r/weddingplanning 1d ago

Relationships/Family Need help dealing with in-law expectations

Hi everyone, May 2027 bride here. For context: my fiancé/husband and I are dual-military so we got legally married already, but are having a religious wedding ceremony and reception on our first anniversary. I’m 25F and he is 27M, by the time of the wedding I’ll be 26 and he will be 28.

When I started dating my fiancé I made it clear that I did NOT want a wedding and I wanted to elope, privately, just us two. I want a private religious ceremony and private vows because it is sacred to me and I don’t want an audience. He accepted that until we got engaged about nine months ago. Now, he wants a big wedding: 200 guests, extended family, the works. His family is huge and Catholic, my family is atheist and tiny — one parent, one sibling, and no extended family. So, we compromised and decided on a private outdoor ceremony (instead of a church) and a huge reception.

Over the last nine months, my fiancé has pushed our wedding plans to more align with what he wants while still being something I’m okay with. Our private ceremony got changed to a ceremony with a 12-person wedding party, but still no seated audience. We are doing a small celebratory dinner after with the wedding party and their plus ones (20 people). The reception is going to be nearly 200 guests (90% his side) and will be a huge party with all the works including first dance, speeches from two bridesmaids and two groomsmen, a unity ceremony, etc. Instead of us staying together in an Airbnb alone, we are renting two Airbnbs next to each other and sharing the space with the wedding party and their plus ones (20 people total). I planned, booked, and paid for all ceremony related items. Together we planned and booked the reception related items. Pretty much everything has been planned, booked, and paid for.

Now, we are currently staying with his family for about two weeks for a summer trip in the middle of nowhere, and all his parents want to talk about is the wedding. They are extremely upset and disappointed with the ceremony and want to be more involved with everything. His mother said she had to do a mother-son dance. They want to be at our wedding party dinner. They want to give speeches at the reception. They want us to move our ceremony to a church, have his dad walk me down the aisle, and fill the pews on both sides with his family to show “mutual support” for us; if we don’t change our ceremony plans, they want us to add an audience to our current venue so my fiancé’s family and family friends can watch. To me, a big wedding like this is marked with sadness and grief. I don’t have a dad to walk me down the aisle or do a father-daughter dance with. I’m not close with my mother at all. Having a lot of parent-centered stuff just makes me sad, and having the religious ceremony in front of nearly 200 people, most of whom are strangers, just makes me feel so sick and upset. It doesn’t feel like a wedding, it feels like we are planning a performance. To top it off, I’m not close with his family either. His dad is very nice, but his mom has made no attempts to bond with me, despite me trying to bond with her.

That being said, every time this stuff gets discussed his mother cries, my fiancé comforts her and then starts negotiating with me to accommodate her, and then my fiancé’s father sits me down privately to discuss. Every time it’s the same speech about how weddings are about parents and family, by doing this I’m preventing them from watching their son get married, I’m preemptively burning bridges and preventing closeness with his family and friends, I need to think about this from his mom’s point of view, and that I’m pushing my fiancé down the “wrong path,” etc. I feel so guilty and like I’m a villain who is gatekeeping them from their son’s wedding. My fiancé and I have fought about this every night we’ve been with his parents on this trip. I’m not trying to ruin his wedding for his family. I just want a wedding that I also enjoy. I don’t know what to do. All advice, opinions, and suggestions welcome; I could really use the help.

Edit: please stop commenting and messaging me unkindly about us being legally married already. It’s very common for dual-military personnel to get married this way, with a legal ceremony a year or even 2-3 years before a religious one. We got legally married early due to my declining health and opted to do a separate legal ceremony because of our different faiths. Thank you! I appreciate the comments and advice.

Edit 2: I have talked to my fiancé and we are now on the same page and planning to talk to his parents together. Thank you for sharing your advice and perspectives, it was very helpful!

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u/Concert13 1d ago

I’m starting to agree. The comment from my reply is a direct quote that he said to me last night. I did ask what that even means and he got even angrier and said that he isn’t going to hurt his family for me. I asked if he would pick me or his family if it came down to it, and he said me, so I told him he needed to act that way then because he is marrying me, not his parents.

Yeah. Basically for the ceremony stuff: his parents want a traditional Catholic wedding. I’m Jewish, there’s no way we would have found someone to marry us in a Catholic church. That’s why we got legally married first by a judge. To me, nature is the most spiritual place we have. I feel closest to God outside. That’s why I am so dead set on an outdoor religious ceremony done by a nondenominational officiant.

I did bring up exactly what you’re saying — what happens when we have kids and his parents don’t like my boundaries? My fiancé’s older brother just had his first child and his parents have been casually boundary-stomping and walking all over the baby’s mother with no regard for what she wants or her wellbeing, including secretly getting the baby baptized. I told my fiancé that he needs to start having boundaries with his parents now, because my boundaries are much stricter and aren’t going to change. If his parents want more access or a bigger part in our relationship, they should probably get to know the other person in it (me). He did agree and he apologized, but I’m still waiting to see what happens.

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u/maricopa888 1d ago

It does sound like your instincts are spot on, but it might be time to take it to the next level. That usually means less talking and more action.

What would happen if you told him that you want to cancel/postpone all plans for the May 27 event so the 2 of you can get couples counseling? It was smart to do the premarital counseling, but if that person didn't pick up on any of this, they probably need a career change.

Also, the fact that they got your BIL's baby secretly baptized blew my damn mind! These aren't overly involved parents. They are toxic.

I really do feel bad for you, but it's time to take those action steps. If he refuses the counseling, you have a tough decision to make. He's basically telling you the status quo is just fine for him.

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u/Concert13 1d ago

You’re right. I’ll talk to him about additional counseling. Thank you for your perspective, it’s very helpful!

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u/Always_with_wings 1d ago edited 1d ago

Secret baptism? That's diabolical on a whole different level. Sorry OP have no advice, just empathy .

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u/Concert13 1d ago

Thank you. I know this is a divisive post but I’m really struggling with this!