A NO-KIDS-ALLOWED wedding might be crashed by little ones in suits and dresses, and the family of the bride isn't sure whether the couple should be warned.  

After two years of being cooped up, a happy couple finally has the chance at their dream wedding.  

In a weekly live chat called Dear Prudence via Slate, an aunt wrote in asking for advice. 

Her niece is getting married in an intimate fairy-tale garden setting with no children allowed, she explained.

But her soon-to-be sister-in-law is having a hard time dealing with the fact that her young children “aren’t welcome.”

“She’s tried getting them in as ring bearers, pages, flower kids, and my niece (bless her) has serenely and firmly said no, infuriating this woman to no end,” the aunt wrote.

She heard from a friend that the sister-in-law plans on having her kids crash the wedding in little suits and dresses as a “surprise” for the bride and groom.

“If she was my sister I’d have gladly wrecked those plans with glee,” she wrote. “But she’s not my relative! Do I tell my niece, the groom, or the in-laws? Do I keep my mouth shut?”

Answering the chats was author, screenwriter, and playwright R. Eric Thomas.

He encouraged her to share that information noting that no one wants a surprise on their wedding day.

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“Tell everyone you know. Tell your niece, the groom, the in-laws, the caterer, the DJ, the secretary of agriculture. Tell them,” Thomas answered.

He said kids are a wonderful addition to weddings that have room for them.

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At his own wedding, he hired a kid wrangler and had a special play area with age-appropriate food and activities.

“But your niece has chosen a different route, as is her right. This is not a kid-friendly event. Your niece’s soon-to-be sister-in-law is disrespecting the event, which is immature and rude. Sounds like she needs to sit at the kid’s table as well—at home,” he wrote to the aunt.


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