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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU Disagreement on wedding seating

430 replies

RoyalnGeneral · 03/10/2019 08:52

Wedding one. Some details changed but I am not any of the four people involved.

I have a friend, Alice who suffers from anxiety (relevant). Alice got married to Ben about 18 months ago. Ben is a laid back ‘try to keep everyone happy’ type of guy. Alice and Ben are friends with another couple, Carl and Donna. Ben and Carl have been best friends for over 20 yrs. Alice and Donna worked together for several years but now work at different organisations.

Carl and Donna have announced they will be getting married next spring and Carl asked Ben to be his best man. Planning was going well until seating arrangements were discussed when it turned out Ben would be sitting at the top table while Alice would be at a guest table. Alice was upset and said she didn’t know anyone at the wedding and didn’t want to sit with strangers. She wanted to sit next to Ben at the top table.

Ben spoke to C&D and asked if Alice could sit with him. Carl and Donna said no, they understood it wasn’t ideal but that A&B would only be separated for a few hours. Alice said if she couldn't sit at the top table then she wanted Ben to sit at her guest table and do his speech from there. C&D refused again as they wanted Ben at the top table with Carl, so he could do the toasts/ read the messages/ keep people on time.

Things went back and forth without resolution, then last weekend Carl phoned Ben and uninvited him from being best man. A&B are still invited to the wedding and can now sit together at the guest table. The new best man will sit at the top table. The best man’s wife will be sitting with friends at another guest table.

Alice told me about this last night. She was taken aback that Ben had been uninvited. She said that at her wedding she hadn’t cared about wedding party only at the top table. What was important to her was that her guests felt comfortable and she didn’t think it was fair she had been expected to sit by herself with people she didn’t know.

I said that while Alice hadn't minded who sat at the top table at her wedding, Carl and Donna seem to want a more traditional approach. Also, C&D have accommodated Alice’s request to sit with Ben, although not in the way Alice expected. Carl will now have his best man with him at the top table, as he wants, and the best man’s wife will be sitting with people she knows, so perhaps it is the best compromise C&D can come up with, given the circumstances.

Alice disagreed. She said C&D are overreacting and she doesn’t see why she couldn’t been seated with Ben in the first place. She isn't sure she wants to go to the wedding now as she thinks it will be awkward.

AIBU to think Alice should have accepted C&D’s initial refusal and not continued to insist on sitting with Ben?

I know Alice’s anxiety means she finds these situations stressful so perhaps C&D could have been more sympathetic. But it’s C&D’s wedding day which I tend to think puts the onus on A&B to try to accomodate their friends' wishes.

OP posts:
Bouffalant · 03/10/2019 09:22

I suffer from anxiety and have had panic attacks/therapy/different types of medication for a decade, and I think Alice has been very unreasonable here.

BlueChangeling · 03/10/2019 09:22

Alice is a drama llama.

Saddler · 03/10/2019 09:22

Alice is an absolute pain in the arse and cause a load of grief. I'm surprised she's still invited. Nause.

SmileCheese · 03/10/2019 09:23

I expect if they had reached another solution regarding the seating plan Alice would then have come up with a different problem regarding something else at the wedding.

I strongly suspect this would be accurate. Once they agreed to the new seating arrangements Alice would have found fault with other aspects of the day e.g. Ben being with Carl to get ready or Ben being seated at the front of the room whilst they said their vows. Alice strikes me as the sort who would use her anxiety to try and change more than this part of the day.

SmellbowSmellbow123 · 03/10/2019 09:23

Alice is being very unreasonable.

I’ve never been to a wedding where the best mans wife was sat at the top table.

would the bridesmaids want their partners up there too?

Ridiculous.

lunar1 · 03/10/2019 09:23

Poor Ben!

OtraCosaMariposa · 03/10/2019 09:24

I've been the best man's partner and shoved on a table with the other odds and sods who didn't have a partner. It was fine. It's just the meal and the speeches.

I would never have dreamed of demanding that I sat on the top table, how ridiculous!

FizzyGreenWater · 03/10/2019 09:25

I think Alice has done a fine job of being as much of a pain in the arse as possible to absolutely everybody. Poor Ben.

pasturesgreen · 03/10/2019 09:27

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Inlovewitharagorn · 03/10/2019 09:27

Alice has been completely unreasonable.

Bibijayne · 03/10/2019 09:28

I'm with Alice on this one. Who splits up married couples? At our wedding best man and maid of honour were on the top table with their spouses.

cccameron · 03/10/2019 09:28

I think C and D's solution is perfect and yes Alice totally unreasonable. Can't bear people that think the whole fucking world revolves round them.

roundturnandtwohalfhitches · 03/10/2019 09:29

Why is everyone so sad for Ben? Alice is being ludicrous and demanding. Ben is encouraging the whole drama her by going back and forward with her ridiculous suggestions, thus causing the bride and groom a whole load of grief. He's not doing her any favours by enabling her. I suffered from severe anxiety for years and wouldn't have dreamt of doing anything like this. Nor would my DH have helped me.

Monkeyseesmonkeydoes · 03/10/2019 09:32

Alice needs to get a grip - I suffer from anxiety but would never try to influence an event like this. I would have either declined the invite or bolstered myself to go.
She needs to get over it, a solution has been found and her DH knows that he was the first choice for BM so shouldn't be smarting too much.
They should just go and celebrate with their friends.

IfIShouldFallFromGraceWithGod · 03/10/2019 09:33

Alice is unreasonable and a pain in the arse

MovinOnUp · 03/10/2019 09:33

Alice is being a PITA and I say that as someone with general anxiety disorder.
She should have accepted the situation as it was and if she really felt she couldn't sit at a table without her DH (which I do understand) she should have just said she would attend the wedding after the meal.

Clangus00 · 03/10/2019 09:33

Alice was being a stroppy mare.
The bride and groom have been quite right.
Would she have started crying or whatever when the photos were being taken? She’d be on her own with strangers then too.
She’s probably cost her husband his friendship with the groom.

NearlyGranny · 03/10/2019 09:34

I suspect Alice thought everyone would cave, but now her actions have brought unwelcome consequences, particularly for her husband.

How she and Ben organised their wedding does not have to be everyone else's blueprint.

Nobody died (I hope not, I may have skimmed the thread!) so she can learn from the experience. If she refused to go altogether, she is risking Ben's friendship with Carl and potentially narrowing their social circle. Ben may end up resenting her for this. He should not be put in the position of having to choose between his best friend and his wife over something so petty.

Monkeyseesmonkeydoes · 03/10/2019 09:34

Alice's anxiety is now making her worry about this more than some people would, she'll be going over it in her head, and she's looking for somewhere else to out the 'blame' now.

If you're her friend you need to try to get her out of this loop and just accept the outcome and try to move on from it.

Mummyoflittledragon · 03/10/2019 09:34

I don’t like the idea of splitting up couples, especially where the partner doesn’t know anyone else. However this is the choice the b&g made. Alice needed to respect that and either decline or go once the best mans duties were fulfilled.

daisypond · 03/10/2019 09:35

Alice is unreasonable.

Sweetpea55 · 03/10/2019 09:35

Poor Ben, I feel sorry for him having to explain thar he isn't going to be BM any more because his wife can't sit on her own for a couple of hours.
What an unreasonable mare.. And after all.... It's thier wedding and what they are wanting regarding the seating is quite traditional and not abnormal at all

LemonBreeland · 03/10/2019 09:36

If Alica felt unable to sit apart from her DH then she should have said she would not go to the wedding. Now her DH is missing out on being best man. She is to blame in this, and I think that C&D have done their best to be accommodating and still have the wedding they want. They were backed into a corner by Alice.

ASandwichNamedKevin · 03/10/2019 09:36

Why anyone with anxiety would want to be at the top table of a wedding they aren't a part of is a mystery to me. The top table is a hive of activity.

This. I suffer from anxiety, and go to great lengths to make sure it doesn't impact on others. DH and I are a team on this and if the anxiety seems to be clouding my judgement he'd tell me.
If I really couldn't have faced sitting on my own I'd have just gone to the service and the evening do, but as a PP said she's bound to have met someone if the 2 guys have been best friends for 20 years.

AntiHop · 03/10/2019 09:36

I was my sister's bridesmaid. My dp was dreading the idea of sitting on a table without me with people he didn't know. I asked my sister if he could sit with me. She agreed. If she'd said no, he would have just sucked it up though.

I don't know why people are so precious about the top table.

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