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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:
Ginfordinner · 19/12/2020 06:54

Unlike the professionally offended mumsnetters, being invited to an evening only do doesn't offend me. However, there is no way I would do a 10 hour round trip that involved finding accommodation for an evening do.

And she was rude to ask you why you couldn't go.

BurgerOnTheOrientExpress · 19/12/2020 06:54

No one knows if C-19 problem will be resolved or worse next summer. I've been invited to my nieces wedding and have explained that I presently can't state I'll attend or not as it's 6000 miles away. I'm positive my niece will have a great day with out my attendance.

Anyone getting married next year will be grateful it goes ahead and have to accept that there could be a multitude of reasons why they don't have a full house. You shouldn't have to explain anything or feel guilty.

CrotchBurn · 19/12/2020 06:57

@TeenPlusTwenties
Yeah it's very millennial isnt it? "I've been invited to an event that isnt convenient for me in a place I dont like and that will require effort for me to get to. So I wont be going." Quite sad really.

Dontjudgeme101 · 19/12/2020 06:59

You have nothing to feel guilty about. She’s being cheeky. No way would l travel for 5 hours for a evening reception. I am glad that you said no to the invitation.

grandmasterstitch · 19/12/2020 07:03

We got an evening invite to a wedding in Kent (we're in Northumberland) and had to decline. Mostly because two weeks before I was bridesmaid at a wedding in Dorset but also because it was way too far to travel for an evening reception. Bride accepted we could make it, job done. YANBU. If you invite evening guests who live a distance away then you have to accept a number of them won't come

Maireas · 19/12/2020 07:05

Who the hell would invite someone in Northumberland to an evening only do in Kent??

BernadetteRostankowskiWolowitz · 19/12/2020 07:12

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

This isn't friendship.

TildaTurnip · 19/12/2020 07:13

Those saying she should make a weekend of it-why should she? That’s a lot of money and time for a few hours at a reception.

NoGoodPunsLeft · 19/12/2020 07:16

I won't drive 5 hours for a week's holiday let alone 'making a weekend of it'. I

You aren't close friends which is a valid reason to not go to the hassle and (i imagine significant) cost of going.

SnuggyBuggy · 19/12/2020 07:23

Evening only invitations should just be for people who live locally. I agree it's ridiculous expecting people to travel and not hosting them for the full day.

Mummyoflittledragon · 19/12/2020 07:46

@SnuggyBuggy

Evening only invitations should just be for people who live locally. I agree it's ridiculous expecting people to travel and not hosting them for the full day.
This. Your friend is incredibly rude to expect you to go all that way for an evening only and not to have accommodation on site is ridiculous. #makingmemoriesandfuckyourguests
CakeRequired · 19/12/2020 07:48

Yanbu. She's probably finding a lot of people are saying no to the evening section, probably even some are rejecting the full invite. She's picked one hell of a stupid venue, but it will be 'insta pretty', that's what is important after all. Hmm

Annebronte · 19/12/2020 07:56

Evening only invites are pretty rude, I think. They certainly should only be for people who are local to the venue.

ShirleyPhallus · 19/12/2020 07:56

@buzzandwoodyallday

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...
Agree with this. I don’t know why you didn’t say 5 hours of travelling was too much for an evening reception
PelekiEki · 19/12/2020 07:57

Don't feel guilty. 5h travel for an evening isn't worth it, especially if you're not particularly close to her.

I had to decline the invitation to my cousin's wedding this summer, and they weren't impressed either. It was abroad (I know, who gets married abroad in the middle of a pandemic???), and they invited close to 150 people from all over Europe, expecting them all to be there. 150 for a wedding abroad is normal in their culture/religion btw.

Cue weekly phone calls from May until 2 weeks before the wedding in August, they would ask me if I'm coming and I'd politely say 'no, I can't', each and every single time.

But why. Everyone else is coming (they didn't in the end). You can change your mind the day before and we'll still be happy to see you there. Why can't you make the effort.

Well, because you're getting married in the middle of nowhere. It's normally a 3h flight but with Covid the direct flight isn't running so it's more like 8h when you factor in layovers. I can't afford the hotel you've chosen (nor is it practical to stay somewhere else). My grandparents came from that country and I know how the culture is. No one is complying with the hygiene restrictions, no one wears masks on public transport, I don't want to catch Covid there. Covid doesn't exist was their answer Hmm. There would be no social distancing at the wedding and the bride said she didn't want anyone with a mask on her wedding photos. Not to mention this country was deemed a risk area by the country I live in, so my work had banned all non-essential trips to a risk area unless you had a strong reason.

They were really upset, and did all the above to every single family member that declined their invite. The wedding was in August and I haven't heard from them since. They didn't send wedding photos to anyone in the family. Their loss. Don't feel guilty about it OP, you've stated the reasons why you can't go, and they can take it any way they want, not your problem anymore.

Cheesypea · 19/12/2020 07:58

Yes evening only invites are for people who live locally. Pop in have a drink, send your best wishes and possibly gi to a different event.

Calmandmeasured1 · 19/12/2020 08:03

There is no way I would travel for 5 hours to attend only the evening part of a wedding reception even if it was someone I saw regularly.

Edel2019 · 19/12/2020 08:04

@Cheesypea

Yes evening only invites are for people who live locally. Pop in have a drink, send your best wishes and possibly gi to a different event.
💯

So rude of her to ask for a reason, and then her passive-aggressive response. Ignore OP!

Neverbeme · 19/12/2020 08:10

Completely reasonable of you but I think you could have told her the truth.

Buttercream22 · 19/12/2020 08:11

I don't think your being unreasonable. That is along way.

My wedding is far away from where I live (about 5 hours) All my guest live about 3 hours away (we have recently relocated). All the guests are invited all day because of the distance. However we have become friendly with our neighbors and said they are more than welcome to come to the evening do (we were over numbers for the day). All of them have politely declined, which we expected because it's too god damn far for them to come to the evening do. They appreciated the gesture.

Mind you....we've had to postpone twice now and are set to get married in Aug. Who knows what will happen. I'm kind of a laid back person, if someone can't make it, they can't.

SugarCoatIt · 19/12/2020 08:13

Don't feel guilty, especially just for an evening invite

picklemewalnuts · 19/12/2020 08:28

Do you know for sure it's 'just an evening invite' as opposed to the whole wedding being the evening? We married at 4pm and went straight into evening festivities, we didn't have two events.

Notonthestairs · 19/12/2020 08:34

Whatever the circumstances it is perfectly acceptable to turn down an invitation provided you do it politely and in good time.

Send a gift and a card wishing them well. Stop feeling guilty.

InTheDrunkTank · 19/12/2020 08:37

No one can possibly be annoyed about you not coming if they only invite you to the evening do. I'd happily go if it was in the same town but there's no way I'd be travelling hours and doing an overnight stay for an evening only invite, even outside of pandemics.

HighSpecWhistle · 19/12/2020 08:39

YABU to use Covid as an excuse when the vaccine is already being rolled out. It is likely to be a very different situation in the Summer. I would be hurt with that excuse.

YANBU to have declined the invite based on travel, but it's an indicator that you don't value her friendship and she's probably a bit gutted as she would have put effort into yours and has clearly supported you when you've needed it. I suspect that's the end of the friendship.

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