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Mrs. Thimble, NYC/Philadelphia Age and Occupation: 26, Actress & Costume Designer (+ day job) Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, Lawyer & Techie Wiz Engagement Date: August 22, 2008 Wedding Date: October 2010 Venue: The Pearl S. Buck House About Me: I’m an easily inspired over-thinker delighted with the process of designing, building, directing and {dare I say} co-starring in the early-autumn affair I’ve been dreaming up. I’m a sucker for trendied-up comfort foods and old family anecdotes; I have an affinity for adjectives, alliteration, eyelet and earl grey; and I live for quality time with family and friends. I never guessed I’d marry my “high school sweetheart", but when it turned out to be my funny, techie, loyal Mr. Thimble I was committed for life. We’re both mid-career transition and ready to move back to small-townish TBD, PA in a pre-wedding flurry of all-good life changes.
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The Princess Effect

June 30th, 2010 @ 3:22 pm by Mrs. Thimble

We are not inviting children to our wedding because I have about thirty little second cousins on my side of the family and we simply can’t accommodate for that many kids. This is killing me because, before they’d doubled in numbers, I had always imagined I would simply enlist them all into the wedding party and let them run down the aisle and be adorable and no feelings would be hurt.

The Princess Effect :  wedding kids philadelphia Flowerc1 flowerc

{from The Brides’ Cafe}

I feel that offering them this important (and fun and adorable) role in our wedding day is my duty as the youngest of my generation.

As the baby-of-the-family straggler, I was given the ability to go to the majority of my 14 older cousin’s weddings. And the most important wedding event I’ve attended was when I was six years old and I was the flower girl.

This is where my theory of The Princess Effect comes into play. As the youngest in a very large extended family, I was given many a role model among family members to look up to. Whether we were close or whether I heard stories from afar when they’d disappear to college one by one, in each I found a friend to talk to, a babysitter to braid hair with, or a strong will that would intimidate me at the time. The Princess Effect is what I call the magnetic pull of little girls to their favorite older female family members, their preschool and kindergarten teachers, and their babysitters—their role models outside of their mothers. And when I see a little girl smiling at and trailing her big sister or aunt or babysitter, I remember that feeling and I think of little girls in Disney World meeting their favorite princess in person and audibly gasping in awe and wonder. Like I did when I saw my preschool teacher out of context sitting next to us at church, or when I saw my cousin in her wedding dress in June, 1990.

When I was a flower girl, I soaked up the opportunity to be in the spotlight and show off my maturity and ability to take on this great duty. The absolute best part of being a flower girl was taking special pictures with my cousin-bride, and getting to pretend I was picking up her train. I remember thinking it was just like we were in a fairytale. I definitely fancied myself the most important member of the wedding party.

My mother used to babysit this cousin, and when she was a teen my cousin babysat me. My cousin now has a daughter who I used to babysit, and my cousin’s sisters have daughters, and my 14 other cousins on my mother’s side have adorable children. Because I was so fortunate to have so many role models growing up, I wanted to have the fun “princess” moment on my wedding day in which I asked them all to be a part of it—especially the girls as part of a women inspiring women pattern. But I have to realize that as the family grows in leaps and bounds and generations, the ties have to loosen to accommodate it.

All that said, we will have one little girl at the wedding: a will-be 10 year old first cousin on Mr. Thimble’s side. We’re hoping our first cousin rule holds water and doesn’t upset anyone, because she’s the only kid on his side just as I was as the straggler youngest in my mom’s family.

Are you struggling with your rules on kids at the wedding? What did you decide and how?

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16 Responses to “The Princess Effect”

1.
TheFutureMcBride
Member
TheFutureMcBride (message)  4,484 posts, Honey bee

I think that sounds like a good idea even though it may be hard.

As for me, I’m hoping that there will be absolutly no children at my wedding. I just can’t take it after loosing Moose (our baby) in December. I love kids; I just can’t handle them right now.

 
2.
emma5w
Member
emma5w (message)  547 posts, Busy bee

THIS has been a huge issue for us. In particular with my FILs. If we invited children, it would add at least 40 people to our guest list, which woudl put us well outside our budget. So then it was just siblings’ and first cousins’ children - which would still add about 20. So, no. Then it was just siblings’ - adding 8. Still, no. FI and I have said multiple times NO KIDS UNDER 18. And yet we finally had to cave on his immediate cousins who are 14 and 16 because it basically would’ve started WW3 if they weren’t invited. Oh, and guess who can’t come because they have soccer games?! So. frustrating.

 
3.
moderndaisy
Member
moderndaisy (message)  6,703 posts, Bee Keeper

Goodness, we battled with this same issue. But the 10 kids are all our nieces/nephews, so at the end of the day we just included all of them, 8 out of 10 walked down the aisle as a ring bearer, escort or flower girl. It worked out really well except for the one very misbehaved 2 year old flower girl who screamed through the entire vows.. I’m not blaming her though..

 
4.
Entangled
Member
Entangled (message)  2,616 posts, Sugar bee

My fiance and I are both the oldest of all the cousins (and he has no first cousins). I never got the princess-awe effect with family members (occasionally with neighbors that I wasn’t as close with)… I got The Bossypants Effect instead. :-P

It actually makes the kids decision really easy on our part. There’s one first cousin and one half-brother under 10, and a cousin and a sibling around 18 and that is it. Everyone else in both our families are 21+. We HAVE to invite the two siblings and adding two cousins of the same age on isn’t really a big deal when there’s no next degree of relatives with kids.

 
5.
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Guest
jbtrail

I have a similar issue. My fiancé feels strongly about having an adult reception, and I understand and agree with many of his reasons. However, EVERYONE on our guest list is from out of town (anywhere from 3 - 8 hour drive). Does anyone have advice on how to handle this? Is it unreasonable to ask family members to leave kids with family/friends for the weekend? Is it worth it to try and find a sitter for the evening for the kids (there are about 6-7 kids that are 2 - 13 years old)? Help!

 
6.
sapphirebride
Member
sapphirebride (message)  1,750 posts, Buzzing bee

I totally get what you’re feeling about the princess thing! I have three older siblings and I was the flower girl in all of their weddings. It felt like such an honor and I still remember watching them get ready and thinking about how beautiful they were and how amazing it was that they were getting *married.* I hope my flower girl will feel so special being a part of our day!

 
7.
seattlemeg
Member
seattlemeg (message)  538 posts, Busy bee

Oh such a hard decision… We are actually currently deciding on it. We don’t have a lot of guests with children, so at most we’d have 6 kids at the wedding, however because it’s a small wedding and my venue can only hold 100 (we’ve decided to invite 118) we’re worried about those additional 6 seats…

 
8.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Cola (message)  2,870 posts, Sugar bee

I love your description of the “princess effect!” But I also completely understand your decision to not have kids at your wedding, except 1.

 
9.
katiebirdbee
Member
katiebirdbee (message)  40 posts, Newbee

No kids for us other than immediate family members, and cousins, and no kids in the wedding party, it’s too hard to pick one and not all…I encouraged all the little girls to wear their fancy-est dresses :) I’m sure everyone will understand

 
10.
D.Marie
Member
D.Marie (message)  2,484 posts, Buzzing bee

Such a sweet story…I love the Princess Effect and I think it’s so true. I loved babysitting when I was little. Our neighbors used to babysit us or my older sister watched me when she got old enough. I always looked up to her but we grew apart. I dont have any little girls on my side of the family but my husband has little girls and boys and it was just too much to invite them all and worry about kids running all over the place at a historical mansion .
So we just invited the parents, no kids on his side. But we did, out of courtesy of them being in our wedding party, invite the best man and his wife to bring their 12 yr old son, and my MOH’s two yr old daughter was our flower girl! She walked down holding her moms hand! She was so adorable!

 
11.
Miss Argyle
Bee
Miss Argyle (message)  2,516 posts, Sugar bee

Strict no kids policy for us. Way to many kids in the fam to accommodate them all. I have no qualms about it either. Just can’t deal with kids bouncing all over - my patience is a tad too low :(

 
12.
lisaberry
Member
lisaberry (message)  186 posts, Blushing bee

We actually made the exact same rule — there are so many first cousins on my side of the family that inviting all of their children would add 36 people to the guest list. But I do have a first cousin who is 15 — he’s the only exception to our no kids rule. My brother and I are the youngest of the cousins (but for the 15 yr old) and were never invited to family wedding growing up because we were too young — which sucked. So it was important to me that my one cousin be invited. But the rest — we just can’t! :(

 
13.
jenandchris
Member
jenandchris (message)  734 posts, Busy bee

We did the same thing! We drew the line at first cousins. For me, that means little kids (I’m the oldest on my side) and for him, that means no little kids (his first cousins all have kids), but this worked for us without having to say “no kids” but still being able to manage the numbers without offending anyone.

 
14.
winter
Member
winter (message)  1,333 posts, Bumble bee

crossing my fingers for you. but honestly this is entirely up to you.

 
15.
Member Icon
Member
lolo7835 (message)  558 posts, Busy bee

At the moment, we are doing a ‘no kids other than family’ rule. Personally, I’d rather have no kids, but its not a super huge issue for me so I’m willing to compromise (although my 80 year old grand-aunt told me it was rude in her day to bring non-family kids to a wedding, but cest la vie)

Between the Mr. and I that’s 12 kids from 13 years to newborn. Nearly all of them are well behaved and I know all of them pretty well, so I’m not to worried. Don’t think I’ll have any of them actually in the wedding since we can’t have them all, and the blow up from picking and choosing is something I’d like to avoid.

And then there’s the extended ‘family’-or the friends in my life that I consider to be almost like family. I’m in my early 30’s, so about 90% of my friends are married now. With kids. We crunched the numbers, and if we invited all of them it would be 30 additional kids, all under the age of 10. So that would be 42 kids total which is practically 1/3 of the guest list. No way jose. Their behavior is a pretty solid mix from wild child to angel, but I’m not going to pick and choose. So family only is a clear line for us that most people understand. Of course, I have closer friends insisting that since I’m so close to their child that they would be heartbroken etc. *sigh*

What also annoys me is my friend’s idea that the 13 year old and 12 year old cousins can baby sit all 42 of these kids. Um…no. They are going to be dancing and enjoying the wedding, and are not my or anyone else’s free childcare thank you. And no, I’m not paying for a babysitter either since ah…42 kids. Even my grade school teachers didn’t have classes that size.

 
16.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Hamster (message)  4,046 posts, Honey bee

We ended up only having two kids at our wedding, mostly due to geographical reasons, but this was definitely a subject that had to be handled with tact and care!

 

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Mrs. Thimble
Mrs. Thimble

Mrs. Thimble, NYC/Philadelphia Age and Occupation: 26, Actress & Costume Designer (+ day job) Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, Lawyer & Techie Wiz Engagement Date: August 22, 2008 Wedding Date: October 2010 Venue: The Pearl S. Buck House About Me: I’m an easily inspired over-thinker delighted with the process of designing, building, directing and {dare I say} co-starring in the early-autumn affair I’ve been dreaming up. I’m a sucker for trendied-up comfort foods and old family anecdotes; I have an affinity for adjectives, alliteration, eyelet and earl grey; and I live for quality time with family and friends. I never guessed I’d marry my “high school sweetheart", but when it turned out to be my funny, techie, loyal Mr. Thimble I was committed for life. We’re both mid-career transition and ready to move back to small-townish TBD, PA in a pre-wedding flurry of all-good life changes.

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