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DEAR ABBY: I am currently living with my fiancee, Josie. That we are a same-sex couple was hard for our families to come to terms with. (Mainly Josie's mother.)
We are now planning a small courthouse wedding with a family dinner to follow a week later. We have made this clear to family and close friends, and nobody has taken issue with it. However, Josie's mother thinks it isn't right that we are inviting only parents to the ceremony and not siblings (Josie has one; I have three). She also called Josie crying because Josie and I went dress shopping on our own (spontaneously).
My mother is perfectly happy with all of our decisions and supportive with whatever we decide. How can we get my fiancee's mother to be more supportive? -- WEDDING DRAMA IN PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR WEDDING DRAMA: It might be helpful to recognize that while your family is more accepting, Josie's mother appears to be struggling on a couple of fronts. As many mothers do, she may have fantasized about a church wedding, helping her daughter select her bridal gown, and having a son-in-law. In a sense, she is grieving the death of her fantasy. Frankly, I feel sorry for the woman. With time, I am sure she will become more accepting and supportive.
You and Josie are about to embark on your lives together. Let your happiness be the beacon that guides her mother to acceptance, although it may not happen as quickly as you would wish.
https://www.arcamax.com/healthandspirit/lifeadvice/dearabby/s-2386029
We are now planning a small courthouse wedding with a family dinner to follow a week later. We have made this clear to family and close friends, and nobody has taken issue with it. However, Josie's mother thinks it isn't right that we are inviting only parents to the ceremony and not siblings (Josie has one; I have three). She also called Josie crying because Josie and I went dress shopping on our own (spontaneously).
My mother is perfectly happy with all of our decisions and supportive with whatever we decide. How can we get my fiancee's mother to be more supportive? -- WEDDING DRAMA IN PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR WEDDING DRAMA: It might be helpful to recognize that while your family is more accepting, Josie's mother appears to be struggling on a couple of fronts. As many mothers do, she may have fantasized about a church wedding, helping her daughter select her bridal gown, and having a son-in-law. In a sense, she is grieving the death of her fantasy. Frankly, I feel sorry for the woman. With time, I am sure she will become more accepting and supportive.
You and Josie are about to embark on your lives together. Let your happiness be the beacon that guides her mother to acceptance, although it may not happen as quickly as you would wish.
https://www.arcamax.com/healthandspirit/lifeadvice/dearabby/s-2386029

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I ... actually don't hate this advice? Though I wish Abby had been more explicit that this is not LW & Josie's problem to fix, in all senses of the term. "Let your happiness be the beacon that guides her mother to acceptance" was a cute way to hint at that, though.
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You can't make this woman be more supportive. Her feelings are not your responsibility to fix, which is good, because you can't. And honestly, you not only shouldn't try, but I'd wager that your efforts are making this worse. For example, the proper people to complain about adult or older teen siblings not being invited to your wedding are those same siblings - not their mom, and especially not if they haven't made any objections themselves.
I'm also stuck on the fact that she called her daughter to cry about not being invited dress shopping with you two. The appropriate person to cry to after the fact was... god, I don't know, her husband? Her therapist? Literally anybody else? It's not her feelings that are the problem here, it's her behavior. People get weird around weddings, but if this is a pattern in other areas you need to figure out now that you can't fix her and need to stop trying.
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Excuse me? Pray, say again?
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Because that's the only thing they can control.
I'm lucky to have an accepting/embracing mother and be marrying into an accepting/embracing family--but just hearing about families who find it "hard" to "come to terms" with their childrens' queerness makes me see absolute red. Because their homophobia is not their loved ones' problem.
Further, moms who started out being homophobic and then came around, or one who's straight up homophobic anyway, need to STFU about not being included in their children's wedding and prewedding activities in the manner of their choice. They're lucky to be invited at all. If they're upset about not being taken dress shopping, or not getting to help plan the ceremony, oh fucking well there are consequences for your actions, Brenda, get over it.
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So LW and Josie are looking for a way to say "It's great that you now treat us as a Real Couple who are Really Getting Married, we want to encourage that, but also you do not get to plan the wedding or have veto power over what we do, please back off."
I'm extrapolating somewhat from a sparse letter, but the sudden switch-flipping from active opposition to overinvolvement/takeover is a familiar dynamic, and I think that's what's happening here.
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Snark aside, what I was thinking was this: Sometimes people have Ideas about how their child will grow up, which they are encouraged by society to call 'Dreams' as if this were about their life and not their child's life. Some people's Ideas are ... heteronormative and stereotypical, to say the least, and they then Mourn These Dead Dreams when their child turns out differently. I think that instead of encouraging people to have these Ideas and to calcify them in their minds, people should be encouraged to remember that children are their Own People and their lives will be whatever they will be. But I'd be shocked and delighted if Abby suggested *that*, or even seemed to conceptualize it.
edited for a bit of clarity
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The shape your wedding takes is, ultimately, your (and your intended's) choice. Not your mother's, or her mother's, or anyone else's. YOURS (as a couple). Entitled busy bodies should buzz off and take their feels to their therapist/spouse/friends and not dump them on you.
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