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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Bridesmaids late and other shenanigans

64 replies

FrazzledRockRed · 05/08/2018 14:22

Aibu to be furious ? I just need to get all this off my chest.

I wanted a smallish wedding but was swept along into a 100 person do by parents (who were not paying but dm paid for the food). I know that’s my fault but anyway.

We have a matriarchal aunt who wanted things a certain way and got the hump when we didn’t e.g. she wanted us to get married at her church. Also as I had had a DS with someone else I shouldn’t wear white etc.

I won’t be specific but let’s say I went to uni in Leeds, grew up in Nottingham, dHs family lives in Birmingham and we now lived and worked in Manchester.

We decided to do the wedding in Nottingham, largely because aunt has a bad back and can’t do long car journeys. I had one of her daughters as bridesmaids. We did the wedding for 2pm to give everybody time to drive from wherever and so that young children could have lunch beforehand with their families.

My other bridesmaids were my sister, my dh’s sister, and two other cousins.
We bought their dresses and asked them to wear gold sandals with heels any size or style.

On the day of the wedding the bridesmaids who were blood relations of the aunt got ready at her house as it was less than a mile from the church.

In the morning Nottingham family has agreed to decorate the hall. We paid for chair and table covers and flowers , but other bits and bobs we would do ourselves.

At about 11 am One of my mum’s friends said she had been by the venue and there was no one there, she swung by aunt’s house and said everyone was still in pyjamas. My mum and dad had to go and put out the electric candles and favours etc we had stored there overnight.

On the day I got to the church about 2.05. Only my sister and dh’s sister were there. The cousins and aunt’s family were not there. I did not want to make a spectacle by having the bridesmaids troop in ten minutes later. The day before they did not get to the rehearsal at church in time so the priest had to leave.

They arrived at about ten past 2. I was outside the church standing there like an idiot with my dad phoning his sister saying ‘where are you’ and getting voicemail.

So I went down the aisle. They were all bunched up behind me because they had not been to rehearsal. The videographer could not get a decent shot because they were not where they were meant to be. I was seething. The worst bit was that the aunt got her granddaughter who was 2 years old. Plonked her in front of me as I was going down the aisle. She had put her in a white flower girl dress which clashed with my ivory dress and did not match.

They had agreed to help tidy up afterwards so we get our deposit back and mum and dad and my sister were out with binbags after.

Aunt has 2 children and they are a bit wet and her husband is under the thumb. Other people are scared of upsetting her so she usually gets her way. I’m certain she told them not to be on time and not to help. Her teenage ds said he couldn’t come as he had work. That’s a place a friend could have taken and they got a save the date at least 3 months beforehand. From the whole family including the dd who was a bridesmaid I got a £50 note as a gift. It felt like a slap in the face as she usually gives generous gifts to other family and I am her only brother’s only daughter.

The cherry on the top was this. We said the honeymoon would just be at home. Dh wanted to have a surprise trip to another country. I am a different nationality and need a visa to get there. We tried to get an emergency one but appointments were only available after we were due back. Insurance didn’t cover it.

No one did a hen party for me. I’m quite mousy and stay at home, but I’m hurt that no one even asked and I felt it would be pushy to ask. Even a night out in the town, not this spa weekend abroad business.

Aibu to be furious, hurt and upset?

OP posts:
junebirthdaygirl · 05/08/2018 19:07

A lot of the detail could be quite outing. You may not have to worry about your aunt again.
She seemed to have a lot of influence over your wedding. My aunts would just get an invite. No opinion whatsoever.

SilverySurfer · 05/08/2018 19:09

It happened, it's in the past, there's nothing you can do to change any of it so you should let it go and concentrate on the future.

lou1221 · 05/08/2018 19:23

When did you get married? Yesterday? Seriously you need to calm down. Yes people were thoughtless and rude, but surely if this aunt is family, then you must know what she's like, she should gave been a guest and no more.

You did another post earlier about emailing a dj in the early hours.

What's done is done. mistakes have been made, learn from it, don't be so generous with your time, money etc again. Enjoy married life.

FrazzledRockRed · 05/08/2018 20:08

froggybiby

Gripneeded I am really sorry for your loss. Flowers

@froggybibby
I just meant my aunt has one sibling, my dad, so it’s not like I’m some random second cousin twice removed whose wedding she had to turn up at. She’s closely related so given how she’s so involved in other weddings and christenings and family events, it’s not unreasonable to have thought she’d do the same at mine.

OP posts:
fc301 · 05/08/2018 20:16

Gripneeded has hit the nail on the head. My condolences 💐

dailygrowl · 05/08/2018 20:39

If it's any consolation, lots of people I know who had distastrous weddings are still happily married 30 years later while loads I know who had gorgeous and "perfect" weddings were divorced within 5 to 15 years. The aunt and bridesmaids were awful but just take heart from the statistics above that you are actually starting off on a great footing!

dailygrowl · 05/08/2018 20:44

Among my peers hen nights are/were usually organised by the bride herself, or the bride told her chief bridesmaid/an adult bridesmaid who likes being in charge of this kind of thing who then gets all the other women together to do the hen night. Either way, it's the bride who initiates it. I think your (real) friends were assuming that you or your bridesmaid/s had organised a secret one and er, didn't invite them! Again, look on the bright side - you are married now, your disastrous wedding (and honeymoon!) bodes well for the future, and you can always tell yourself, that at least the hen night was something your aunt couldn't ruin, because there wasn't one.

CoolCarrie · 07/08/2018 15:03

Sorry for your terrible loss Grip, your post is heartbreaking.

LynetteScavo · 07/08/2018 18:06

You are married.

Let it go.

I say this as someone who spent what should have been their honeymoon sitting at home with a baby eating a whole tier of wedding cake.

20 years later DH and I laugh at how twattish other people were at the time.
We are still happily married. Much to some people's surprise.

LynetteScavo · 07/08/2018 18:22

If people who were meant to care about you were cunts at an important time to you, cut them out of other important occasions. They don't deserve to be invited to 1st birthday parties or christenings.

The 2 year old In a white dress sounds sweet though. DH was supposed to wear a white shirt to our wedding, but he wore cream because he thought it suited him better. I'm still bemused 20years later. Some things really aren't that important. You were married in a church. For complex reasons I wasn't, and had to arrange a convalidation.

I hope you have some nice photos, despite the crappness of your wedding g day.

Echobelly · 07/08/2018 18:46

I understand your upset, although I have to say, hen night is don't ask, don't get, especially as you said you're not a going out person. I hated the idea of anyone else organising mine, so did it myself. Remember, unless they've been to a lot of weddings/organised a wedding/been a BM, most people think it's just turning up on the day in a dress chosen by someone else.

I think you need to try to focus on what the good bits were, and I agree it's maybe an idea to do something concrete about your aunt, possibly in terms of avoid her.

FrazzledRockRed · 07/08/2018 22:05

I think the main hurt is people I thought cared about me being cunts on an important day. How do I process this?

OP posts:
fc301 · 10/08/2018 21:23

I think the way to move on is to recognise that their behaviour was bad, that it reflects very badly on them. But does not reflect badly on you, was not caused by you and was not deserved by you.
You now know what they are really like and you need to use the information to protect your own interests in future 💐

AndBabyMakes3 · 17/08/2018 00:49

@GripNeeded Flowers your post truly puts things into perspective; I am very sorry for your loss xx

@FrazzledRockRed I understand your annoyance and agree with previous posters that the best thing you can now do is go LC with your aunt and put it behind you. Try to be happy that you are married to your now DH despite the day not going to plan - that is the most important thing after all. Hope you have a wonderful life together

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