MarathonRunner, this is a brilliant post and exactly as it has been/is for us. We have only boys. The wedding seems to mirror yours. We paid half, (my husband used his pension pay out) but our opinions and efforts were not sought. After the top table bit, we were history as parents. Neither were our own wedding photos displayed alongside the DIL’s parents’. We realised we were just there to provide the money. This founded the recipe for our future with our eldest son’s new home life and GC (other son hasn’t married). Help sought for DIY and money to build up the home and now, with GC, money to pay for expensive meals out with GC, with me looking after them (which I loved and am very grateful for) whilst son and DIL enjoy. We denied the request to part pay for private school fees because we simply couldn’t afford it. Suggestions for babysitting fall on deaf ears and any very small previously agreed with DS domestic assistance (before I knew any efforts, however small or what I would view as helpful were simply not wanted) involved more mobile phone activity than usual and DIL’s Mum coming around almost instantly and targeting me with intimidating conversation whilst being around 6” away from me constantly - so that we left. They just want us for money, that’s all, no more and no less and we’ve second mortgaged ourselves to provide money for a bigger house (DIL rang me in tears when I was still very naive about it all) they wanted - and for cars. Any other assistance is simply not wanted or welcomed. Our son invited us to watch DGS enjoying an out of school activity. DIL’s parents turned up as they do every week and, despite crippling politeness, we distinctly felt the cold shoulder. Same with parties; we feel like trespassers - and we are very quiet, meek etc. I suspect our son has been warned not to invite us again as we haven’t been invited since, so that’s a treasured memory at least. Very sad, but DIL is a good Mum and she’s clearly very protective. As an aside, I was thanked for just 1 xmas present from 1 DGS; I suspect the many others I bought and wrapped were from Father Christmas. However, we have got over ourselves and understand the relationship is and always has been about money; we are not wanted for ourselves in any form or shape. On the plus side, they have formed a lovely family unit with everything we could only ever have wished for and have spent the last 45 years working for after starting with nothing. Our only wish is that they hold it together - otherwise we will feel well and truly exploited. One positive is that other younger son has seen all this play out and he’s now a more mature, caring person because of it - and still single at 35. My MIL was wonderful and always gave me welcome snippets of advice which I treasured. We never ever thought of looking to them for money and innately knew we had to make it ourselves. That was life then. I considered myself very fortunate to have 2 “mothers”. Sadly, she died too early but I’m still using her cooking tips. I just can’t understand why there is sometimes denial of extended family now but maybe it’s a new cultural thing, the way they live now and we mustn’t take it personally. It seems to me the role for some paternal parents is just to keep working until they drop! Sadly, we don’t have a daughter, so can’t offset all this with the benefits of the Mother/Daughter relationship.