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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

30th birthday or friend's wedding?

312 replies

petitesongbird · 21/11/2024 14:22

AIBU?

A good friend of mine is getting married. She told me the date whilst in the presence of my fiancé, and I said (rather shocked) oh, that's my fiancé's 30th birthday. I shook it off at the time as I honestly didn't know what to say and said I'd try to sort something.

We've now had the save the date through and we're both invited to the ceremony and the evening reception, but not the meal in between (family only to this part of the day). No children are invited and we have two small children (one is currently only a few months old). The latter point is fine; I totally understand this rule.

The ceremony is at 2pm and the evening reception is at 6pm. It would take 3 hours to travel to the venue from where we live. My fiancé has expressed very clearly to me that this is not how he wants to spend his 30th birthday, for several reasons. The main reasons being the fact if we go together, he doesn't get a proper celebration and will be separated from his children on this birthday, and if I go alone and he takes care of the children, he won't be with me on his 30th birthday, and again wouldn't be able to celebrate properly.

Even if I just attended the ceremony, I'd have to leave by 11am and would return home by approx. 6/7pm (and therefore most of the day will have gone). If I attempted to go solely for the evening reception, I'd have to leave at 3pm and would return home around 1am. Any which way I look at this, the logistics aren't easy but the overwhelming factor for me is that my fiancé stated to me very clearly that all he wants to do is be with his family on his 30th birthday.

Am I therefore being unreasonable by telling this friend I can't attend? She is a good friend, but this is my fiancé, and my gut is in this instance that I need to put my family first. I have previously not attended a friend's birthday when it was my Grandpa's 90th birthday, for example. I just feel like no matter what I do, I'm letting someone down, which is a rubbish feeling.

OP posts:
BERB24 · 26/11/2024 08:52

Book a lovely hotel near the venue, go for a nice meal while everyone is ‘enjoying’ a probably average wedding breakfast, and make it into a weekend celebration. Find a hotel that has babysitting and bring the kids, or leave them with family if you can and enjoy a child free weekend. I would definitely be attending the wedding, you can properly celebrate his birthday the day before or after.

Thistimearound · 26/11/2024 08:53

I’m Team Do What You Want…

On the one hand, birthdays don’t need to be celebrated on the specific day. It doesn’t matter at all…

On the other hand, it sounds a bit of a pain of a wedding anyway with not being able to go to the wedding breakfast and having to leave your actual baby behind, so I don’t think you particularly owe her.

If as a family you’d prefer not to go, don’t go.

GhoulWithADragonTattoo · 26/11/2024 08:54

That wedding sounds rubbish:
It's a long way away.
Kids are not included and
You are not invited for the food.

I'd turn it down for that alone. A bonus you partner can celebrate his birthday on the day.

Acornacorn · 26/11/2024 08:56

A birthday does not trump a wedding! Celebrate his birthday another day. It’s not like you have particular plans already set for it.
I would be very hurt if I were your friend and you prioritised a birthday.

Edingril · 26/11/2024 08:56

GhoulWithADragonTattoo · 26/11/2024 08:54

That wedding sounds rubbish:
It's a long way away.
Kids are not included and
You are not invited for the food.

I'd turn it down for that alone. A bonus you partner can celebrate his birthday on the day.

I would be happy to celebrate my birthday anothet day, or dh his

But yes ignoring that the wedding does not sound easy though so this does sum it up

CrispWinterSunshineBright · 26/11/2024 09:01

OatFlatWhiteForMePlease · 21/11/2024 14:30

i wouldn’t travel 3hrs to any wedding that I wasn’t invited to the meal regardless of the date.

This.

LoquaciousPineapple · 26/11/2024 09:02

BERB24 · 26/11/2024 08:52

Book a lovely hotel near the venue, go for a nice meal while everyone is ‘enjoying’ a probably average wedding breakfast, and make it into a weekend celebration. Find a hotel that has babysitting and bring the kids, or leave them with family if you can and enjoy a child free weekend. I would definitely be attending the wedding, you can properly celebrate his birthday the day before or after.

So spend a large sum of money on a nice hotel, spend a large sum of money on a babysitter, spend a large amount of time and money on 6 hours of travel, spend a large sum of money on a nice meal. And sit around for several hours in after the meal and before the evening do.

All for the wedding of someone who doesn't consider you important enough to pay for you to have their "average wedding breakfast".

Sounds great 🙄

Sparklyhat · 26/11/2024 09:06

A wedding is a one off special occasion, he could celebrate his weekend the previous day or the next. Do you have anyone to have your kids so you and yo ur partner can just go? Then during the wedding meal you’ll have some time free together to go out for a birthday meal of your own

Artistbythewater · 26/11/2024 09:06

BERB24 · 26/11/2024 08:52

Book a lovely hotel near the venue, go for a nice meal while everyone is ‘enjoying’ a probably average wedding breakfast, and make it into a weekend celebration. Find a hotel that has babysitting and bring the kids, or leave them with family if you can and enjoy a child free weekend. I would definitely be attending the wedding, you can properly celebrate his birthday the day before or after.

Why on earth would anyone do this?? The cost of a hotel, dinner, travel, presents, outfits and babysitting is going to be astronomical!!
The bride and groom clearly don’t value their guests at all, leaving them for hours on end without any food or shelter. Such a basic and essential thing to do given the effort that is required.

I would also never use a babysitter I didn’t know. It is dangerous and risky with very young children.

BIossomtoes · 26/11/2024 09:07

Acornacorn · 26/11/2024 08:56

A birthday does not trump a wedding! Celebrate his birthday another day. It’s not like you have particular plans already set for it.
I would be very hurt if I were your friend and you prioritised a birthday.

This. It’s hardly an achievement to reach 30. If it was a 100th birthday it might be different.

Artistbythewater · 26/11/2024 09:09

BIossomtoes · 26/11/2024 09:07

This. It’s hardly an achievement to reach 30. If it was a 100th birthday it might be different.

For some people it is a huge achievement those of us that have had serious health issues.

The point is not the 30th birthday but the brass neck cheek to organise a wedding and not even feed your guests, 3 hours from where they live and expect them to feel welcome?!

Clockgoesback2 · 26/11/2024 09:11

Normally I'd go to the wedding, it's a once in a life time event. I'd not make a fuss if it was my birthday and I'd be a bit suspicious of someone who did. Surely most people celebrate their big birthdays on the closest weekend anyway? BUT the no meal is extraordinary and I wouldn't put myself out to go to a wedding like that. Never heard of that !

Navyontop · 26/11/2024 09:23

I actually think it’s ridiculous to miss a good friends wedding because it’s your partners 30th birthday, I’d just celebrate the weekend after. HOWEVER I also wouldn’t attend a wedding 3 hours away where I was excluded from dinner!! That’s absolute madness!!
Travel all that way and then go get a pizza whilst everyone else eats, that’s wild!!

GoingRoundInOvals · 26/11/2024 09:29

MarceyMc · 21/11/2024 17:29

So she wants you to travel 3 hours for the ceremony, then bugger off whilst they have the wedding breakfast but come back for the evening do? Lol, I would be declining based on this alone. It's a glorified evening invite and I wouldn't travel 3 hours for an evening invite

This. What a weird way of doing the wedding.

I don't agree with evening guests anyway, I feel like it's a 2nd tier kind of thing, but, if you've invited someone for the ceremony, then they stay for the meal! Otherwise where are they meant to go??

ArminTamzerian · 26/11/2024 09:37

Acornacorn · 26/11/2024 08:56

A birthday does not trump a wedding! Celebrate his birthday another day. It’s not like you have particular plans already set for it.
I would be very hurt if I were your friend and you prioritised a birthday.

Twh friend isn't allowed to be hurt, since the.wedding is child free, 3 hours away, and they're not invited to the meal!!

TPJB · 26/11/2024 09:57

A birthday can be celebrated the day before or after. I never understand adults who make a big deal about their birthdays like big kids.

However the wedding sounds a pita with such a big gap in between celebrations.

Abcxyz123user · 26/11/2024 10:13

minicrocodile · 21/11/2024 14:31

What? I'm totally the opposite of this. An adult can celebrate their birthday on a different day and it's fine.

I'd be a bit miffed if someone important to me missed my wedding for an adult who hadn't yet arranged anything for their birthday and couldn't handle celebrating a different day.

And I'd judge any friends who did this too. Usually wedding dates are chosen with loads of considerations and a lot of thought.

But you can't be upset if you didn't bother inviting friend to wedding breakfast and expected her to fill hours until reception twiddling thumbs when the said friend travelled 3 hours one way, leaving small kids behind because you had no kids rule.

Abcxyz123user · 26/11/2024 10:16

Do posters have problem understanding in the context? How can you miss 3 hours to wedding venue, not being invited to the meal and children not allowed?

minicrocodile · 26/11/2024 10:21

@Abcxyz123user

I do agree with you there, the other requirements of the wedding are unreasonable. The only evening guests we had at our wedding were work colleagues who both lived nearby and wouldn't have expected an invite at all.

I should have made it clearer I meant the principle of choosing a birthday over a wedding.

viques · 26/11/2024 10:30

Abcxyz123user · 26/11/2024 10:16

Do posters have problem understanding in the context? How can you miss 3 hours to wedding venue, not being invited to the meal and children not allowed?

Exactly this. The bride knows the OPs family and home situations, yet made these conditions part of the invitation.I don’t think she expects the OP to accept the invitation but is angling for a wedding present.

Acornacorn · 26/11/2024 11:39

ArminTamzerian · 26/11/2024 09:37

Twh friend isn't allowed to be hurt, since the.wedding is child free, 3 hours away, and they're not invited to the meal!!

I think they are different issues though.
In my opinion, choosing not to go to a wedding because it’s a long way away and child free and no wedding breakfast is a good reason. But it sounds like the OP would like to attend on this basis nevertheless. I would too for a good friend.

choosing not to go because it’s your partner’s birthday is a poor reason in my opinion.

HamptonPlace · 26/11/2024 11:41

Lots of people seem to have stated/assumed that the OP is being discriminated against, not being invited to the meal. However, OP's post clearly states that it is family only meal (unusual to be sure). But it is not that other friends are invited to the meal, but not her? No children weddings also not unusual at all.. Birthdays being important for adults? Weird.

Emmz1510 · 26/11/2024 11:55

I wouldn’t go to a wedding where I was only invited to the ceremony and evening do and expected to kill the time in between, plus that was so far away and my kids were excluded and on my OH birthday.
It’s fine to politely decline.

mumda · 26/11/2024 12:32

She's made it easy for you to say you can't go.

Ignore the date clash: You're not invited to everything so it'll mean a nightmare of a couple of hours in-between. And you'll have to find childcare.

I'll expect some mumsnetterers to say "Oh but I love a swan round Tesco[1] in my wedding outfit and heels"

[1] Other shops are available, but it maybe its in the middle of nowhere so a complete and utter ball ache.

Cakemaker2222 · 26/11/2024 12:54

I might have been team wedding if you had been invited to the meal, but to travel 3 hours and not be given a meal is rude. You would not be unreasonable to decline. Try to discuss it with the bride if you can, say how sorry you are to miss it. Give plenty of notice and be very clear in communicating your decision, changing your mind at the last minute is the last thing you want to do.