it. Again, I would highly consider really eloping to have the day you envisioned without the drama.

     







  • scribe95 said:
    Yeah, that's not eloping. You are having a planned private ceremony a year away. Is there a special reason you don't want your family there - like your parents? 

    You don't have to have a big to-do. Could still have a BBQ where you say your vows while people sit at picnic tables. 
    We had a planned to elope but as time went on it's starting to spiral out of control.  we both got new jobs, moved to a new state, bought a house, and got engaged in 3 the last 3 months (we've been together for 5 yrs) so we figured we'd just elope or have a small ceremony with parents/grandparents and then later have a wedding/housewarming/new job/barn raising celebratory BBQ in the new backyard.  To try to calm my family, i figured doing on the same day as the ceremony might take the edge off.  maybe we need to go back to the original plan and do it seperately.
  • Why on earth would you give your bossy controlling family a year's notice of your elopement? June 21st is a great day. You could celebrate on the first day of summer every year. 2 weeks from now run off and get married and don't tell anyone until you are back. This is how you elope. Later this summer invite people to a BBQ. Done.
    I'm just gonna say...I totally agree with the bolded! ;)

    It sounds like your aunt isn't going to be happy unless you do things her way, and you don't want to do that, so you and your FI need to decide what you want and just do it. I agree that if you're going to have a small, private ceremony, might as well get it over and done instead of dealing with a year of bullshit from meddling relatives.
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  • updated the post to omit "elopement"
  • phiraphira member
    5000 Comments 500 Love Its Second Anniversary 5 Answers
    scribe95 said:
    I just don't understand why you can't get married next year as planned with family and friends - including your aunt etc - at a BBQ that you already had planned to host. There doesn't have to be "wedding stuff."
    Waiting till next year = a whole year of BSC auntie going BSC.
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  • PPs have great ideas. It sounds like you and your Fi should plan your private ceremony and tiny reception afterwards (lunch or dinner with the family members who will be there), ASAP. June 21 sounds like a lovely date!! :)

    Just wanted to commiserate because this sounds EXACTLY like Fi's family (they are from Sicily and somewhere else in the South, Naples I think).  We are having a big traditional wedding, but they are freaking out because the ceremony will be secular and because we are limiting the guest list to about 170 people.  170 is too small for them!!!!!  If you did cave in and have a bigger wedding, I can almost guarantee BSC aunt would find something else to complain about.  Just stick to your guns.

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    "I'm not a rude bitch.  I'm ten rude bitches in a large coat."

  • If it were my aunt saying that, I wouldn't be inviting her to the post wedding celebration. "I'm sorry you feel that way, Aunt. I'll mark you down as a no for the BBQ."
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  • Call the parents, grandparents, and officiant and find a day in the next 30 days where you can all get together for a wedding and a meal.  Buy rings.  Get married.  Go out to eat.  Send wedding announcements.  When you're ready for the barn-raising, invite whoever you'd invite to something like that.
  • It sounds like your wedding guest list is in the 10-12 range (you two, parents, grandparents), which you can easily make a lunch or dinner reservation for sometime this month.

    Honestly unless there is another reason for waiting, I agree with PPs who would encourage you to get married this month.  You can always do a 1 year anniversary BBQ party, and like it or not your extended family should accept it by then and the dust will have likely settled.

    Good luck!
  • scribe95 said:
    phira said:
    scribe95 said:
    I just don't understand why you can't get married next year as planned with family and friends - including your aunt etc - at a BBQ that you already had planned to host. There doesn't have to be "wedding stuff."
    Waiting till next year = a whole year of BSC auntie going BSC.
    Yes, but she can tell aunt she is invited to her low-key BBQ wedding to get her off her back.

    Stuck in box...

    I don't think inviting this BSC aunt to anything will "get her off her back."  The BSC aunt will simply see it as something else she can try to control or be bitchy about it if she can't.  And why, after saying such nasty things about the OP's FI, would this woman be welcome at anything in his honor?
  • lc07lc07 member
    Tenth Anniversary 2500 Comments 500 Love Its 5 Answers
    I don't think the BBQ is going to stop these complaining relatives from complaining. I'd just have the wedding you want with whomever you want. Forget the BBQ.
  • phiraphira member
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    lc07 said:
    I don't think the BBQ is going to stop these complaining relatives from complaining. I'd just have the wedding you want with whomever you want. Forget the BBQ.
    Agreed, mostly. If the BBQ is something you and your fiance want, then go for it. But if it's something you'd be doing to appease family members who would only be appeased if you got married The Correct Way, then it's a waste of your time and money.
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  • If my aunt said I was being cheap with my etiquette approved wedding plans, I would agree and ask her if she wanted to pay for my wedding in the style the family deserves! She opened up the money conversation so she must be willing to contribute, right???
    Honestly, I have come very close to saying this to Fi's mom.  She started in on this very long list of people they wanted invited that we had never met, and talking about limos and party buses, and crazy decor ideas.  I just said, "We have no money from our families and this is what we can afford on our own."  It was really hard not to add, "If you want it, you can pay for it!"
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    "I'm not a rude bitch.  I'm ten rude bitches in a large coat."

  • JerZNix said:
    I'm afraid sitting down with her to talk about it will turn into another attack and i'm not sure ignoring it is the right idea because eventually i'll have to invite her to the BBQ without the apology having been said.  i don't even know what would happen if I just didnt invite her- the entire family would probably revolt.

    In addition to suggestions from others, if any family member, I don't care who they are, treated us like that after we chose to share our wedding plans with them, they would not be invited to the event. End of discussion. Don't feel obligated to invite your aunt to anything, I wouldn't.
  • GuitarSlayerGuitarSlayer member
    25 Love Its 10 Comments First Anniversary Name Dropper
    edited June 2014
    You have a choice.  Either you kow-tow to the cow, or you get married privately and have the reception as you wanted.  I'd go for the second option with great haste (as rec'ed by other posters), and don't invite her.  No more confrontations - don't deal with BSC people.  Let the family revolt about her not being invited -- smaller guest list!  Your ceremony is the thing that seems to matter to you, hence its privacy -- if nobody in that lot is affected by BSC auntie, full speed ahead. 

    Small weddings are no shame at all; they cut down on drama because the troublemakers are not there.  She's judging your wedding based upon her idea of a "good" wedding, which involves glitz, glamor, and a lot of money. She also wants to make as much drama as possible so she gets a share of the attention.  If your family members are worth having at the reception, they will blow her off  and attend. If they don't go just because of her, would you have wanted them there?  Don't forget that you do have friends and other people not affected by the family drama.  You won't be alone on your wedding day. 
  • MW5280MW5280 member
    Second Anniversary 25 Love Its 10 Comments Name Dropper
    Oh, I so understand the Italian relatives issue.

    I have relatives flipping out that we're only inviting 120 people, that it will be on a Sunday morning, that it is a short engagement, that we aren't really involving attendants...

    Oh...the Italians... (It's been our family sigh/mantra for years.)
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  • MW5280MW5280 member
    Second Anniversary 25 Love Its 10 Comments Name Dropper
    I'm not saying that I don't love my Italian family, and I'm not saying exclusively an Italian trait. 

    I'm just saying that I understand OP's situation. Sometimes the only thing you need to hear is that you aren't the only one encountering an obstacle. 
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