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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Hen do- present for the bride

29 replies

sciencegirl91 · 02/11/2021 19:49

I’m a bridesmaid for my friend. She didn’t want a traditional hen do, so is instead hosting us for an evening, and paying for food and activities herself (which will total around £100 a head). Incredibly kind and generous in my view, since it’s not uncommon for people we know to have weekends away at the cost of £200+, and then the hens pay for the bride, not the other way around!

As bridesmaids we’re organising various little fun surprises and activities too. One thing we wanted to do was buy the bride a substantial, memorable gift from all her hens. Not a normal tradition for hen parties, but we thought it would be nice to thank her and recognise her generosity. We suggested a contribution of £30 and sent a link to what we wanted to buy her. Most of the hens said yes they loved the idea and wanted to contribute. However two have refused to participate. One is genuinely short on cash, some sympathy there, though she does spend a lot on going out and has no living expenses (lives with parents). Another just said she has already (even though it’s weeks away…) sent her a (cheaper) gift. Obviously, gift participation is never compulsory so we will ask for a bit more from everyone else to cover it, and awkwardly find a way of signing the card from most but not all of the hens.

AIBU to think that this is a bit mean spirited, particularly from the hen who has no cash flow issue but just wants to do her own thing? I suppose it’s just a matter of priorities (for both of them) and yes, everyone is entitled to spend or not spend their money however they like. But for a close friend (it’s a small party!) who has spent £100s on what should be a lovely evening, it seems a shame they don’t feel able to contribute what is a small amount relative to the cost of most hen dos!

OP posts:
LethargicActress · 02/11/2021 19:54

YABU. It’s expensive being a wedding guest. It’s not your place to judge what priorities other people have for their own money just because you have chosen a present you want to give for a hen party. They probably have valid reasons for not wanting to contribute.

HunterHearstHelmsley · 02/11/2021 19:56

YABU. Its not up to you to decide what other people do.

Also, just because someone lives with their parents it doesn't mean they have no living expenses.

Ozanj · 02/11/2021 19:56

Yanbu. In your position I’d probably just cut out the two who wouldn’t participate from the card. That way you aren’t singling any one person out

User527294627 · 02/11/2021 19:56

I think yabu - these things are always optional, not compulsory, and you genuinely don’t know peoples circumstances when it comes to money.

Have everyone sign the card so the bride isn’t put in the awkward position of wondering why two friends didn’t contribute and feeing guilty or anxious about them having been asked for money they can’t afford, and put it behind you with the happy thought that you are in the fortunate position of being able to contribute.

MrzClaus · 02/11/2021 19:57

Really, YABU. One hen has already sent a gift, the other can't afford to chip in. Compulsory gift collections are horrid! You asked, they said no. That's really the end of it surely? I don't think it's mean spirited to not contribute to an organised gift. Attending the wedding itself will probably cost them a fair bit of cash! I'm sure the bride would rather have them attend, instead of chipping in for a gift.

FeltCarrot · 02/11/2021 20:00

Does no one else want to know how an evening at home can cost £100 per head? 😮

SummaLuvin · 02/11/2021 20:02

They are at liberty to spend their money however they wish, and what you value might not be what they value, but that doesn't mean it isn't worthwhile if they get joy/pleasure from it.

That being said, given the Hen is fully paid for by the bride if I knew they would have attended up and found £100-£200 more to attend a more 'traditional' hen do, it would probably forever change the way I saw them. If they wouldn't have attended the Hen anyway for money reasons then fair enough. But I would keep my feelings to myself either way.

LawnFever · 02/11/2021 20:10

@FeltCarrot

Does no one else want to know how an evening at home can cost £100 per head? 😮
That’s exactly what I want to know, what on earth has she organised that’s costing so much?

Yabu on the contributions, you can’t dictate what anyone else spends their money on and you can’t know for sure what either friends financial situation is.

It’s not your place to decide to spend £30 of anyone’s money without checking with everyone first & can’t everyone just get their own card? That’s a complete non issue unless you make it one.

LawnFever · 02/11/2021 20:11

Oh, and maybe neither of the people who aren’t contributing would’ve gone on a weekend long hen party costing £££ so it’s irrelevant what that may or may not have cost.

Twickerhun · 02/11/2021 20:15

Yabu - it’s up to them what they spend their money on. Outwardly people might think I could afford £30 for a gift, but honestly I can’t.

coodawoodashooda · 02/11/2021 20:17

@FeltCarrot

Does no one else want to know how an evening at home can cost £100 per head? 😮
I do. That's ridiculous!
WaterBottle123 · 02/11/2021 20:19

YANBU, you're undoing all the good work the bride did in making the evening affordable!!!

thefirstmrsrochester · 02/11/2021 20:21

Also here for the £100 per head at home thing.

A bride doesn’t need, and shouldn’t expect, a ‘hen’ gift. Assume you will each be buying a wedding gift, and attending a wedding, never mind being part of the wedding party, is pricey in itself.

MyAnacondaMight · 02/11/2021 20:21

YABU. The bride is paying for the hen do, probably to remove this financial strain from the guests - very kind and generous of her. And there you are adding that strain back in by asking everyone to pay for a gift that the bride hasn’t asked for.

If you want to buy her a gift, or do added surprises etc., then do it from the bridesmaids. Stop asking the other guests to fund this for you.

Acatnamedfox · 02/11/2021 20:23

Unpopular opinion but..

Thank Christ I’m not friends with some of you.
I think it’s stingy and I feel bad for the bride, they’re not her real friends.
How long have they got to come up with the money? £30 is a night out and I’d sacrifice that for a good friend for a present for the biggest day of her life.

purpledagger · 02/11/2021 20:47

I really dislike requests like this.

If it's optional, why are you judging two people who don't want to participate? I dislike being pressured into contributing to something that I have no say in on principle.

drpet49 · 02/11/2021 20:49

It is upto them but i think it is tight and stingy.

Ozanj · 02/11/2021 20:52

@purpledagger

I really dislike requests like this.

If it's optional, why are you judging two people who don't want to participate? I dislike being pressured into contributing to something that I have no say in on principle.

I dislike freeloading off the bride on her Hen do. If you can’t afford to be a bridesmaid you drop out, you don’t then let the bride drop £££ on you while you begrudge her £30 for a gift (yet find the money to go on a night out with your better mates later).
SarahBellam · 02/11/2021 20:57

I’d like to hope the bride didn’t choose her friends for what they could buy her.

Marvellousmadness · 02/11/2021 20:57

Yabu
Wtf is a hen gift anyway???

NigelSlatersXmasTaters · 02/11/2021 20:59

YABU, it's a lot of money. You say the friend living with parents has no expenses. I imagine she's keen to save and move out rather than blowing more money on a hen gift.

MissCrowley · 02/11/2021 21:34

£30 is cheap I think, it depends I suppose what else the hens are paying for in terms of the actual day?

For example my (ex) best friends wedding as bridesmaids we were expected to pay for:

Alterations to the bridesmaid dress £50-100
Specific underwear to wear under the dress £80
Shoes £whatever we wanted to pay
Make up
Hair
Make up trial/ hair trial -£70-80
An abroad hen party £600-700
2 nights in the manor where she was getting married £300
Gift for the bride £50
Goody bags for the hen party £30
Brunches and dinners out to discuss main event £200

I calculated it was going to be around £2000 to be my best friends bridesmaid. I had no income, 2 kids and they were starting school that year so needed 2 full uniforms plus shoes.

I was effectively dropped from the event completely. Which is why she's no longer a friend.

Awineaday · 02/11/2021 21:44

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Awineaday · 02/11/2021 21:46

Sorry, posted on wrong thread. Getting it removed

FairFuming · 02/11/2021 21:58

Sorry bur I think YABU.
I was stuck in a similar situation when I was with my Ex and everyone assumed I had loads of cash as he was a high earner. He was and still is but he was also extremely financially abusive. I'd never have had that money spare but because noone knew how awful things were at home assumed I was being tight and I got called a fair fee names.