I paid for all my kids’ weddings. One rule: all family invited. I’ve always believed that a wedding isn’t just about two people; it’s about the joining of two tribes, and in our tribe, that includes the screaming toddlers and the sticky-handed cousins.
My oldest son had a backyard bash, and my middle daughter had a fancy hotel ballroom event, and both times, the dance floor was a beautiful mess of generations. I never thought my youngest, Naomi, would be the one to challenge the only condition I ever placed on my financial support.
My daughter wanted it child-free because her fiancé, Harrison, “can’t stand kids.” When she sat me down in my living room in Surrey to tell me this, I actually thought she was joking at first. Harrison always seemed a bit stiff—a high-flying consultant who looked like he’d been pressed in a suit factory—but I figured he was just shy. Naomi, however, was dead serious, her eyes flashing with a defensive fire I hadn’t seen since she was a teenager. She told me that having kids there would “ruin the aesthetic” and that Harrison’s nerves couldn’t handle the unpredictability of children.
I said no money without family. I wasn’t trying to be a tyrant, but my sister has four small kids, and my son has two boys who adore their Auntie Naomi. Excluding them felt like cutting off a limb just to make a suit fit better. I told her that if they wanted a child-free wedding, that was their choice, but it would have to be on their dime. I wasn’t going to fund an event that deliberately locked out the people I loved most in the world.
She exploded, “Stop controlling me!” She stood up so fast her chair nearly tipped over, accusing me of using my money to buy her obedience. She called me old-fashioned and narrow-minded, claiming I cared more about “tradition” than her actual happiness. She left furious, slamming the front door so hard the pictures in the hallway rattled. I sat there in the silence, feeling like a failure of a father, wondering if I really was just a stubborn old man holding onto a dying ideal.
Two days later, her fiancé, Harrison, called me. My stomach dropped when he said: “Arthur, I need to see you, but please don’t tell Naomi I’m coming over.” His voice wasn’t the usual confident, clipped tone he used in boardrooms; it sounded small, cracked, and genuinely desperate. I agreed to meet him at a small pub down the road, the kind of place where the booths are deep and the lighting is dim enough to hide a man’s pride. I spent the drive there rehearsing a speech about family values, but I never got to use it.