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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU?? Friends wedding invites issues

258 replies

Mama2harris · 12/07/2019 11:08

Hello all,

Sorry for the first post of mine to be a very long one but I wanted to get all the facts in, but I need to know if I’m being the bad friend here....

So I’ve known my best friend for a few years, we met at a mum group both expecting our first child and have become very close over the years.

She lives almost 50 miles away so for me to visit her it’s near on a 100mile round trip and she doesn’t drive so i always have to do the driving to see her which I didn’t mind up until now....

Last year on a number of occasions when I went to see her on our arranged play dates for the little ones she asked if we could do a 70 mile round trip from hers to take our little ones to see one of her other friends with a child the same age as ours, at the time I thought nothing of it as she’s my best friend and I’d do anything for her, she made a point of saying On each occasion that I needed to get to know this other friend because we were going to be bridesmaids together, I made the 170 mile journeys each time because it’s what she wanted and yes if we were going to be in her wedding party we needed to get along which we do,

The end of last year they finally set a date for the wedding, I was super excited for her and helped out with all the things she asked me to do, from helping find cake designs for her to match the colour scheme to sending her a list of everything she needed to plan, then she throws the bombshell at me that only myself and my son are invited to the day and my partner can only come to the evening, not ideal when it’s an hour and a half journey each way to somewhere in the middle of nowhere with nowhere for him to go and wait while me and my son attend the ceremony and meal! And to top it off, no bridesmaid status, she didn’t ask me.

I talked to my partner and he agreed as she’s my best friend and she’s probably just not gotten round to asking me officially to be a bridesmaid he’d just go for a drive on the day somewhere and sit in a coffee shop cos there’s certainly no way we’re taking two cars.

I didn’t mention anything to her as it’s her day, her decision etc but then The invitation came, it’s only for the evening for all of us, this really upset me and I asked her, she told me she hadn’t gotten around to doing the day invites yet and she’ll post it out when it’s done, a few months later we met up for our little ones play date a month or so ago, still no bridesmaid offer, just a lot of asking me questions about planning etc, and other advice. And with the wedding only a couple of months away I’m certain her day invites will have been sent out a while ago already.

I feel totally betrayed and used, did she just tell me the bridesmaid story to get me to take her to see her other friend (who has been asked to be a bridesmaid). Am I unreasonable for thinking she doesn’t see me as much of a friend as I see her? Coming from a very religious family I’ve always seen evening only invites as a bit of an insult, they’re the obligatory “we don’t want you at our day but here come the evening”.

I feel It’s a bit of a kick in the teeth to ask your so called best friend with partner and child to take a day off work to travel an hour and a half away each way to the middle of nowhere and pay for a very expensive hotel room overnight and gift and fuel and drinks just to come to the evening of the wedding which she knows we’ll not be able to stay late due to the little one needing to go to bed.

What’s made it worse is she now seems to be avoiding the whole wedding conversations, in fact most conversations, If I send her a message she’ll read it straight away then either my reply at all or reply a few days later when she has a question to ask me or needs to rant to someone about work or the nursery etc. My son was in hospital earlier this week having surgery and she didn’t even message or call to ask how it went.

I’m so angry. My other half said it’s not right what she’s doing and if I don’t want to go we don’t have to. I really don’t know what to do, am I being unreasonable for thinking this, do I cut my losses, I know it’s her day and all but it still hurts.

OP posts:
Biancadelrioisback · 14/07/2019 12:37

Any update OP? I'd love to hear her explain her way out of this...

Freespirit24 · 14/07/2019 12:56

@Mama2harris

Hi Dear, first of all, sorry to hear about your experience with your so-called friend, I hope you can soon let all this stress go and concentrate on your family.

I want to make a few points about the situation if that is okay:

  1. A wedding is a ceremony and the reception (meal, after-party) is a celebration of that wedding which just took place. I do think that for this reason, some people do find evening invites insulting. That being said, weddings are very expensive and it is difficult to invite everyone to the meal. I believe an evening invite should be for people you are not that close with, perhaps work colleagues and day invites should always go to your nearest and dearest.
  1. Regardless of whether you are day or evening, your family should be invited as a unit. It is not any fun for you going to the daytime on your own with your children, it is just unacceptable. You should also not give out evening invites for people travelling a great distance. At my own wedding we were struggling for number and my husband asked a friend who lives in Amsterdam to come and he was going to invite him as evening and I was like no he has to be a full day guest as its rude to expect someone to pay for flights and hotel to come and get an after-party only.
  1. Bridesmaids should be asked and decided on long before you start designing a cake or organising anything. As soon as my venue was booked and date set, I asked my bridesmaids and she either wants you or she doesn't so he clearly doesn't see you as someone very close to her. I am sorry.
  1. Even if she made you all day guests (good for you for standing up to her), I think the whole wedding would be entirely awkward for you now after this experience.

I personally would decline the RSVP and not go. I would never accept my husband being disrespected like that and she thinks she can mess with your life like its a game of chess! It is her wedding but she should also consider how her wedding will impact her relationships with people when the wedding is over.

DanielRicciardosSmile · 14/07/2019 13:16

I've never heard of anyone organising their wedding in this order:

  1. Invite evening guests
  2. Invite daytime guests
  3. Decide on bridesmaids

Does she usually do things arse about face? She sounds like a bloody nightmare, and I'd be interested to know why actual bridesmaid (presumably the 35-mile away friend) is no longer speaking to her.

lazymare · 14/07/2019 13:23

She is a user. Just send an rsvp to decline then block her.

Cherrysoup · 14/07/2019 13:30

She’s lying. Of course she’s organised day guests with a couple of months to go. Don’t waste your time and mental energy on her, OP, she isn’t worth it.

iknowimcoming · 14/07/2019 14:33

I'd send an rsvp regret card and not put a stamp on it Grin

whirlwinds · 14/07/2019 15:29

Why waste anymore money on a card when text is cheaper. As for ghosting, I suspect it isn't in OPs nature to do such things. Better to be polite and just decline.

ChrisNewmum · 14/07/2019 17:29

Don’t reply - don’t go - don’t speak to her ever again

ChrisNewmum · 14/07/2019 17:31

Don’t reply - don’t go - don’t ever speak to her again

simplekindoflife · 14/07/2019 18:42

There's no way she hasn't sent out her day invites yet. She's waiting for all her RSVPs back before she decides if you make it to a day guest or not...

And who decides on bridesmaids just a couple of months before the wedding! You're normally having your final fitting soon!

Play her at her own game: be flaky, be elusive and don't give any definite answers. But don't be second best to anyone.

NoIDontWatchLoveIsland · 14/07/2019 20:13

She's a CF. Walk gracefully away with your head held high OP. You've been a good friend. She hasn't.

Kanga83 · 14/07/2019 20:25

The more I read this, the more I change my mind on just declining. Do you share many mutual friends? If not, could you accept then just not turn up? She'll have empty seats which she won't like and probably loss of money per meal. But you need to block her after that, no explanation etc.

MamaMumMama · 14/07/2019 20:27

Your "friend"'is a CF.
You've now seen this.
CF for making you drive to friends
CF for promising bridesmaid role
CF for not inviting your partner
CF for only inviting you to the evening
CF for still wanting your planning advice!

Time to walk away- do not entertain this friendship any more!

You'll meet a real bestie one day

Mama2harris · 15/07/2019 10:14

So I’ve had a response from her, saying

  1. “you’re invited to the day, I just haven't seen you to give you the invite”. Didn’t confirm if my DH was included in that invite though, and She posted the evening invite out to me and has seen me since I received it so could have given it to me then.
  1. She didn’t invite DH to the day because she doesn’t really know him, and that she wouldn’t expect me to invite her OH to my wedding! She’s met my OH a few times and I’ve met hers too. I’d never invite her without him and I’m pretty certain most people wouldn’t do that either.
  1. She’s said she regrets asking grown up bridesmaids as the venue is so small, no aisle to walk other than a few steps etc.

After the reply I got from her I’m done with it all. Moving on.

OP posts:
WillLokireturn · 15/07/2019 10:20

Probably best. As you've noted she's been a bit disengious with invites and you don't sound keen to attend anymore.

MzHz · 15/07/2019 10:22

She is such a bullshitter!

Cryalot2 · 15/07/2019 10:22

Flowers so sorry ,you have every right to feel hurt.
Do as the others suggest, have no more contact. You deserve better.

billybagpuss · 15/07/2019 10:25

Have you replied? Sorry she’s such a cow bag.

SnuggyBuggy · 15/07/2019 10:35

Good for you OP

ALittleBitAlexis · 15/07/2019 10:52

Good for you! What a silly response - who would send someone a day and evening invitation separately. It baffles me how willing people are to burn bridges so they can ego-trip about their wedding.

Yellowweatherwarning · 15/07/2019 11:01

Cf award to her op!

Biancadelrioisback · 15/07/2019 13:34

Okay, trying to be fair here, I think many people get carried away with wedding planning, often before they're even engaged. They sound out potential bridesmaids and may think they have it all worked out in their head until they actually start booking things (like venues). So I can see why she may regret discussing you and this other woman being bridesmaids so far in advance and how that was an error on her part. I'm assuming she didn't have a venue booked back then? If the venue isn't practical for bridesmaids then I can understand her changing her mind. Still a bit crappy but on its own, not unforgivable.

However, you'd have to be either a tight arse or and arse hole to not invite your close friends DH. If you don't know him well enough to have him at your wedding then you should sodding well be a better friend and get to know him. Especially someone who is bringing a small child! Especially especially when the wedding venue is a canny commute!

Also, no. No one sends out day and night invites to the same person. I worked as a wedding manager in several large venues and independently. I have never seen this done. Why not send a separate invite out for the ceremony and breakfast too? Waste. Of. Time. She's talking out her arse.

ThumbWitchesAbroad · 15/07/2019 14:26

Good that you've decided you're done with it - best option I think.
Now just let it go and move on from the silly woman. Thanks

ChrisNewmum · 15/07/2019 14:35

I’ll watch whatever Ilike!!

ThumbWitchesAbroad · 15/07/2019 15:11
Confused Wrong thread, ChrisNewmum?