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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to not agree that I ruined this girl’s wedding?

334 replies

itsbritneybitch92 · 04/03/2022 23:45

I was friends with a girl who I met in uni at 18. She immediately referred to me as her best friend, though I don’t think we were ever that close. She was quite clingy and would often have feuds with random people for little reason. She’d never confront the person, but would just be extremely passive aggressive around them.

When we were around 22, after a summer break, she suddenly ghosted me. She wouldn’t respond to any messages and would avoid me in person. She created social events and made sure that I was the only mutual friend excluded. She used to take photos of a group of us in a lecture hall and then crop me out and post it on Facebook. If I sat at a table for lunch with our mutual friends, she’d get up and leave immediately. She referred to a new girl as her best friend. I didn’t know why this happened. A year later, a mutual friend told me it was because I didn’t contact her enough over the summer as she had gone through a rough time. If I’d checked in enough with her I’d know. Fair enough, I was sorry.

At age 24 and about to graduate, she suddenly started to talk to me again but it was awkward. Whatever. I wasn’t interested in drama.

At age 28, she invites me to dinner. It’s very unexpected. She tells me that she’s getting married and I’m going to be her bridesmaid. I didn’t say anything but I really like having friends so I thought it’d be a fresh start. Following this, I tried to keep up with her regularly with texts and calls but she’d either not reply or respond with a vague message. We arranged to meet up five times and every single time she cancelled hours before. The other bridesmaids are mutual friends and I know she was happily hanging out with them.

Covid lockdown number one - my dad died. We were going to meet up on the day. I said I can’t because my dad is unwell with covid (bear in mind this was when we knew barely anything about covid, it was scary). She didn’t respond.

Next day, she then texted me a copy paste job which detailed how sad she was to postpone her wedding. But couldn’t even respond to my message.

Months pass. I’m struggling. It’s 8 months until the wedding. There hasn’t been any planning, bridesmaid dresses, hen do etc. I can’t be her bridesmaid and I tell her that. She doesn’t respond. She then sends out another copy paste message to say that only close family and friends can come to the wedding and she is so very sorry that I can’t be there.

Now it is 6 months after the wedding…according to her best friend and husband, I’ve ruined her wedding. I should’ve been more grateful to be a bridesmaid and I should not have cancelled with such short notice. I saw her wedding photos, she started off with 4 bridesmaids and in the photos, there were 6. There was zero planning from/for the bridesmaids at the time that I left. She also invited a lot of mutual friends to the wedding who she actually isn’t even that close to. They want an apology. I’m 30 years old and sick of this. AIBU?

OP posts:
Ddot · 09/03/2022 07:10

Write her an apology letter, say your sorry for canceling but are very grateful to be asked. Then add you were grieving the loss of your father and couldnt find it in you to celebrate anything. Finish with I know you will understand and I wish you happiness for the future.
Then avoid the selfish it's all about me daft moo

ThumbWitchesAbroad · 09/03/2022 11:23

@Ddot

Write her an apology letter, say your sorry for canceling but are very grateful to be asked. Then add you were grieving the loss of your father and couldnt find it in you to celebrate anything. Finish with I know you will understand and I wish you happiness for the future. Then avoid the selfish it's all about me daft moo
Why though? Why on earth should the OP apologise for any of this high drama self-absorbed reactionary shit that the woman is creating?

There is nothing to apologise FOR!

Kikibabes · 09/03/2022 14:15

@Throughabushbackwards

I'd have moved on from this friendship at the first ghosting when you were 22. I just can't cope with this kind of drama. I'd rather have a tiny set of solid mates than spend my emotional energy coping with this. Walk away, you won't regret it.
Couldn't agree more- also very sorry OP about your father and the fact that ur friend thought her wedding was the most terrible thing that could happen when this had just happened to your family 😘😘
Ddot · 09/03/2022 15:46

ThumbWitchesAbroad
If she apologises she can take the high road and the idiot will have nothing to moan about to anyone and move on to someone else. Makes life easier and the op has enough on her plate.

ThumbWitchesAbroad · 09/03/2022 22:35

Again, OP has nothing to apologise FOR.
I don't at all believe in making false apologies.

SpicePumpkin · 09/03/2022 22:53

@Ddot

ThumbWitchesAbroad If she apologises she can take the high road and the idiot will have nothing to moan about to anyone and move on to someone else. Makes life easier and the op has enough on her plate.
Why the hell should someone apologise for grieving the loss of a parent, to an entitled spiteful woman!! I honestly do not see your logic in your responses here. OP does not need to 'take the high road' as she has done naff all wrong!
EthelTheAardvark · 10/03/2022 23:56

@Ddot

ThumbWitchesAbroad If she apologises she can take the high road and the idiot will have nothing to moan about to anyone and move on to someone else. Makes life easier and the op has enough on her plate.
I rather suspect that she said sorry when she originally cancelled - it seems unlikely that she sent a message that said only something like "I can't be bridesmaid, see you sometime".
MRex · 11/03/2022 07:23

@Ddot

ThumbWitchesAbroad If she apologises she can take the high road and the idiot will have nothing to moan about to anyone and move on to someone else. Makes life easier and the op has enough on her plate.
No, the apology was at the time of cancelling. Extra apologies that are demanded are a form of abasement designed by the ex friend to be punishment. OP did nothing wrong and it's not necessary for her to go through that.
Punkyfish3000 · 24/03/2022 07:44

@YouWereGr8InLittleMenstruators

You're not supposed to be thanking her for the request to be her bridesmaid -I'm pretty sure it's the other way around! She asks if you would do her the honour of being her bridesmaid, you graciously say "Aw, of course." Then she thanks you. You are doing something time consuming, expensive and often frustrating for her benefit. You definitely don't thank her...
Just to play Devil's advocate, when I sent participant requests for my own wedding certain candidates did actually say 'thank you' for the message requesting them for [X or Y role] and they would be accepting, even though it's not strictly participant etiquette (of course everyone got thanked for accepting the request and doing their part on the day). With regards to the bridesmaid request coinciding with your father's death you had far bigger fish to fry in the first place and you would not have been in the right frame of mind.

With regards to everything else in the post this is beyond deranged behaviour from your friend and I would not be having any more to do with her and the other mutual friends.

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