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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:
DougRossIsTheBoss · 20/12/2020 10:33

Evening only guests are OK for local people eg work colleagues but expecting people to travel 5hrs just for the evening is rude and she should obviously expect people to decline.
She certainly should not have asked you to give a reason
Send a card only I'd say.

AnneLovesGilbert · 20/12/2020 10:49

Don’t send a present. She was rude to invite you to the evening do which is a ball ache to attend and way worse to ask for your reasons. No gifts!

halcyondays · 20/12/2020 10:52

Covid or not, you don’t invite people to evening only if they have to travel 5 hours to get there. That’s ridiculous.

JoeCalFuckingZaghe · 20/12/2020 10:55

Don’t feel bad. I’m supposed to be getting married next year (postponed from this year). I’m still on high alert to cancelling the bloody thing but if anyone I invited cancels I’ll be more than happy for them to do that, it’s a scary time and I would hate to know people were feeling uncomfortable and putting themselves at risk just to attend. If she judges you or acts shitty with you because of this she’s a twat!

Purplecatshopaholic · 20/12/2020 11:08

All that way to be part of the b-list evening crowd? Err, that’s a no from me. And she’s a CF to question you as to why too.

StillCoughingandLaughing · 20/12/2020 22:05

Also, it's not "haughty" to dislike the idea of a B list evening do, it's an opinion.

And in MY opinion, it’s haughty to get prissy about an evening invite. Why are you allowed an opinion but I’m not?

Caterinaballerina · 20/12/2020 22:14

YANBU but please read the ‘oh okay’ in the lightest breezier tone that it could possibly be and act according to it being like that.

hellejuice91 · 20/12/2020 22:28

I think YANBU by declining but I also think the bride to be is not being unreasonable for asking why. People can't come to weddings for all sorts of reasons and sometimes they are things you can fix (ie transport issues), I don't think she was wrong to ask you.

Andylion · 20/12/2020 22:29

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?!

This would be reason enough for me to decline, even without Covid. And I don't think you should be embarrassed about admitting it.

hellejuice91 · 20/12/2020 22:31

Also just want to say about the evening thing. When my cousin got married I was only invited to the evening bit, the reason for this was she could only have 50 people at her ceremony due to limited space (but it was her dream venue) and by the time her and her now Husband's more immediate family members, but their very closest friends filled the space. It does not always mean you are seen as less than when just invited to the evening

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