andrewducker: (default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2012-01-28 03:06 pm

Addressing ettiquette and wedding stress

I'm sending out wedding invites at the moment, which is making me aware of all sorts of in-built biases in the conventions surrounding how we address people. I'm skipping over a lot of it by using first names for everyone, but even then there's a question of order. For older people I'm largely going with Male Partner, Female Partner, Children in order of age, but reversing the male/female order when the email address is for the woman of the house. For people nearer my own age I'm going with "Partner I know best->Partner I know less well, Children in order of age". Lesbians go in the order that I'm used to people putting them.

The whole invitation thing has been more stressful than I thought, largely because the venue has space for 80, and it turns out that Julie and I have 57 family members between us, so there are only 23 spaces for friends. This means that we've had to cut some cousins I haven't seen in 20 years, and restrict a few people to not having +1s if we're going to fit in even the people that we see/chat to on a regular basis, and a couple of really old friends. And the reception can take 30 more, but that still left us with 57 people that we don't have space for. I just hope people understand.

[identity profile] naath.livejournal.com 2012-01-28 08:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, and, I was invited to a cousin's wedding via my parents - which I found extremely USELESS because I DON'T LIVE WITH THEM and therefore found out rather later than ideal! Send grown-up-children their own invite, to their own address...

(My friends are quite good at getting my style-of-address correct; although I don't care about minor deviations to the extent that I don't even recall them and wouldn't throw a hissy fit for anything that wasn't clearly just trying to piss me off because it's really hard to remember how all of a large number of people like it)