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i need details as to what my responsibilities are.
son is very angry that i am not fullfilling his expectations..he is angry at me for everything.

2006-11-02 07:33:10 · 10 answers · asked by carolthec4 1 in Family & Relationships Weddings

10 answers

Right now is probably a very stressful time for him. I'm not making excuses for him AT ALL... but, I would calmly sit him down and ask him what his expectations are and explain to him you will try and meet them the best of your abilities.

Financially the grooms parents are believe are in charge of the rehearsal dinner, and I've heard recently from someone the invitations as well, but I'm not 100% sure on that one.

2006-11-02 07:54:10 · answer #1 · answered by Heather S 4 · 0 0

Mother Of The Groom Duties

2016-11-01 08:14:35 · answer #2 · answered by stever 4 · 0 0

The parents of the groom play a very small role in a wedding. They pay for the post-rehearsal dinner, and in some areas, they pay for the wedding flowers. Other than that, they sit back and look happy.
It sounds as though your son has some very unrealistic expectations. One of which might be subconscious anger that his father is not present for his wedding. But that's not something you can do anything about.
If he's this angry with you about things that are beyond your control, he might need a course in anger management as a wedding gift. And I'm not fooling. If he gets angry at you, he's going to get angry at his wife. And it sounds as though he doesn't know how to manage anger well.
A thoughtful son would realize that the wedding is poignant for you as well, as it brings up your loss, as well as his.
Give him a hug, tell him to snap out of it, and if his anger persists, tell his new wife he needs to learn some anger management techniques.

2006-11-02 07:44:18 · answer #3 · answered by old lady 7 · 0 0

What are his expectations?

Most weddings are generally planned and decided by the Wedding Couple. The Brides parents are usually a lot more involved with the plans.
Your responsibilities lie with what you want to be responsible for.
Me being the mother of three sons, all married, I supported whatever decisions they made concerning their weddings, and if they did ask me to do something for them it was by request, not expectation. I did let the Bride and her parents know that if there was something that they might have needed help with to please let me know,,,,other than that I left the decision making to my sons and their brides.
Too many people making too many different kinds of plans can get really confusing, and I have found that the Bride and the Groom are usually the ones that make the final decisions.

2006-11-02 07:50:49 · answer #4 · answered by Susan M 3 · 0 0

initially, do no longer assume something, because of the fact each couple is different, each set of mom and dad is different, each own situation is different, and each wedding ceremony is different. traditionally, the Bride's mothers and dads HOST (plan, set up, and pay for) the marriage and reception yet that does no longer mean it applies to each wedding ceremony. And right this is 4 recent genuine life examples . . The Bride and Groom have been "properly paid" experts and that they paid for their own wedding ceremony in its entirety. They paid for all the bridesmaids robes and tuxedo leases for the gents plus each attendant replaced into given $500 for weekend accommodations or return and forth costs. The Bride's mom and dad have been divorced for some years. The Bride's mom paid for each little thing. The Bride's Father did no longer pay for something nor did he grant. And the Groom's Father did no longer pay for something nor did he grant. Neither the Bride's Father nor the Groom's Father names have been placed on the marriage invitation. The Groom's mothers and dads paid for each little thing. The Bride's mom and dad did no longer even attend the marriage. The Bride's sister and brother-in-regulation paid for the reception (dinner social gathering room apartment, nutrition, liquids, and stay band) and the Bride and Groom paid for each little thing else. the only thank you to unravel this capture 22 difficulty is to ask the two gadgets of mom and dad on your domicile, if available, or some quiet place to communicate this undertaking. by skill of having an open and candid communicate all of us know what each individual is keen to do (or no longer do). I relatively have consistently found that if the Bride and Groom paid for a million/3 and the Bride's mom and dad pay for a million/3 and the Groom's mom and dad pay for a million/3 it works out properly. And this branch ought to additionally observe to the customer checklist, a particular sort of travellers must be desperate like one hundred people, and then each couple is accepted to ask approximately 33 people. Your wedding ceremony should not be approximately "administration" or "who's in fee." replied by skill of: an authorized wedding ceremony expert / a expert bridal representative / a bridal ceremony officiant

2016-11-27 00:01:03 · answer #5 · answered by paula 4 · 0 0

What does he expect you to do? Your role is to be the mother of the groom and sit there and be happy for him. Unless he's a total jerk - then you can just sit there. Sadly we need some more detail of what's going on!

2006-11-02 07:43:26 · answer #6 · answered by susie 3 · 0 0

Actually, you don't have many responsiblities as the mother of the groom. There are items that the parents of the groom have traditionally paid for, so giving them some money would be nice. Other than that, plan the rehearsal dinner or give them the money to do it themselves.

2006-11-03 02:00:23 · answer #7 · answered by Pink Denial 6 · 0 0

Widow should sit and have dinner. Wave and say Hello to everyone. She should be patient and cordial... Widows should never dance with the son at recept. Son being mad at Mom is normal. Some sons get bitchy at their Moms for feeding them to much for dinner and they get upset about the way their TUX looks on them. Sometimes the sons think they are to fat.. Lil boitch!

2006-11-02 07:42:18 · answer #8 · answered by J S 2 · 0 1

Ask him what he is expecting you to do...he is obviously angry at you for something, but if he doesn't tell you what it is then he has no right to be angry at you.

2006-11-02 08:42:57 · answer #9 · answered by VAWeddingSpecialist 6 · 0 0

Just support him....but I don't understand why he would be angry at you??

2006-11-02 07:37:56 · answer #10 · answered by Rachel 7 · 0 0

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