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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, May 31, 2008

Hang on to your wallet when wedding money grubbers are near

By Michelle Singletary

This is the high season for weddings. And inevitably, with this season come the financial foibles that can stress or even end relationships with friends or relatives.

www.CNNMoney.com and Money magazine columnists Leonard Schwarz and Jeanne Fleming love to collect stories of people behaving badly when it comes to money. Recently they put together a list of you-have-got-to-be-kidding-me wedding and money stories. Here are three:

  • Someone was invited to a destination wedding. It's a trendiness that can get very costly for the guests. Five times as many couples opted for destination weddings in 2006 as in 1996, according to the National Tour Association.

    In this case the bride and groom selected a resort hotel in Hawai'i for their guests' stay. Because of cost, one invited guest balked at going. But, he said, the bride and groom twisted his arm. So he went. After the guy got there, he found out that part of the reason the couple was so insistent he come was that they got free accommodations for bringing in a certain number of guests. Had he not booked a room, the bride and groom would have lost their sweet deal.

  • Another egregious money story started in a Las Vegas wedding chapel. The bride and groom decided to go it alone and didn't invite any guests. Then the bride's cousin decided to get married. A friend of the cousin was throwing her a bridal shower. So how did the bride who had no guests at her wedding respond? Since she never had a bridal shower, she suggested that everyone at her cousin's shower should be encouraged to bring a gift for her, too.

  • The parents of a bride insisted that the couple have a lavish wedding. But following the reception, the bride's father took the groom's mother aside. He told her that because his business was facing a financial emergency, he needed her and her husband to lend him $25,000 to help pay for the wedding.

    So what would you do in these cases?

    When I first read the stories I was appalled, especially by the bride who wanted to piggyback on her cousin's shower. It takes a lot of gall to ask that guests attending someone else's party bring you gifts.

    But on reflection, each story tells a lot about how people are pressed into doing something with their money that they don't want to do.

    Let's look at destination weddings. This type of wedding can be lovely and certainly worth the money — if you can truly afford it.

    If once you explain that you can't afford to go to a wedding and the bride or groom (or both) continue to pressure you to attend, what you have is a display of selfishness. Don't let yourself be bullied by selfish people.

    But if you choose to attend the wedding knowing that it will be a financial burden, you can't get mad if the couple used you to get a discount. At least they were being prudent.

    So as you ponder how to respond to a wedding invitation and the financial craziness that may come with such a blessed event, remember you do have free will. Exercise it wisely.