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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to feel bad about not going to wedding

85 replies

Shr1881 · 19/12/2020 02:22

DH and I have been invited to a friends wedding next summer. Well - the evening reception only. We’d have to get public transport there, which is a 5 hour journey. It’s at a venue in the middle of absolutely nowhere, many miles away from where my friend lives. There’s no accommodation at the venue so we would have to look at staying over in the nearest town. There’s no guarantee the pandemic will be over by then, and with all the travelling, plus the mixing with others, and the fact I fall into the vulnerable category, we made the decision to decline the invite. (We will of course send a card and gift closer to the time).

Background to our friendship - we went to college together 20 years ago and were pretty good friends back then. We lost contact after college and then found each other again on Facebook when that came along. We used to be in much more regular contact than we are these days, and had met up a couple of times, and she offered me support when I went through a horrific break-up a few years before meeting DH.

She and her H2B came to my own wedding 6 years ago, to the whole day and evening. It would have been approx half an hours drive for her to get there. We’ve kept regular contact since then via Facebook, but not spoken on the phone for many years or seen each other in person since my wedding.

Not long ago, she shared one of those cringey “tag your best girls “ posts on Facebook and I didn’t make the cut, I wasn’t hugely bothered as I think posts like that are a bit school playground-ish. But it’s clear she doesn’t see me as one of “her girls” or whatever. I know from FB comments I’ve seen that she’s invited quite a few friends to the day and evening.

I emailed our RSVP (as that was how they had asked for people to do it), I basically said, thank you so much for inviting us, we are sorry to say we won’t be able to make it etc

I was a little taken aback by the fact a few hours later, I received a FB message from her, asking for a reason why we couldn’t come..!
I was honest and said that due to the ongoing pandemic we had to make this decision, due to me being vulnerable and the travelling that would be involved, and (this is true btw) the last thing we wanted to do was have to change our minds at the last minute, as we know only too well from our own wedding planning that it really messes things up when people do that.

I don’t think it went down too well, she replied with “Oh, okay”.

I will admit - I obviously haven’t told her this - that the fact we’ve been invited to the evening only is a small part of why we declined - I understand why people sometimes have a separate evening guest list.. but there’s part of me that feels like wow.. an 5 hour journey for just the evening?!

When we were planning our wedding, there were - I think - two or three people who declined the invite and didn’t give a reason, and I wouldn’t have dreamed of asking for one - but that’s just me.

Am I an awful person?! Do my genuine reasons for declining seem ridiculous? Have I done something terrible here? Should I have accepted the invite and worried about the pandemic situation closer to the time?

OP posts:
tectonicplates · 19/12/2020 02:25

All that travelling just for the evening reception? No, I wouldn't feel guilty.

clpsmum · 19/12/2020 02:25

Don't feel guilty. She expects you travel all that way for evening only, sod that! She's cheeky to ask for reason too

Aquamarine1029 · 19/12/2020 02:30

It’s at a venue in the middle of absolutely nowhere, many miles away from where my friend lives. There’s no accommodation at the venue so we would have to look at staying over in the nearest town.

They couldn't make this a bigger pain in the arse if they tried. Don't waste a second feeling bad.

katy1213 · 19/12/2020 02:34

Five hours travel to the B-list reception of someone you haven't seen for years? You must be joking. Crass of her to demand a reason, too.

HeddaGarbled · 19/12/2020 02:34

YANBU for not going. YABU for feeling bad about it and for letting it take up enough head space to make you want to start a thread about it.

Fudgsicles · 19/12/2020 02:36

YANBU. I wouldn't make this amount of effort for any evening invitation, it's far too big of an ask.

Diverseduvet · 19/12/2020 02:36

I'd probably do the same in your situation, mostly due to the travelling and the expense involved, just for the evening.
I think if you're good friends it's not necessarily rude to ask why, but you're obviously not, or you would have had a day invite too!

Spaghettibetty345 · 19/12/2020 02:49

Does the evening include dinner? Maybe she forgot to invite you to the whole day. I would’ve been honest and said there’s no point travelling 5 hrs just for some drinks.

sneakysnoopysniper · 19/12/2020 03:00

I would not have replied to the WHY. Its sufficient to politely decline a social invitation by saying something like:-

"Thank you so much for your invitiation to xxx. We really appreciate your including us. Unfortunately we will not be able to come. Do have a lovely time."

Frannibananni · 19/12/2020 03:10

I’m guessing she would be getting quite a few people decline.

titan89 · 19/12/2020 03:20

You did the right thing for you. Don't think about it anymore. Her asking you for a reason is extremely impolite.

Nomaigai · 19/12/2020 04:05

We had a wedding that was a lot of travel for some people. The only people who got evening only invites were people who lived in the local area. Anything else is rude. Certainly you don't invite someone evening only and then be annoyed they don't come if there's a lot of travel involved!

Maireas · 19/12/2020 05:31

You didn't make the cut to the main gig, so you're not that important to her. Evening only guest Hmm. You're not on the A list but still have to bring a gift and dress up. The pandemic is reason enough even if you weren't vulnerable.

Maigue · 19/12/2020 05:42

@katy1213

Five hours travel to the B-list reception of someone you haven't seen for years? You must be joking. Crass of her to demand a reason, too.
This. Insanely rude to ask for a reason when someone’s politely declined for reasons that should be obvious!

Put it out of your head, OP.

JillofTrades · 19/12/2020 05:42

Yanbu. I think its not ok to invite people to the evening reception. Very rude in fact. All that effort to just join the party bit. I wouldn't make that trip really and it sounds like a massive ache.

IceCreamAndCandyfloss · 19/12/2020 05:56

I wouldn’t have gone if local. Evening only invites, for me, are second tier guests who didn’t get to witness the actual wedding but are expected to turn up later with a gift.

With the virus, I wouldn’t be doing any group gathering unless SD and all outdoors.

naturalyoghurtmuncher · 19/12/2020 05:59

Don't feel guilty. It's perfectly reasonable to decline. She will probably find that her big wedding is cancelled due to restrictions anyway 🙊

KellyJonesLeatherTrousers · 19/12/2020 06:03

Why do people think it’s rude of her to ask why you can’t make it? Perfectly natural for her to want to know I think. There could be lots of reasons why you’re not a day guest - big family/budget - she clearly genuinely wanted to there and like most brides, is excited at the prospect of having all her friends there.

You’ve thrown lots of reasons in here as to why you don’t want to go and I’m not sure what the real reason is. You could’ve made a weekend of it if you wanted to go, I’ve done this before and had some great weekend away.

Perhaps you don’t like travelling or you don’t want to spend the money or just don’t value the friendship enough. Either way, YABU to not expect her to want to know why.

buzzandwoodyallday · 19/12/2020 06:30

Using covid as part of your excuse when it's not until next summer and things could be vastly different by then is a bit off tbh. You should have been honest and told her you're not willing to travel all that way just for the evening...

CrotchBurn · 19/12/2020 06:35

@buzzandwoodyallday
This.

Yeah it's a bit off tbh. We've just had a year of lockdown. I dont really understand why you would see it as a big massive hassle for just the reception - surely what you would normally do would be to turn it into a bit of a break for you and DP. I would probably see it as a good prompt to head off to X part of the country and would make a two night break of it, so the reception really just becomes a minor part of your stay.
You say you're vulnerable but you will probably have had the vaccine by then.

You dont want to go but just be honest with yourself - that's all it is. She came to your wedding, you seem to be mortally offended that she didnt tag you as a "best girl" and has only invited you to part of the wedding. I think that's acceptable tbh 🤷‍♀️

I just think it's off that you'd be this offended, and that after a year of lockdown you'd be this eager to turn down a good excuse to get back out there

EmmaWithTheGreatHair · 19/12/2020 06:47

How many guests is your friend inviting? Is it a huge wedding?

The last evening invite only wedding I attended, there wasn’t a table to sit out, a few chairs had to be dragged out and dusted down and we sat around the edge of the dance floor, while the day guests lounged on their tables. Felt a right twat!

To expect you to travel five hours etc just for the evening do isn’t on and you YANBU to decline on that reason alone!

Bakeachocolatecaketoday · 19/12/2020 06:47

She will have had loads of people decline, for the same reason as you!

I wouldn't be going 5 hours for a wedding, I've made that mistake before, arrived with quite a few otthers for "the evening do" only to find the wedding speeches ongoing (running late) then the wedding party then having a "break" before the evening disco. Pitched up with two smallish children intending to spend an hour and the "evening do" hadn't even started at the point in time I wanted to leave.

Had to hang around outside the venue for about 45 minutes then all the other guests are well into party mode and the newcomers feel odd!

SimplyRadishing · 19/12/2020 06:48

You were right to decline and while we all know covid is a bit of a week excuse (sorry but it is) its is a more socially acceptable/frictìonless way out which causes way damage than highlighting her breathtaking lack of self awareness.

SimplyRadishing · 19/12/2020 06:49

God its too early.
Weak*
Causes way less damage**

TeenPlusTwenties · 19/12/2020 06:53

It’s at a venue in the middle of absolutely nowhere, many miles away from where my friend lives. There’s no accommodation at the venue so we would have to look at staying over in the nearest town.

Has there been a shift in focus on weddings (maybe since things were changed so you could marry anywhere?) from focusing on what works well for your guests (because you are hosting a party and want them to have a good time) to just what the couple want (because it's their special day)?