Ontariobear
JUB Addict
$100 is fine. If nothing on the registry seems like a gift you would want to give them then why not a gift card to some sort of bakery supply outlet to get exactly what they want.
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“I’m not sure if it’s the first wedding you have been to, but for your next wedding … people give envelopes. I lost out on $200 covering you and your dates plate . … and got fluffy whip and sour patch kids in return. Just a heads-up for the future,” the bride texted her wedding guests.
What kind of bitch is she? Definitely a tacky bitch.
Well if they're free to follow their church in matters that don't concern them, then you are certainly free to follow your own conscience in such matters when they do concern you. You're under no obligation to defer to their incidental bigotry just because it is "their day."
It would give great insight into their way of thinking to know whether other members of your family will receive an invite extending to a guest, while you might only be invited to attend alone.
Anyway, if their views introduce limits on your familial connection, let that be reflected in your choice of gift.
Great advice so far: $50 to $100 is fine.
Let me tell you what is NOT an appropriate wedding gift: a $50 hooker.![]()
If your cousin is your first cousin, the daughter is your first cousin once removed.
If you don't know, it implies that either you are less political within the family about gay politics and rights, or that you simply aren't very close to these cousins.
The fact that it IS an issue again implies that you are not close enough to these kin to have to worry about the level of gift. If you haven't been a relative who's talked by phone, kept up between holiday gatherings and the like, then you probably are just not close. As to the intent of the invitation, unless you KNOW that your cousins are materialistic and grasping, then every couple deserves the benefit of the doubt when sending an invitation to family members.
And oft-overlooked aspect of invitations by young people is the social ties and obligations that exist between the parents' generation. Your parents and her parents may have always sent one another graduation announcements and the like. It may not be about your generation, but about theirs.
