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Just Said Yes September 2018

Wedding Invitation Wording Disagreement

Caroline, on April 24, 2018 at 10:51 PM

Posted in Etiquette and Advice 27

I'm getting married in September and my parents are paying for about 90% of the wedding. My mother and I are in disagreement on how we should word the invitations, specifically her and my father's title. My mom wants the wording to be very formal and follow traditional wedding etiquette, as she says...

I'm getting married in September and my parents are paying for about 90% of the wedding. My mother and I are in disagreement on how we should word the invitations, specifically her and my father's title. My mom wants the wording to be very formal and follow traditional wedding etiquette, as she says that they are paying for the wedding and are the ones "doing the inviting". Thus she wants the wording to be:

"Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kelly request the pleasure of your company...etc"

Where as I think this is a bit sexist to be only referred to by your husband's name and I would like her name to be included so it reads as:

"Mr. and Mrs. Raymond and Marie Kelly request the pleasure of your company...etc."

But she is adamant that this is an incredible offense and would cause her crippling embarrassment from her more etiquette-savy friends whom she is inviting...

I am frustrated because I thought we were a slightly more modern family who does not feel bound to archaic societal rules. We're having a fairly casual, non-religious wedding and would consider ourselves comfortably middle class, and I didn't think we associated with anyone who would really care whether or not our invitations followed strict traditional guidelines.

I know we're both being stubborn, but am I being irrational in my desire to have her first name included in the invite or is she being unreasonably antiquated in her insistence on being referred to by her husband's name, because that is what old-fashioned etiquette demands and she is footing the bill?

(My mother literally told me I was breaking her heart with my "tacky" wording preferences and is threatening to remove me from the family cell phone plan, which I pay for but remain on the plan for the lower family rate)

27 Comments

  • Jeleebeenz
    VIP September 2015
    Jeleebeenz ·
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    This is a pick your battle kind of deal here. It is HER name, how SHE wants to be referred to and she is paying. Why is this even an issue for you?

    I am in my mid 50's and do not want to be referred to as Mrs. John Smith because I'm not. I'm Susan Smith. If your mom is cool with the older etiquette for HER name you need to let this one go.

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  • Jen
    VIP July 2018
    Jen ·
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    It's her name (and she is paying) so I'd let her choose how she wants it to read. It's not a reflection on you or your views. That being said, I did not address my invitations that way for the same reasons you mention!

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  • Swtnss238
    VIP May 2019
    Swtnss238 ·
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    Shes gracious enough to pay for ur wedding and ur gonna argue over this? Seems petty and ungrateful to have such a disagreement with how SHE wants HER name shown on an invite that SHE is paying for.
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  • Lyons,Tigers,Bears
    Dedicated June 2018
    Lyons,Tigers,Bears ·
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    I insisted on using the woman's first names on invitations. My FMIL bitched about it. But I said to her, it's 2018. We are individuals in our own right, not just someone's Mrs. #MeToo

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  • Stephanie
    Devoted October 2018
    Stephanie ·
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    What about Raymond and Marie Kelly request the pleasure of your company...etc.?

    But I agree that it's not worth it at all especially if they are paying for it.

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  • M
    Super October 2018
    MaltedMilk ·
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    Mr & Mrs James Anderson invite you......to me, is not sexist. It is traditional and perhaps a bit old fashioned, but not sexist. "Mr James Anderson and his woman invite you....." now THAT is sexist!!

    It think the Mr/Mrs thing just shows a married social unit, that is all.

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  • Missy B
    Devoted October 2019
    Missy B ·
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    With her paying for it...let her have this one.

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