I have a good group of friends and a reasonable sized family. I can’t wrap my head around these weddings with 100-300 guests. Am I a loser or are they inviting mostly tertiary characters.

  • Sludgeyy@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    Plus ones

    I have 10 friends I want to invite, they have 10 friends.

    40 guests.

    I’m 1 of 4 children. That’s 8 guests. If they were the same. 16 guests.

    Over half way to 100 in just friends and immidiate family.

    I have a dozen cousins from both sides. 24 guests. If they did, 24 guests.

    Friends, immidiate family, and cousins. 100+

    I have 3 best friends and at least 7 friends that have/will/would invite me to their weddings.

    It adds up quick when you double then double again.

    • dream_weasel@sh.itjust.works
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      22 hours ago

      Why are you doubling the second time? Are you suggesting that you need to invite +1 guests for the friends of your friends for some reason?

      Edit:

      Aha. “They” is the future spouse not the friends you’re talking about. Duh.

      • Fjdybank@lemmy.ca
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        23 hours ago

        OP calculation is for half of the bride/groom. Weddings typically take 2 to tango

        • dream_weasel@sh.itjust.works
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          23 hours ago

          Ah got it. The family made sense but friends were confusing me: the “they” refers to your spouse, not the friends in question.

  • ctry21@sh.itjust.works
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    22 hours ago

    We had less than 25 people at ours, city hall wedding with a late lunch afterwards and everyone home by 6pm. Spent the money we saved on buying a house instead, and the small number of people kept the day feeling really chill. We had a long engagement and kept putting it off because we were dreading having an expensive ceremony with everyone we’ve ever met in attendance…and then one day we just realised we can do whatever we want.

  • backalleycoyote@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    Getting engaged was what made my fiancé have to come to terms with how phenomenally different we, and was the reason we eventually called it off and split. She had a big family, a huge professional network, and a massive social circle. I am completely estranged from my family, work in a small business where 95% of my shift is just me and while I like my coworkers, we’re not close. I’m sociable but I rarely make “friends”. My invite list was my dog and two buddies, enough to fill a best man (obviously my dog) and two groomsmen. It’s been a long time since that all transpired, but it still hurts a bit that what we thought was going to be a life defining moment and a foundation of the future ended up being the basis of recognizing “we are too different”.

    • Hanrahan@slrpnk.net
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      1 day ago

      my then fiancee and soon to be wife, we got a one way ticket around the world, stopping off in Vegas on the way, to get married.

      Since divorced though :)

  • Seleni@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    At least in my case, family. My family is really big and loves parties, his family is really big and loves parties. That quickly becomes a 250-300 person guest list.

  • velxundussa@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    200 might seem like a lot, but I can see it.

    I actually got married last Saturday, we had about 120 guests.

    Between close friends, family, people that you can’t see as often because they live far and the +1s (and in the case of a guest in a polycule +2s) it goes up pretty quickly.

    From the top of my head, we had about 20 family members, 20 friends from work, 25 people from the LARP we organize, another 25 from the LARP we play at, 8 bridesmaid+groomsmen, then a handful of friends from our other social circles.

    I guess it depends of your definition of tertiary character: not all people we see every week, but it doesn’t mean we wouldn’t like to if we had the time and it made any kind of sense in the realities of adult life.

    • Geobloke@aussie.zone
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      1 day ago

      You’re completely right, love my family and wanted them to share our moment. We might not see each other as much as we’d like, but we felt like our wedding was a great excuse to get a many together as we could

  • Brave Little Hitachi Wand@feddit.uk
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    1 day ago

    Commenting just to counterbalance - my wedding was like six friends at a rose garden without permission. My parents are separated and my wife’s weren’t great with travel, so we eloped.

  • Geobloke@aussie.zone
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    1 day ago

    I’m from a big family, I have roughly 30 cousins and 10 aunts and uncles, one you include partners we were pretty close to 80, that’s before we add in 20 friends each with their own partners. We had to cull lots of people out of our list just to keep it down to 120

    • dream_weasel@sh.itjust.works
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      23 hours ago

      This was me as well.

      Seems like some people might not understand how BIG families can get if you have one or two or 3 generations in a row with more than 6 members.

      Our impromptu Easter this year was 85 people and it was just family.

  • elephantium@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    My wife and I invited around 200 to our reception. I guess you could call it mostly “tertiary characters” (ugh, just typing that makes me feel like I’m falling into Main Character Syndrome).

    We probably had around 30 friends (quick tally), then immediate family accounted for a dozen more, then extended relatives pushed us over 200. My mother and my paternal grandfather both came from larger families, so you get lots of aunts, uncles, and cousins that way. +1s definitely inflate that figure, too.

    Am I super close with them all? No, but I was still happy to have them there. I generally like my extended family (fortunate in this day and age, I know!).

    • Andy@slrpnk.net
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      1 day ago

      The size of families and the expectation of who gets invited varies a lot by culture, too.

      Irish weddings are often big. Same for Mexican weddings, a lot of Arab folks.

      I suspect Protestant Americans are outliers globally in the size of the average family and the degree of contact people maintain with cousins.

      • vrek@programming.dev
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        1 day ago

        I worked with this Indian guy and a Indian woman. Both great great people and excellent at their jobs. We had a work outing(normally work ended around 5, we went to a restaurant with free food and 2 drink tickets starting at 3 and lasting till 6) and somehow we got talking about weddings, I think another women just got engaged. OH MY GOD, the weddings they talked about were insane. The guy didn’t walk up the aisle, no he wasn’t waiting up there for the bride, they literally rode live elephants down the aisle. Both of them said their weddings went for 3-4 days, plus honeymoon. Multiple performances by professionals including sword juggling, fire breathers, several live bands, etc. I don’t even know what else. Yeah they were engineers and made good salaries and their spouses were also professionals with good salaries but not like actors or ceos or anything. I have no idea how they managed to afford it but they said it was “expected” in their culture.

  • CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    My dad was a general contractor. The plumber he used was Italian, the woman he married was Italian. They had around 800 people at their wedding. The wedding cost about $150,000. And they walked away with about $20,000 extra in gifted money. They had 8 groomsmen and 8 bridesmaids.

    No, you’re not a loser, just some people have life on easy mode.

    This was about 25 years ago too.

    • vrek@programming.dev
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      1 day ago

      Ok… I can understand that but… What does the plumber have to do with it? Was he “laying pipe”?

      • harmbugler@piefed.social
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        1 day ago

        The plumber was the one getting hitched to the other Italian. A bit of ambiguous pronoun use there.

        • vrek@programming.dev
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          1 day ago

          Oh, it was a general contractor marrying the plumber. That makes sense. I read it as 3 separate people.

          • CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            My dad used an Italian plumber (a man), the Italian plumber was getting married to an Italian woman (the 3rd person in the story).

            My dad is just the person who the Italian plumber and I both know.

  • kubok@fedia.io
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    1 day ago

    I’m with OP.

    When me and my wife got married, we invited 20-ish people. Small service, lunch for everyone, and every guest looked happy. It was a good day and looking back, I would not have done it differently.

    One year earlier, we went to a wedding of a friend with ~200 people. Nice woman, but a total show-off. The wedding reception was horrible. They had a dress code, the service was spread among three locations, there were apparently massive costs, and many awkward, unhappy looking people. That marriage apparently did not last either.

    • My partner and I went to city hall, signed a few papers, and called it a day. It’s not for a lack of people in our lives either, we both have huuuuuuuuuuuge overlapping social circles.

      I can see how it’s possible to have so many people and make a huge thing of it, I just don’t see why. The wedding industry is particularly scammy on top of it

  • Say you get married young, early 20s, you may have less accumulated friends.

    By the time you are early 30s you will have probably accumulated more.

    Friends from uni / college, work places, hobbies etc.

    How many of these people invited you to their weddings? Usually fair that you reciprocate.

    That’s how you end up with long guest lists.

      • Starya67@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I got married at 40. Parents, siblings, 3 friends. We had a blast.

        I have about 30 friends, but they’re all over the world. These 3 friends lived where we got married.

        I have a large family, but why would I want to waste money (for both them and me) inviting them to a huge event during which I probably won’t get to talk to them because there are so many people?

      • cmbabul@slrpnk.net
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        1 day ago

        Yeah if id gotten married around 28-34 like most people who’s weddings I either attended or was in then I could easily get 200 when including family friends.

        My mom got jokingly mad at me for not getting married at the time because the unwritten understanding is that wedding gifts are a kind of a communal form of mutual aid. Everybody in the community gives gifts wedding gifts so the couple has a leg up to start out, she paid in to that but until my brother got married wasn’t getting anything back lol

    • Iconoclast@feddit.uk
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      1 day ago

      Speak for yourself I guess. Most people would tell you that the amount of friends negatively correlates with age.

      I’ve made one or two “friends” during my 30’s and both are my customers. I barely stay in contact with any of the people I was friends with in my 20’s as they’ve all moved elsewhere and I’m the only one who never left my hometown.

  • tyler@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    You invite the people you want to be there. That applies to both you and your soon to be spouse. It also applies to your parents if they’re paying (and sometimes even if they’re not). It’s also a great excuse to see people that you haven’t seen for a long long time.

    It’s also extremely normal to invite family.

    Now double the number because most of those people will bring a plus one, and add 20% cause that’s children that will come (unless you say no to kids which is becoming more popular).

    Great, now your list of 20-30 people is over a hundred.

    Of course you can have smaller weddings, but you will have to explain a lot to a lot of people, including family.

    ————

    To give an example, I invited my brother, my two sisters, my parents, and my grandparents to my wedding. I also invited some coworkers and friends, I think like 6-10 I can’t remember.

    My wife had even fewer friends to invite. About the same size family. But her parents wanted to invite several people we had never ever met before.

    We had 140 people. The numbers sound small up until the minute you start writing invites. Then you realize just how many people “have to come”.

  • sudoMakeUser@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    100 is pretty easy to get to. I have 60 people on one side of my family alone. But for an average person, let’s do a count. You’ve got say 8 immediate family members, including their partners. Your partner does too. Your dad’s side has 10 people you want to invite. That’s only two families of 5, so that’s a low estimate for a lot of people. Your mom’s side has two families of 5 you want to invite. Now your partner has the same. Lets keep it small and invite only 10 of your friends, so 20 with their partners. Your partner wants 10 friends as well. You are now at 96 people.

    That’s your immediate families, 10 relatives from each side, and 10 friends for you and 10 friends for your partner only.

  • FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website
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    2 days ago

    The sliding scales of inviting all the people you want to have there and avoiding people getting pissed off if they don’t get an invite (or similar political reasons) are only limited by the financial means available.

    100 is a relatively easy target to reach for most people. Family and friends and their +1’s and children gets you there pretty quick.