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Where to put a 15 yr old boy in your wedding

  • 05-04-2019 9:31am
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 7


    Im recently engaged and I have a 15 year old son (previous relationship) and I'm not sure where to put him in the wedding. My fiancee has 2 brothers and a nephew that he loves like his brothers which would make it 4 groomsman and 4 bridesmaids which is too much. (We are on a budget) Can anyone help me with this please...Its stressful! Thanks.


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Comments

  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Home & Garden Moderators, Recreation & Hobbies Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 22,287 CMod ✭✭✭✭Pawwed Rig


    He could be the ring bearer. We had my nephew do that as he was upset that he had no role. We talked up the importance of it and even trusted him to mind the rings the night before and bring them to the ceremony.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,391 ✭✭✭RocketRaccoon


    Surely your son is more important than your fianc nephew?


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,477 ✭✭✭harr


    Ring carrier is a good idea...friend of mine was kind of in same position and gave her son (14) a few different roles on the day . The one enjoyed most was being the usher in the church, she to built it up to an important role.
    He gave out the wedding booklets and directed people to seats.
    In fairness he did a great job on the day and the church side of things went off without issue.
    Just involve him in as much as possible and give him a mention during the speech’s


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,477 ✭✭✭harr


    Surely your son is more important than your fianc nephew?
    Normally the groomsmen would come from the husbands side and he probably wants or had planned on asking them.
    Maybe he had promised the nephew a role before he realised this would be an issue.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,391 ✭✭✭RocketRaccoon


    harr wrote: »
    Normally the groomsmen would come from the husbands side and he probably wants or had planned on asking them.
    Maybe he had promised the nephew a role before he realised this would be an issue.

    The son is 15, I'm sure he knew about him before proposing and planning the wedding.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 762 ✭✭✭irisheddie85


    If it suits your family setup you could ask him if he wants to walk you up the aisle. Would be a really symbolic moment of bringing joining your family with this new man. Even alongside your dad if that was your plan.


  • Registered Users Posts: 16,418 ✭✭✭✭banie01


    If it suits your family setup you could ask him if he wants to walk you up the aisle. Would be a really symbolic moment of bringing joining your family with this new man. Even alongside your dad if that was your plan.


    +1
    I was about to suggest similar.


  • Registered Users Posts: 26 dinnyhw


    I got married recently and have two kids from a previous relationship. My daughter was bridesmaid and my son was groomsman, but he also walked my mother up the aisle.
    Maybe he could do that or even make a speech??


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,800 ✭✭✭tretorn


    Groomsman is the grooms choice and its usually someone from his side of the family.

    Would you be happy if he wanted a daughter of his to be your bridesmaid.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 632 ✭✭✭Sorry about that


    tretorn wrote: »
    Groomsman is the grooms choice and its usually someone from his side of the family.

    Would you be happy if he wanted a daughter of his to be your bridesmaid.

    If I was about to become her stepmother I’d very possibly have already considered it.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 375 ✭✭oLoonatic


    Why not have him walk down the aisle with you (not sure if your dad is around) but both of them if so??


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,726 ✭✭✭lalababa


    Have him collect the cash.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Home & Garden Moderators, Recreation & Hobbies Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 22,287 CMod ✭✭✭✭Pawwed Rig


    tretorn wrote: »
    Would you be happy if he wanted a daughter of his to be your bridesmaid.

    That would be a no brainer for me. I would assume she would be bridesmaid or flower girl


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,298 ✭✭✭Sunny Dayz


    Are you having a religious ceremony? If so, there's a reading towards the end of the mass, like a reflection after communion - it would be a lovely thing for him to read out as it is usually wishing the newly married couple a happy future.


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 13,962 Mod ✭✭✭✭pc7


    This man is becoming a huge part of both your lives, I would have personally picked the son/daughter as groomsman/bridesmaid. Nieces and Nephews would be way down the list. Also if you are having 3 of each, adding an extra that is your son isn't too much, I think it would look worse to have 3 and him excluded.


  • Registered Users Posts: 247 ✭✭tangobelle2010


    My son was 12 when I got married, slightly younger than yours. We had three bridesmaids, three groomsmen and my son - the Junior Groomsman. He sat in church with the groomsmen. He sat at top table with the groomsmen - he loved being one of the boys. And after our first dance when the rest of the bridal party came to the dance floor, he joined hands with myself and my husband and danced with us as a "unit". So many people commented on how lovely this was afterwards.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,391 ✭✭✭RocketRaccoon


    My son was 12 when I got married, slightly younger than yours. We had three bridesmaids, three groomsmen and my son - the Junior Groomsman. He sat in church with the groomsmen. He sat at top table with the groomsmen - he loved being one of the boys. And after our first dance when the rest of the bridal party came to the dance floor, he joined hands with myself and my husband and danced with us as a "unit". So many people commented on how lovely this was afterwards.

    I had my daughter from a previous relationship as a junior bridesmaid and it was the exact same, she got ready with all the girls, sat at the top table, was involved in the first dance.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,441 ✭✭✭Tombo2001


    Surely your son is more important than your fianc nephew?

    OMG - this comment is wrong on so many levels.

    (i) nobody is more important than anyone else - in the scheme of things.

    (ii) what you are somewhat outrageously inferring is that FOR THE OP - her own son may NOT be more important to HER than her Fiance's nephew. Of course he is more important to her, that goes without saying and to even ask the question is just needlessly antagonistic.

    (iii) In every wedding that ever happened - the groom picks the groomsmen; the bride picks the bridesmaids. As such, the groom picks who he wants to pick. And there is no outrage whatsoever if the groom feels his nephew that he is pals with all his life is the person he wants as a groomsman over the OP's son.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,441 ✭✭✭Tombo2001


    Additional point OP - you've come into this forum to ask the question. ERGO you are asking a large group of Women what they would do.

    Ask a bunch of Men how they would feel about it. You will absolutely not get the same answer.

    Why dont you ask on the Parenting forum - essentially this is a Parenting issue as well as a Wedding issue.

    Ultimately - I would see this as the Groom's decision. Its the one part of the Wedding that he controls, everything else is either the Bride or the Couple deciding, so consider that before you start telling him what to do. It may be that he is AOK with it; it may be that he;s not, and that should be respected.


  • Registered Users Posts: 56 ✭✭BookNerd


    I have a teenage son and my fiance has a tween daughter. They are both priority at the wedding as us marrying has a bigger impact than them over anyone (apart from us).
    My son is giving me away and is groomsman.
    His daughter is my bridesmaid. I have a lot of friends and relations I could ask but she is so excited about the wedding and she and I and my son and fiancee are about to become a family so they are our main wedding party.
    His brother is best man and I am having my best friend sign the register (she didn't mind not being bridesmaid).
    The best man, our parents and our kids make up the top table.

    Personally I can't imagine not having the children as a massive part of the wedding as it is binding them to each other and their step parent also so I feel like it's really important they play an important role.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 42 NashD


    I don't understand the issue.
    You don't need to balance the sides - as was suggested earlier it's not going to cost anything extra to slot him in as a junior groomsman and have him sit with ye at the top table. I assume he would be wearing a suit and eating a meal either way?!
    I'd be really surprised to attend a wedding and not see a teenage child of the couple included in the bridal party.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,767 ✭✭✭GingerLily


    Teenage boys can be very sensitive, I would be be very careful of making your son feel excluded, it's going to be such a significant day for him, it would be a shame if he felt left out :(


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,004 ✭✭✭Ann22


    My son gave me away and made a little speech at 9yrs old. It was lovely but if it had've been my 2nd son there's no say he would've done it as he's very quiet and reserved. My father had passed away the year before.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    GingerLily wrote: »
    Teenage boys can be very sensitive, I would be be very careful of making your son feel excluded, it's going to be such a significant day for him, it would be a shame if he felt left out :(

    thats assuming a lot though

    have you asked the lad if hes in any way bothered? i wouldnt have been at that age


  • Registered Users Posts: 42 NashD


    Tombo2001 wrote: »

    Ultimately - I would see this as the Groom's decision. Its the one part of the Wedding that he controls, everything else is either the Bride or the Couple deciding, so consider that before you start telling him what to do. It may be that he is AOK with it; it may be that he;s not, and that should be respected.

    Yes and No... absolutely I would never have dreamed of trying to veto any of my husbands choices - but if I had a son and he wasn't even considering him as a groomsman that would be a gamechanger for me.
    I think it sends a message of the role the groom sees the boy playing in his life.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    NashD wrote: »
    Yes and No... absolutely I would never have dreamed of trying to veto any of my husbands choices - but if I had a son and he wasn't even considering him as a groomsman that would be a gamechanger for me.
    I think it sends a message of the role the groom sees the boy playing in his life.

    youre totally contradicting yourself there


  • Registered Users Posts: 42 NashD


    youre totally contradicting yourself there

    How so?
    Perhaps I used the wrong word - i understand Veto to mean "to block/remove".
    If so apologies - I would never block or ask my husband to remove a choice he has made - I would be looking for inclusion of an additional person who we would be providing a suit and meal for either way so it's no extra cost.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,767 ✭✭✭GingerLily


    GingerLily wrote: »
    Teenage boys can be very sensitive, I would be be very careful of making your son feel excluded, it's going to be such a significant day for him, it would be a shame if he felt left out :(

    thats assuming a lot though

    have you asked the lad if hes in any way bothered? i wouldnt have been at that age

    You're the one assuming things from my post.

    Teenage boys CAN be sensitive? I didn't say he would be, I just advised the OP to be careful?

    I don't think your advice is constructive at all


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 547 ✭✭✭Duffryman


    Tombo2001 wrote: »
    Additional point OP - you've come into this forum to ask the question. ERGO you are asking a large group of Women what they would do.

    Ask a bunch of Men how they would feel about it. You will absolutely not get the same answer.

    Just stumbled upon this thread myself as it showed up in ‘Recent Posts’ on the home page. Wouldn’t normally be in the weddings forum myself.

    Anyway, this is true. Ask a bunch of men, and you’ll get a very different answer to asking a bunch of women. And a key difference is that all the men have been 15-year-old boys themselves. :)

    If you don’t mind listening to an input from this man….something I have to wonder about is how you say you’ve three groomsmen and four bridesmaids already, and that since you’re on a budget, adding another groomsman (presumably you mean your son?) would be just too much.

    But realistically…the extra cost of adding your son as a fourth is likely to be no more than €100 to rent another groomsman suit for the day. That’s peanuts in comparison to what you’re probably spending on four bridesmaids, between four dresses, four lots of hairdos and make-up, probably four gifts, and maybe even four pairs of shoes.

    My view would be that if your budget extends to paying for all that for four different women, you should be able to find the cost of an extra suit rental for your son too, and have him as a groomsman after all. Assuming your fiancé is happy with the idea, of course. Men should be allowed some input into these things too!!


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  • Registered Users Posts: 16,418 ✭✭✭✭banie01


    Tombo2001 wrote: »
    Additional point OP - you've come into this forum to ask the question. ERGO you are asking a large group of Women what they would do.

    Ask a bunch of Men how they would feel about it. You will absolutely not get the same answer.

    I never really thought I'd ever get the opportunity to say this and mean it...
    But!
    Did you just assume my Gender?!
    As well as the gender of every poster on the weddings forum?

    I'm male, and quite a few posters on this sub forum are.
    A poster's gender should have no bearing on the weight afforded the advice unless the question is about tits or genitals!
    Assuming a blanket response type due to gender is well...
    For want of a better word quite sexist.

    To the OP, I seconded advice offered on this thread to include your son.
    Maybe by having him escort you down the aisle or some other means

    I married when my son was 12, he was (Co) best man;
    He was included in the stag party, we split the day into 2 so he could participate.
    Activities earlier before he went home and the men had pints!

    At our wedding he made a really beautiful speech, welcomed my wife to our family and was a great host.

    When marrying someone with kids, the wedding isn't just about the "day"!
    It's about uniting the bride, groom and kids into a new unit!
    That's easiest done by being inclusive and giving every child who wants a part in the day,exactly that!
    A part in making a family while and celebrating that with family and friends.


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