My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

Not invited to friend's wedding. What to do?

433 replies

backtothegrindstone · 27/09/2016 15:30

An old friend has not invited me to their wedding and I'm feeling upset. We were flat mates at uni and whilst we're not close enough to call each other all the time, 18 years later we still see each other from time to time. She came to my wedding 6 years ago, and also to both my kids christenings and we have occasional play dates with our kids and they go to each others birthday parties. I know her fiancée well enough too. I was really surprised not to be invited to her wedding but have been biding my time in case a late invite comes through. The wedding is this weekend and nothing has arrived. It's not your conventional wedding- more if a creative, festival/woodland type thing so I can't imagine numbers are heavily limited and another friend who i'd have considered less close to them has been invited. Frankly, I'm really quite upset, especially as she's posting about it on Facebook every ten minutes. I know it's not good form to say anything right now and spoil her wedding, but at some point after I would like her to understand that I am upset about it. I'm not good at confrontation and o don't think I could approach her face to face or on the phone but at the very least I'd really like to make a quite pointed dig when commenting on her Facebook photos when the wedding pics go up. Im quite sure that if I'm not invited to her wedding then clearly the friendship doesn't mean enough to her to be worth continuing with so I then intend to unfriendly her and be done with the friendship for ever. But what's a good thing to say?

Ideas for a really good comment please!!!

OP posts:
Report
Simmi1 · 03/10/2016 05:23

That's awful touchmybum. Your poor DH being caught in the middle Sad

Report
Touchmybum · 03/10/2016 00:03

Listen, my SIL didn't invite me to her wedding. She invited my DH, her brother, to whom I'd been married for 22 years at that point, on his own. I was invited to the evening 'do' along with our 3 children. We wouldn't be each other's favourite person by any means, but we have never exchanged a cross word either. She was one of my bridesmaids when we got married... I have never referred to the lack of an invitation; I rolled up dutifully to the evening do and thanks be to god or whatever deity is out there, it was a very foggy night and we live miles away, so we didn't stay very long.

She didn't so much as get a photo with our children (her only nieces and nephew)... but you know, it says far more about her than it does about me... I don't forget though...!

Report
miniplaty · 02/10/2016 22:40

OP I would do the same thing as you're planning to do. She obviously doesn't value your friendship so don't waste your time, plenty of other people out there that deserve your friendship

Report
Simmi1 · 02/10/2016 22:22

Sounds like a good plan OP. Sorry again that this happened to you. It is awful Flowers

Report
backtothegrindstone · 02/10/2016 21:45

Nothing at all so far. I plan to unfriend her. And when she inevitably contacts me sometime in the future I think that will probably be my chance to say that actually I don't think I want to catch up as she really hurt my feelings. I'd like to have my say at some point but I think I found venting on here pretty cathartic and there was some excellent (and some not so excellent) advice that helped me to get my head together about it all so I could sit on my hands for the time being. Thank you to those who were helpful and supportive.

OP posts:
Report
craftycarls · 02/10/2016 21:34

So what did you do in the end?

Report
Member570343 · 01/10/2016 16:30

Similar thing happened to me recently except it's a family member. I wouldn't have expected an invitation but a few months ago she told me, I'd have her wedding to attend this Summer. I said "Lovely. Looking forward to it" I live overseas & would have absolutely loved to have been included. So I kept watching the post & it never came. Then just like you OP having to see it splayed all over Faceducker :(
My Mum was the only one on in our family who received an invitation which strangely/rudely only had her name on. (She didn't go). I can't understand why she told me I'd be invited in the first place. All I can think is that she doesn't like me. It is gutting as I really thought they did like me & would actually want my company. I felt so stupid.
Now I know weddings are expensive but they are well off so money wouldn't have been an issue. It was a big wedding with 100s of people there. So every one of them came before me. Some friends said to ask her about it but I felt I'd loose face as she'd then probably say "Of course you can come" & I'd know she didn't want me anyway. Only good thing about FB is that I could see it was actually a pretty boring affair :-) I do think I'd have been 'underwhelmed' if I'd gone. Plus her dress was awful too :-) :-) All that money & little taste.
I'm sorry to say, you have to realise they just didn't want you. You sound like a good geniune friend too So their loss.

Report
Lovelyideas · 30/09/2016 15:56

hear hear

listen to the Elf

Report
ShowMeTheElf · 30/09/2016 15:14

OP has said that she doesn't know any of the other friends, but thinks they are less close than her, which suggests very strongly to me that although she may be close to the bride, and know the groom professionally, she isn't part of what they would consider their friendship circle when it comes to picking who to miss off the list. Say there are 10 families with whom they mix regularly, and they all know each other. Should they knock one of them off the list to accommodate OP and her family, even though they don't know her DH and don't mix with them socially as a couple?
I'm going to say it again OP: it isn't that she does not value your friendship, clearly. It is one party on one day with her husband and family friends. Do not lose a friendship you have both enjoyed on a snub which is not deliberate.

Report
Lovelyideas · 30/09/2016 15:05

well, there isn't really another side is there?

It's not like the mate has made a couple of thoughtless competitive parenting remarks.

She's gone through a guest list and made some decisions.

What's she going to do, have a second wedding and invite the OP? Say "oh, if I'd known it was important to you I'd have invited you" (actually bride that's quite a good idea....)?

The only thing the OP can control here is her reaction

Report
Florathefern · 30/09/2016 15:00

Agree don't say anything before the wedding. What would it achieve? If you were invited only after saying something, would you be cimfortable going knowing you gatecrashed/got a pity invite?

Unfortunately you learned a painful lesson but don't allow your words to be fuel for later gossip. Maintain your dignity.

Report
SirVixofVixHall · 30/09/2016 14:53

Lovely, the OP did say she would wait until after the wedding, so I assumed that was a given, but that aside, why is it not ok to be honest with a friend when they have really hurt your feelings? Surely having a chance to hear the other side is better than just jacking in a good friendship of many years standing?

Report
Lovelyideas · 30/09/2016 12:25

" I would just tell her that you are hurt that you weren't invited as you assumed your friendship was closer than some of the guests, and that you are saddened to find out that isn't the case. If you present the facts in an honest way, then she will have to deal with them."

"just? ..."

if you really think this is ok, at least wait till after the wedding. you have no right to sound your horn prior to the event, your hurt feelings do not entitle you to sour up any aspect of someone else's wedding.

[but really, this is not ok, not at all]

Report
SirVixofVixHall · 30/09/2016 11:31

Rather than the "it's a shame we can't be there" message, which sounds as though you were invited but can't go, I would just tell her that you are hurt that you weren't invited as you assumed your friendship was closer than some of the guests, and that you are saddened to find out that isn't the case. If you present the facts in an honest way, then she will have to deal with them. Hopefully how she responds will help you decide what to do next. I've only ever made things worse by not being straightforward in friendships. Most things can be resolved, and if they can't be, it is better to know as much of the story as possible. Re the estranged friend I mentioned in my post above- I was upset with her about a number of fairly small things that I'd allowed to mount up and hurt my feelings, so I didn't have any contact with her for some time. She was so upset that she even saw a counsellor, I feel absolutely terrible about that now, I dealt with it really badly and had I been more frank and honest at the time then there wouldn't have been an estrangement. I feel very grateful that in the end we did resolve things and are close again. This took years!! What a waste of time. So just tell her the truth, then either she will regret hurting you and you can sort that out between you, or she will deal with it badly and you can distance yourself from the friendship.

Report
Corialanusburt · 29/09/2016 23:06

Her 'see you on the other side' comment tells you everything. She's so arrogant and self centred that it's nothing to her to exclude you and to still assume that her wedding will be at the centre of everyone's thoughts.
I'd text her, 'On the other side of what?'

Report
MumsTheWordYouKnow · 29/09/2016 21:26

Rockin I think you're spot on.

Report
Memoires · 29/09/2016 18:47

One of my best friends lives in NZ. We rarely see each other, we phone at Xmas and birthdays. Sometimes we connect via facebook.

When we do see each, about every five years, it's like we were never apart. I have a few friends like that and I feel blessed, they are true friends. One or two of the people I see regularly are true friends, most are really nice people whom I love, some are people I like well enough, and there's one I really struggle with. I wouldn't necessarily invite them all to my wedding though.

Report
TriniRedVelvet · 29/09/2016 18:38

It's horrible to realise someone who you consider a A list friend only see you as a C Lister. I have 2 of them. Flowers

Report
EverySongbirdSays · 29/09/2016 18:01

I think that the friend/acquaintance thing is slightly untrue.

The sheer cost of weddings these days means people really have to cull unless they are made of money and prioritize their very closest

In the case of the OP it reads as if she met the important criteria which suggests there's a backstory.

Report
minipie · 29/09/2016 17:37

Just because someone doesn't invite you to their wedding doesn't make them a "false friend".

They aren't pretending to be your friend, they just don't regard you as one of their X closest friends.

If you regard them as closer, it's hurtful but it doesn't mean they've done anything wrong. They're just not that into you.

Report
RockinHippy · 29/09/2016 16:54

Nope, not unusual at all - how does that meme I keep seeing popping up on SM - Why make people a priority, who inly make you an option - not quite right, but something along those lines


Everyone gets that wedding are stressful & its often impossible to invite everyone, but IMHO & as happens in my own circles, if you cant invite everyone of your friends, you at very least have the decency to explain to the friends that actually matter why they weren't invited. We've had that happen on a couple of occasions when we didn't even expect an invite & we did it ourselves too - its just good manners & thoughtful of others feelings.

Given the OPs situation, the lack of invite alone is bad enough, but the fact this "friend" still sees fit to contact & chat to the OP & even mention the upcoming wedding the OP isn't invited too, Wedding ir not, she sounds like a self absorbed thoughtless cow who has shown her true colours & lack of respect for the OP, so one "friend" I would personally be glad to be well shot of - life really is too short to waste time & energy on such people!

Report
OjosCansados · 29/09/2016 16:52

Op re the social media communications: please don't make insincere comments on the eventual FB photos. At best you will seem a mug, at worst passive-aggressive. Your friend WILL believe that she can get away with treating you shoddily.

Either defriend and close off completely, or be upfront and tell her how upset you are. Ideally do both, and then move on. At least you will both know where you are with each other.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

PrivatePike · 29/09/2016 16:48

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

PrivatePike · 29/09/2016 16:48

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

JellyBelli · 29/09/2016 16:33

Nope, thats how I am as well. Friends are people who you'd invite to your wedding, anyone else is an acquaintance.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.