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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Husband embarrassed when I felt unwell

586 replies

OneBrightCrow · 05/04/2024 11:18

My husband and I were at the wedding of one of his uni friends on Wednesday. It was a great day however I came over unwell during the speeches, probably due to not having enough to eat before a couple of Proseccos. I was not drunk at all, but came over pale, felt clammy and like I was going to collapse. I didn’t want to cause a fuss by getting up and leaving, but felt so awful that I put my head down on the table. I understand that this could have looked rude but I’m pretty sure the other tables did not notice, and everyone on our table could see that something wasn’t right.

Despite asking my husband to just leave me be for a few minutes, he persisted in trying to get me to leave the room, but his persistence was really not helping, and I tried explaining that if I stood up I was afraid I would collapse or be sick, and I absolutely did not want that to happen.

He wouldn’t let it go so eventually I managed to stand up and sat outside for a bit until I felt better; but I wasn’t quite right for the rest of the day. I chose not to drink any more, but even after multiple glasses of water I was struggling with the noisy room and drunk people getting a bit close for comfort. We found a quiet room with a sofa where I sat for a while, and he asked if I wanted to leave. I said no but we argued when I tried encouraging him to rejoin the party so that he could see his uni friends that he rarely gets to see, including his best friend who had come just for the evening reception; but he kept saying we should be there as a couple.

He got a bit arsey, questioning how I was feeling and saying that he has never known me to “do this” as though I was choosing to behave this way. I said I felt very pressured by him, and was hurt that he had been more concerned about how I was appearing to other people than whether I was OK!

He eventually stormed off and returned about half an hour where we argued again, so I just grit my teeth and rejoined the party even though I still felt unwell.

It’s left me feeling quite hurt about it, and even when I tried talking to him about it (thinking that now he’s sober he would be a bit apologetic) he maintains that putting my head on the table was rude and we would have to agree to disagree.

Am I being unreasonable in feeling hurt??

OP posts:
Thread gallery
20
Sparklfairy · 05/04/2024 16:15

for the record, we had to pull over on the Taxi drive home for my husband to vomit on the side of the road (and his shoes/suit trousers) but I didn’t make him feel bad for this.

And the award for most epic of all drip feeds goes to...!

Seriously, why only mention this now? Was he not in the least bit sheepish!?

ggggggooooo · 05/04/2024 16:15

ZoeCM · 05/04/2024 15:53

Posters on both sides are completely overreacting.

The simplest explanation is usually the correct one. Yes, it's possible OP was genuinely sick, but odds are she was just a bit drunk. I don't think OP would have mentioned the Prosecco in two of her posts if she didn't know deep down it was relevant. Drunk people are always saying "I only had a couple." The posts about ableism, and how the OP's husband should have been worried about her well-being, are a bit melodramatic - as I say, she'd probably simply had a bit too much to drink.

On the other hand, the posts about how mortifying it is that the OP distracted everyone during the speeches and so on are melodramatic as well. A wedding guest got a bit drunk and face-planted into the table. It's embarrassing, but it happens. People need to let go of this idea that a wedding day is ruined if everything goes exactly to plan. It's just a party; the marriage is the important part.

Of course the drink was relevant. Alcohol is what causes the catastrophic drop in blood pressure. That still doesn't mean she was drunk in fact this sort of drop in blood pressure can occur with half a glass. . But you seem determined to believe she was paralytic drunk and it's all her fault. Why? Why are you so keen to talk this stance in the face of several people saying this has happened to them and the links I have posted about the condition.

Otherstories2002 · 05/04/2024 16:16

OneBrightCrow · 05/04/2024 16:12

definitely noted. Although it may have been self inflicted in the sense that I should’ve eaten more prior to the wedding, I don’t think it’s quite the same as being paralytic.

although I’m not a heavy drinker, I certainly don’t usually respond this way to alcohol. I had a similar episode without alcohol when out for dinner with work friends, but they were v compassionate so perhaps I’m comparing and expecting similar from my husband.

for the record, we had to pull over on the Taxi drive home for my husband to vomit on the side of the road (and his shoes/suit trousers) but I didn’t make him feel bad for this.

If I was questioning whether you were drunk I’m not now.

You should have left.

ggggggooooo · 05/04/2024 16:17

@hotwheelshell

She surely should know not to drink at all then!
no. Because it can be fine fir years and then suddenly not fine. It cam happen once or it could happen all the time now .

ggggggooooo · 05/04/2024 16:20

Itsnotallaboutyoulikeyouthink · 05/04/2024 15:33

Well you would have looked pissed by putting your head on the table. How embarrassing for you both.

Oh no. She was unwell. How embarrassing.
Are you 12? Do you honestly get embarrassed when someone is unwell? Jesus now that is embarrassing. Being embarrassed and not concerned. How do people like you cope in life going around feeling embarrassed just existing. I'd hate to be so insecure and feeble

ggggggooooo · 05/04/2024 16:21

hotwheelshell · 05/04/2024 15:30

Even if OP wasn't drunk, she would have looked absolutely slaughtered to anyone watching

You mean like people having a diabetic episode or with cerebral palsy. They look drunk. Do you find them embarrassing too?

K0OLA1D · 05/04/2024 16:21

Sparklfairy · 05/04/2024 16:15

for the record, we had to pull over on the Taxi drive home for my husband to vomit on the side of the road (and his shoes/suit trousers) but I didn’t make him feel bad for this.

And the award for most epic of all drip feeds goes to...!

Seriously, why only mention this now? Was he not in the least bit sheepish!?

Op probably assumed she'd be answered by normal everyday people who have a bit of empathy for someone not feeling too good. But no, she's been jumped on by the 'I only sniff a sherry' at Christmas brigade, who apparently think someone putting their head on a table feeling dizzy, is the height of embarrassing things a person could do

PinkIcedCream · 05/04/2024 16:23

Your DP is a dick!

If my DP had felt pale and gone clammy I’d want to be sure he was ok, not berating him for potentially embarrassing us in front of strangers.

Seriously, who gives a fuck what a room full of randoms think? 🤷🏻‍♀️

K0OLA1D · 05/04/2024 16:23

PinkIcedCream · 05/04/2024 16:23

Your DP is a dick!

If my DP had felt pale and gone clammy I’d want to be sure he was ok, not berating him for potentially embarrassing us in front of strangers.

Seriously, who gives a fuck what a room full of randoms think? 🤷🏻‍♀️

Half of mn apparently. As well as judging said person

Notinthemood12 · 05/04/2024 16:24

K0OLA1D · 05/04/2024 16:09

Hilarious yes. Well done.

Thank you 🎉🎉🎉

DistinguishedSocialCommentator · 05/04/2024 16:24

Singleandproud · 05/04/2024 11:22

Putting your head on the table was odd compared to stealthily excusing yourselves and going to the bathroom.

Edited

I totally agree
In hindsight, I guess the OP would have been better of asking her DH to help her to the outside.

If I saw someone with their head flat on a table, what am I supposed to conclude?

K0OLA1D · 05/04/2024 16:26

DistinguishedSocialCommentator · 05/04/2024 16:24

I totally agree
In hindsight, I guess the OP would have been better of asking her DH to help her to the outside.

If I saw someone with their head flat on a table, what am I supposed to conclude?

That they weren't feeling the best? That they could probably do with a glass of water? Fucking hell.

Sparklfairy · 05/04/2024 16:26

K0OLA1D · 05/04/2024 16:21

Op probably assumed she'd be answered by normal everyday people who have a bit of empathy for someone not feeling too good. But no, she's been jumped on by the 'I only sniff a sherry' at Christmas brigade, who apparently think someone putting their head on a table feeling dizzy, is the height of embarrassing things a person could do

I must be really strange, because other people being embarrassed on my behalf is something I give no fucks about. In the OP's shoes, I would give no fucks about my DH being embarrassed about me feeling faint, and I certainly wouldn't care about judgy strangers on the internet judging me. Firmly a 'them' problem IMO and usually points to low self esteem on their part.

PollyPut · 05/04/2024 16:26

You got a bit drunk on an empty stomach; he was embarrassed. I'd stop expecting him to apologise to you and try to forget about the whole thing

K0OLA1D · 05/04/2024 16:27

Sparklfairy · 05/04/2024 16:26

I must be really strange, because other people being embarrassed on my behalf is something I give no fucks about. In the OP's shoes, I would give no fucks about my DH being embarrassed about me feeling faint, and I certainly wouldn't care about judgy strangers on the internet judging me. Firmly a 'them' problem IMO and usually points to low self esteem on their part.

Mad isn't it. I have a 'do' frequently. I'd just be walking around embarrassed all the time.

K0OLA1D · 05/04/2024 16:27

PollyPut · 05/04/2024 16:26

You got a bit drunk on an empty stomach; he was embarrassed. I'd stop expecting him to apologise to you and try to forget about the whole thing

Edited

Maybe read the ops posts

NoraBattysCurlers · 05/04/2024 16:28

Your husband should not have acted the way he did.

In saying this, the thread should be re-titled "Two drunks at wedding had fight".

Magnastorm · 05/04/2024 16:28

DistinguishedSocialCommentator · 05/04/2024 16:24

I totally agree
In hindsight, I guess the OP would have been better of asking her DH to help her to the outside.

If I saw someone with their head flat on a table, what am I supposed to conclude?

If you were a reasonable person, you'd conclude "oh, hope that person is ok".

But apparently lots on here would think it mortifying, which is fucking laughable by any normal standard.

hotwheelshell · 05/04/2024 16:28

ggggggooooo · 05/04/2024 16:17

@hotwheelshell

She surely should know not to drink at all then!
no. Because it can be fine fir years and then suddenly not fine. It cam happen once or it could happen all the time now .

I was relying to a poster who said she knows she's can't drink and that perhaps OP was the same and that was her excuse.

OneBrightCrow · 05/04/2024 16:30

Geebray · 05/04/2024 15:00

Wait a minute. Bit of a drip feed.

Did you have any wine with your meal?

No, I’d brought my Prosecco to the table. I don’t mind Prosecco but don’t do well with non fizzy wine (I have psoriasis which flares if I have too much wine), so I just had the remainder of my Prosecco for the meal, and some water.

OP posts:
hotwheelshell · 05/04/2024 16:30

You mean like people having a diabetic episode or with cerebral palsy. They look drunk. Do you find them embarrassing too?

It's a wedding. Most likely conclusion that people would jump to is overconsumption

DistinguishedSocialCommentator · 05/04/2024 16:30

K0OLA1D · 05/04/2024 16:26

That they weren't feeling the best? That they could probably do with a glass of water? Fucking hell.

Edited

Watch your language kid.

You completely forgot sp was with DH. WTH should I ask her if she wants a "glass of water."??

AliceMcK · 05/04/2024 16:31

A lot of people blaming you for having Prosecco on an empty stomach. It’s sounds more than that if it continued. You don’t get those symptoms just because of a bit of fizz on an empty stomach.

This type of thing happens to me, always has even as a child and can happen in any situation. I have health issues which exacerbates these type of things. The last time it happened wasn’t that long ago. I’d had a couple of glasses of Prosecco too and not eaten. Lunch was served and I thought I’d feel better afterwards but I got worse to the point I would have put my head on the table if I could, my DH wasn’t next to me otherwise I would have led into him. Instead I started to make a move to get up shaking but had to make others move to get out, I said quietly to an in-laws I wasn’t feeling well, they shuffled others out of my way and held my arm until I got somewhere I could lie down, next room with a sofa, if it had been envy further I’d have been gone. Everyone continued chatting ignoring me not making a fuss. No one was upset. Eventually after some water and quiet time it passed, as it dose and I was back at the table with Prosecco about 45 mins later. Still not 100% but enough for me to have a glass of fizz and see the day out.

Head on the table would be a situational thing for me. Because I’m use to this happening I can gauge if I’m going to go quickly or not. I think my first choice would be like my head on DHs shoulder or say I need to to leave with me as I think I’m going to faint. But my DH is extremely supportive and knows my signs too. He’d never ever be embarrassed to help me.

K0OLA1D · 05/04/2024 16:32

DistinguishedSocialCommentator · 05/04/2024 16:30

Watch your language kid.

You completely forgot sp was with DH. WTH should I ask her if she wants a "glass of water."??

My language is quite OK as it is.

Because her husband was being a knob? And it would have been the decent thing to do?

K0OLA1D · 05/04/2024 16:33

AliceMcK · 05/04/2024 16:31

A lot of people blaming you for having Prosecco on an empty stomach. It’s sounds more than that if it continued. You don’t get those symptoms just because of a bit of fizz on an empty stomach.

This type of thing happens to me, always has even as a child and can happen in any situation. I have health issues which exacerbates these type of things. The last time it happened wasn’t that long ago. I’d had a couple of glasses of Prosecco too and not eaten. Lunch was served and I thought I’d feel better afterwards but I got worse to the point I would have put my head on the table if I could, my DH wasn’t next to me otherwise I would have led into him. Instead I started to make a move to get up shaking but had to make others move to get out, I said quietly to an in-laws I wasn’t feeling well, they shuffled others out of my way and held my arm until I got somewhere I could lie down, next room with a sofa, if it had been envy further I’d have been gone. Everyone continued chatting ignoring me not making a fuss. No one was upset. Eventually after some water and quiet time it passed, as it dose and I was back at the table with Prosecco about 45 mins later. Still not 100% but enough for me to have a glass of fizz and see the day out.

Head on the table would be a situational thing for me. Because I’m use to this happening I can gauge if I’m going to go quickly or not. I think my first choice would be like my head on DHs shoulder or say I need to to leave with me as I think I’m going to faint. But my DH is extremely supportive and knows my signs too. He’d never ever be embarrassed to help me.

No decent person would. Or judge you for feeling off.

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