


Should I include these women as my bridesmaids, and ask my fiance to include my four brothers as his groomsmen? We originally planned to have no wedding party, but I don’t want to hurt any family members’ feelings (mine would have been hurt if I’d been left out).
I had also thought to just have my brothers stand with me, and his brothers stand with him. Or have my mother and cousin stand up with me.
My sisters-in-law love me and I love them. But if I exclude them, am I setting the stage for hurt for years to come? We are paying for this wedding ourselves and trying to keep costs down. I don’t know what to do, and no one around me can offer sound advice without airing their personal feelings.
You are overthinking this and seem torn between serving your own wants (no attendants), versus your perceptions of how tenderly people respond to being asked, or excluded, from the wedding party.
Because I don’t think you are capable of handling the complications involved with making choices and managing this social burden confidently, I think you and your guy should go it alone, and ask your brothers and their spouses/partners to enjoy being honored guests.
I sit near a back corner of the office, with one coworker sitting between me and the restrooms. “Tom” has a few quirks that drive me crazy; in particular, he snickers loudly every time we hear anything in the restrooms, even going so far as to comment out loud (“Oh, man!”) occasionally.
We all know what happens in a restroom, and it’s hard enough to be in a small office where nothing is really private; does he need to draw attention to it? He also scoots away from his desk and sneezes into the void below his (and my) desk every time he sneezes.
I cringe, thinking about the things he’s sneezing on that might make it home with me (my purse, my shoes, myself). As I am the only person sitting next to him, his comments and sneezes directly affect me, but others might not even notice. Is there a way to politely ask him to cover his mouth when he sneezes, and to stop commenting on the restroom sounds? I feel like I have to teach him how to be an adult, when he’s in his 40s.
Use your words: “Hey, Tom, it’s tough enough for us to sit here right next to the restrooms all day. You commenting out loud about every noise makes things worse. Can you stop doing that?”
Frankly, Tom has a right to sneeze in the space beneath his desk. The fact that his space is connected with yours is not something he can control. Your shoes being sneezed upon does not seem to place you at risk. You might want to store your handbag in a file drawer, however.
But that is immaterial. Children should not be vaping, and this boy’s concerns should be dealt with by the adults in his life.
Copyright 2018 by Amy Dickinson
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