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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not go to my friend's wedding/ hen night

31 replies

strawberrycake · 29/08/2010 19:40

My friend is already becoming a real bridezilla, constant photo sharing, talk etc. Whilst I'm not a wedding person (us and the witnesses for my wedding, ordinary clothes and a nice meal after) I smile and try to be supportive pretending I'm interested. She actually is now walking around with a bloody box file to show people everything planned so far, with a year to go.

The Hen night is the other end of the country, when my ds will only be 13 months plus obviously expensive and not my thing at all all bars, flirting etc. I don't drink and have never been to a club, let alone as part of a hen group. It's a mixture of not wanting to leave ds for the weekend (and if I do I'd rather go with dh and use money on us!) and thinking it's my idea of hell on earth what she's planning (each to their own...).

The wedding itself is bang in the middle of the school holidays, I planned to be away for the entire 6 weeks to stay with family in home country to give them time to get to know ds/ meet new-born niece of mine/ catch up. If I go to the wedding it'll give me only two weeks with family whichever side of the wedding I go taking into account flight times. It's a lot of (rare) family time to miss out on for the sake of a day. Also ds will be the only child there, in other words not child friendly but she'll make an exception. They're a real bunch for getting very pissed very quickly so not really a great place to have a baby.

She didn't come to my wedding (as I said, just 2 witnesses) nor did she get anything. If I go to hers I reckon the costs all in all could be £500-600 plus lost family time/ getting myself in vunerable situations in a strange city with drunk careless women (this has happened before drinking with them, really dumb behaviour safety wise).

She WAS my best friend, but we've drifted a bit as she moved a few years back. Basically I'm not that sure I care too much about the friendship, it was great but now she's needy, self-obsessed and (I'm being rude) a bit of a tart with her behaviour (not so much judgey about this but I'm too embarrassed to have nights outs with her anymore). Maybe it's just a down period we're going through, we have been friends since school.

She's already on and on about what we'll do, who I can sit with etc. Seems to think ds is a dolly that can be dragged around multiple venues etc. AIBU to give an excuse/ say no to going? I don't want to frankly plus it seems a lot of money/ stress for me. I don't begrudge her big wedding, I just dont want to be caught up in the expense of it. Yes she'll spend thousands, but I don't want to spend hundreds frankly on her day. I didn't ask it of people. I don't like the whole culture of expecting everyone to fork out their hard earned money, their holiday funds, on your day. I paid for everything on my day and expected nothing.

So am I reasonable or a miserable party-pooper?

OP posts:
RunawayWife · 29/08/2010 19:45

I think you need to tell her you are very sorry but you will be away and not able to go to her wedding.
Also say you can not afford to go on the hen night and it is really not your thing.

I don't think she is a bridzilla she is happy and excited and if you do not want to share that then so be it

turtled · 29/08/2010 19:47

Well don't go if you don't want to.

They are not compulsory.

DetectivePotato · 29/08/2010 19:47

YANBU.

Who wants to spend the amount of money a holiday costs on someone elses wedding?

My best friend from school got married recently. We have really drifted apart and I never see her anymore. She still wanted me to go to Amsterdam for her hen weekend and she had a second hen night here which I didn't go to as it would have required staying somewhere else overnight and I'm not into hen nights anyway.

We finally got the wedding invite 4 weeks before the event, which was on a bank holiday weekend. I know full well she wouldn't have left it that late to send out all her invites. I didn't bother going but just sent her a card.

She has proved over the years that she isn't a great friend of mine and I am cutting my losses (again).

Trillian · 29/08/2010 19:51

ohhhh me thinks me detects sour grapes that she is having a nicer/bigger wedding then you.
Bad form, don't go she will have a better time without you and can enjoy her day with her real friends, who hopefully are not as far up their own bottoms as you seem to be

Vallhala · 29/08/2010 19:54

It sounds like hell to me. (Did my clubbing years ago and feel no need to repeat the experience). There's no reason why you shouldn't send a polite response citing your long holiday back home and family responsibilities as the reason why you must decline.

strawberrycake · 29/08/2010 19:56

lol Trillian, sour grapes. I spend the same amount of money on a deposit for a lovely flat so very happy! That over renting with debt. I'd hate the idea, hence I don't understand it.

It'll probably be the end of the friendship if I don't go, is there a way of putting it nicely. Or a time to so? Say now, or wait for official invite? She's already planned who'll sit with who and I've been assigned sitting with groom's cousins who won't know many people. She's even given me ideas for topics of conversations with these cousins...

OP posts:
RunawayWife · 29/08/2010 20:01

Just say now you wont be able to go, end of

5DollarShake · 29/08/2010 20:02

Hars as it may be to believe Trillian, not everyone wants a big wedding. Wink

OP, you really don't want to go, don't go. I'd prefer all my guests to actually want to be there.

geordieminx · 29/08/2010 20:04

You've been invited to a wedding not sold into slavery FFS.

Tell her you cant make it. Sorry,.

End of

5DollarShake · 29/08/2010 20:07

LOL @ Geordie. Perfectly put.

SolidGoldBrass · 29/08/2010 20:08

Just tell her you can't go. You don't want to go and can't really afford it, that is not going to change between now and the wedding. No need to have a big horsehair-tampon rant about how 'wrong' her wedding plans are and how Simplicity Is Best, just say that you wish her well and hope she has a wonderful time but it's just not possible for you to attend.

DetectivePotato · 29/08/2010 20:08

She has told you topics of conversation?

Oh dear.

PutTheKettleOn · 29/08/2010 20:09

tbh i think you've got a valid reason to miss the wedding - just say you've already planned to be away for the whole summer, your family are expecting you etc - but i'd tell her now, as soon as the wedding date is official.

i think you've got less of a valid reason to skip the hen party - at least it is in this country, you can book train tickets well in advance to get cheap fares, plus at 13 months your son will be plenty old enough to be left with dad for a weekend. I guess it depends on how much of a friend she is, i've been to several hen weekends which were not my scene at all just because the bride was a good friend and she'd feel hurt if i didn't go.

Rockbird · 29/08/2010 20:17

You obviously don't want to go so why make a song and dance about it? Just tell her. As your op does nothing but slag off your 'friend' she's obviously not going to be a great loss to you so what do you care if it ends the friendship.

DandyLioness · 29/08/2010 20:26

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Crapweasel · 29/08/2010 20:28

YANBU not to go to the wedding: you have plans to be away. Bit confused why your "friend" isn't aware of this already given the number of discussions you have apparantly had about said wedding.

Based on the fact that you are missing the wedding I personally think it would be nice to make the effort to go to the hen night in the name of friendship. But if you really don't feel that you can tolerate one night that is so clearly not your scene (like PTKO I've also been to hen nights that incorporate things I'd usually run a mile from) and certainly if you genuinely feel you wouldn't be safe then don't go. No song and dance just - I'm sorry, I can't.

However a lot of your post is quite unpleasantly judgy and money orientated. I think this is really about letting a friendship go. No crime in doing that but kinder to her not to do so by doing anything to spoil her "Big Day"

Edinburghlass · 29/08/2010 20:31

If you're not planning to go, I think it's best if you tell her sooner rather than later, so she can invite someone else in your place. Also, that way it won't seem as if you've declined her invitation in favour of a subsequent (better) offer. Perhaps you could go to either the hen night or the wedding, but not both? I agree people sometimes become a bit obsessed with their own wedding. If you give the cost as a reason, she can't really argue with that, but I think it's best not to get into a big conversation about it.

moomiemoo · 29/08/2010 20:33

What dandy said.

YANBU for not wanting to go. But you are being a crap friend for many reasons but especially because you seem to have zero respect for her and her choices.

strawberrycake · 29/08/2010 20:47

Ok...reflecting on the 'crap friend' comments and not 'respecting her choices'...maybe that's the root, I don't want to carry on the friendship much.

I tried recently. Went for a quiet drink recently in pub with her (whilst newly pregnant, stressed QUIET and local). She got pissed, chatted up some very dodgy bloke then at the end of the night said she'd walk home me. Said bloke and his mate are round the corner waiting to give us a lift back to his place! Total strangers, she gets in the car. In my hormonal worry box state I get in to believing 'it's just up the road and we'll stay 15min, it's nearer to yours than the pub is.' Bloke and mate drive us 45min to area we don't know, stays ages. Would be enough in itself. She then while getting frisky in the bedroom 'accidently' picks up £200 of his from floor he's dropped, claiming she thought it was hers (unlikey, she had NO money on her). Que screaming match with aggressive men, dragging her out the house at 2am whilst they should 'whores' at us. Call a cab to get us home, we get in and she has NO MONEY for cab. Neither do I. Have to find cashpoint AND she wants half of fare. That's the kind of idiotic situation drinking with her gets into. I know I shouldn't have got in the car, my bad judgement but scared to leave her in such a state with strangers/ believed her when she said it was local. God knows what would have happened at their place if I hadn't dragged her out. Fuck knows what she'll do on a hen night if that's a quiet night. Lots of other examples of dumb drunken behaviour, which scares me in a strange city.

Plus she further annoyed me last week 'accidently' taking something of mine home with her that she'd been admiring earlier.

Too many 'accidents'.

Don't mean to stealth, but comments made me realise it's not just about the wedding, it's a lot more.

OP posts:
LadyBiscuit · 29/08/2010 20:51

Dump her - she sounds awful and you obviously don't like her (don't blame you though)

moomiemoo · 29/08/2010 21:01

Ok. Fair enough.

Sounds like she was the crap friend with zero respect first Grin

BlueFergie · 29/08/2010 21:04

Jesus is this woman getting married - she goes off with complete strangers? To be honest I wouldn't go just for this reason. if she is so promiscious (sp?) it doesn't seem the marriage will last very long. One of my very good friends had all this - a big massive wedding, hen weekend abroad the works. All told it cost us about 1,500 (hen weekend, clothes, hotel, present etc...). She was seeing someone else marriage over in less than a year. Am still a little bit bitter about the whole fuss and the money I wasted on what I though was a very important day in my friends life. It sounds like your friend just wants the day and accompanying attention. Skip it

Vallhala · 29/08/2010 21:05

Christ on a bike! Run for the hills!

DandyLioness · 29/08/2010 21:06

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

CheckingCheques · 29/08/2010 21:07

Dont go, but you need to say now. The very first post said it all. Oell her you'll be out of the country for the wedding and you can't afford the hen night, which isn't really ur thing these days now you're a mum.

Please don't bitch anymore about her bridezilling. It's her choice and right