Daughter Wants Adoptive Parents To Play Important Role In Wedding, Gets Guilt Tripped By Bio Mom
A wedding is a celebration not just for the couple, but also their entire families. It’s a chance to honor the people who have shaped the newlyweds’ lives, especially those that played pivotal roles in their upbringing.
However, in a recent Reddit post, Creativecloud19 shared a difficult dilemma she faced while planning her big day. The bride wanted her adoptive parents to walk her down the aisle, but her biological mother, who has recently re-entered her life after years of estrangement, feels deeply hurt by the decision.
This bride told her biological mother — who had been estranged for a long time — she wanted her adoptive parents to walk her down the aisle
Image credits: pexels (not the actual photo)
The lady started to feel like she was being excluded and got very upset
Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)
Image credits: creativecloud19
Image credits: pexels (not the actual photo)
Family estrangement has become an epidemic
According to data collected by Joshua Coleman, a psychologist who specializes in family estrangement, and a national public opinion researcher Will Johnson, today, 1 in 2 American adults is estranged from a close relative.
There’s little difference in the frequency of estrangement by political beliefs or party affiliation, but it is much more common among adults under 35.
Coleman and Johnson believe family relationships may be more fraught today because they exist in what sociologist Zygmunt Bauman called “liquid culture,” a period characterized by rapidly changing norms and values — the traditional bonds and values that once unified people have eroded, leaving relationships more fragile and increasingly vulnerable to political and cultural polarization.
Coleman thinks there are two roads to reconciliation.
The first includes reckoning with the issues that led to estrangement. In this scenario, an estranged child and parent may go to therapy together to better understand their dynamic.
“I say that the purpose of this therapy is to … demonstrate to your adult child if you’re capable of taking responsibility and then understanding why they felt [estrangement] was the healthiest thing for them to do,” Coleman explains. “You might need to … deepen your understanding of how your behavior impacted your child, even if it’s at odds with your own recollections of what happened in the past.”
Usually, Coleman encourages the estranged parent to write a “letter of amends” where they show that they recognize the effects of their words and actions.
The second path requires the wounded party to accept “the inherent flaws” of the person they’ve been estranged from.
The former person may ultimately conclude that despite the problems, they still see the relationship as important enough for them to continue. There is no grand reckoning — more of a softening, an understanding that the person you were estranged from may never fix their flaws or change their mind but you want to be in their life regardless. |They just want family and they don’t want to continue to be estranged,” Coleman says.
Maybe the Redditor and her mom are still at the crossroads?
As the story went viral, the bride provided more context on her situation
Most of those who read it believe she did nothing wrong
However, some are saying she needs to take re-evaluate her priorities
Poll Question
Thanks! Check out the results:
Are you arguing that this is too much, or not enough? I spent $5K on the engagement ring I bought my now ex-wife. And frankly, that's at the bottom end of the average cost $5k-$7k. My friend just bought his GF a $20k engagement ring. According to most some marketers you're supposed to spend 2 month's salary. For me then I spent less than 1/4th of what I should have spent. I'm not arguing people should spend more or less btw. I frankly don't care what people spend on this frivolity. My wedding band was $35. Anyways, she can sell the ring now for at least $3k.
Load More Replies...First, she's putting the cart before the horse. She's not engaged yet, but she's planning a wedding? Because he can't afford a ring? That's just a symbol. Also, her mother returned to her life in the last two years and is living with her because she wanted to get away from an abusive ex. It is convenient that she returned to her life when she needed a favor. This woman is already getting a place to stay. That should be enough for her
I'd just say - "look, you may have donated your egg and incubated me for 9 months, but you're not my mom. You're just a person who got pregnant and squeezed me out. My real parents, the ones who really DO care for me will be the ones giving me away. You've already done that once and now, here we are."
Yep. I'm adopted as well (I was adopted at birth) and I'm in contact with my bio mom and one of my bio sisters, but my "parents" are my adoptive parents. Absolutely no uncertainty in that department. They raised me. They are my parents. I'm fine with talking to my biological relatives and eventually meeting them, and I don't judge my bio mom for giving me up for adoption (she had substance abuse issues and was not in a good place to raise a third child.) But if I ever got married, she would not be placed in the "mother of the bride" position. Unfortunately both my adoptive dad and bio dad are dead, so no one would be walking me down the aisle, lol. But I guess at least there wouldn't be a row over who would get the privilege XD
Load More Replies...Are you arguing that this is too much, or not enough? I spent $5K on the engagement ring I bought my now ex-wife. And frankly, that's at the bottom end of the average cost $5k-$7k. My friend just bought his GF a $20k engagement ring. According to most some marketers you're supposed to spend 2 month's salary. For me then I spent less than 1/4th of what I should have spent. I'm not arguing people should spend more or less btw. I frankly don't care what people spend on this frivolity. My wedding band was $35. Anyways, she can sell the ring now for at least $3k.
Load More Replies...First, she's putting the cart before the horse. She's not engaged yet, but she's planning a wedding? Because he can't afford a ring? That's just a symbol. Also, her mother returned to her life in the last two years and is living with her because she wanted to get away from an abusive ex. It is convenient that she returned to her life when she needed a favor. This woman is already getting a place to stay. That should be enough for her
I'd just say - "look, you may have donated your egg and incubated me for 9 months, but you're not my mom. You're just a person who got pregnant and squeezed me out. My real parents, the ones who really DO care for me will be the ones giving me away. You've already done that once and now, here we are."
Yep. I'm adopted as well (I was adopted at birth) and I'm in contact with my bio mom and one of my bio sisters, but my "parents" are my adoptive parents. Absolutely no uncertainty in that department. They raised me. They are my parents. I'm fine with talking to my biological relatives and eventually meeting them, and I don't judge my bio mom for giving me up for adoption (she had substance abuse issues and was not in a good place to raise a third child.) But if I ever got married, she would not be placed in the "mother of the bride" position. Unfortunately both my adoptive dad and bio dad are dead, so no one would be walking me down the aisle, lol. But I guess at least there wouldn't be a row over who would get the privilege XD
Load More Replies...
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