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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Hen Do From Hell... Is It Worth Trying to Fix?

418 replies

ohwhatisinaname · 09/04/2025 23:12

I just spent 3 days in the most bizarre, uncomfortable hen do I've ever experienced, to the point I moved my flight up by a day to get home early. I can't tell if I was in the wrong for leaving, or if the bride was wrong for being generally awful to everyone .

For context, 9 of us on the trip, age 35-40, half were exhausted mums, one pregnant with twins. It was in a foreign country, bride wanted an all inclusive resort, there were 3 last minute no shows, one was the bride's sister/MOH who had recently had a miscarriage, though I now wonder if she also didn't want to deal with the bride's attitude as she has likely been getting the worst of it at home. One of the people who bailed was a close friend of mine, who was in a bad work situation, I ended up covering her cost so that the others didn't have to. So all in, this 3 day trip cost me at least 2.5 grand just on the flights and hotel.

Issues:

  • The bride picked the hotel, but hated it, kept complaining about it, the food, the drinks, the setup, the beach wasn't clean enough, there weren't enough deck chairs etc.
  • There were too many rooms and not enough people due to the last minute changes. Several of us were alone, so once ready would go see others and have a drink or just catch up while waiting. It was all on a group message "come to my room if ready and we can go from there to dinner" type things, but the bride didn't like people comingling without her. Once a group was 5 minutes late to an organised pre-cocktail dinner and we were all called out for our behaviour and lack of consideration. The dinner didn't start for at least another 45 minutes, so there was no harm. Towards the end of the trip we were told to stop using the group message as the bride was getting upset that people were talking re. plans (when to meet, where to meet etc) and she felt excluded.
  • The bride repeatedly had arguments, of her own instigation with almost (if not all) of the hen do attendees. She picked at everyone for all of their wrongs. She kept saying that people had come for a holiday, not for her hen do. That people had their own agendas, that they weren't paying her enough attention, they weren't good friends etc. It was a weird verbal lashing each day of wrongs. It was like she wanted people to plead for her friendship, when we were all there to celebrate her.
  • There was a boat ride that three of the group including myself did not go on due to a mix of sea sickness/pumping for baby at home. It was extremely windy, and I for one am violently seasick. The bride said that this was ok, then changed her tune later, and decided that I was persona non grata for not going. I did still pay for the trip without question, just didn't get on the boat.
  • The boat ride party met a stag do out there and made friends (mostly married guys not looking for anything, though one or two moderate creepy ones), I think the bride didn't like that some of the guys were into some of her friends, but not her (also not me, but I think she took it personally due to some weight gain insecurities).
  • The guys had a table at a club later which some girls wanted to go to as the bride wanted to go out and she hadn't planned anything properly. I hate clubs, but the bride back in the day was on all of the drugs and into the rave scene, so some of the girls are still into that vibe (to be clear, this is not me at all, though to each their own). The bride had an argument with her oldest BFF at the club, went to the toilet with me and then fled into the night, drunk, by herself at 2am in a foreign country. As soon as we realised she wasn't in the toilet we tried to find her, one of the girls did get her and walked her home. I offered to leave, and have it in writing in messages, but I was instructed to stay with one girl who didn't bring out a phone and another who was drunk and high, basically as a responsible adult. The next day I went to breakfast and was given the silent treatment from the bride for not coming home immediately with her, when she explicitly told me not to.
  • I then felt horrible about the atmosphere, and having to spend a full day at a beach club proclaiming how sorry I was or fighting my corner on not doing anything wrong. My anxiety got out of control, I text the bride that I was going to head home and that I loved her and hoped that she had the best trip, but I didn't want a blow up and to ruin our friendship. She read it and never responded, so I left.

The things that I/the others could be at fault for:

  • People dropping out last minute (3 including the MOH)
  • There was no bride type activities. No bring lingerie or a quirky gift for fun, no bride games, no sash, no drinking games. I think that she was really hurt by this. I am not a bridesmaid though, so I don't think this was my place to plan. But this could bring merit to her "people on holiday not my hen do" comment.
  • No one posted any photos of the weekend, though I suspect now it might be at the request of the bride as she has gained a little weight and isn't happy about it.
  • We didn't all time our breakfasts, lunches etc to be together at the hotel, though the hotel was ridgid that only 6 people could sit at a table so we would be separated anyway.
  • The hotel messed up the dinner reservations on the first day/the party didn't check, so we went to a crappy place in the all inclusive and couldn't start till 9pm. We had all been up for flights since 4 so we just went to bed right after instead of staying out.
  • Some of the brides friends definitely arranged the second group hangout with the stag do party. She didn't like this at all.
  • I'm definitely at fault for leaving early. It's been 3 days and i've not heard a peep from the bride.

The question is, is there any coming back from this? Should I even try? We have a 15 year friendship, which isn't super close now as we live far apart. Should I just bite the bullet and cancel my flights to/from the wedding? Thats about another 2 grand and its 2 days before a trip I have half way across the world. She is stubborn. She in the past has been a very good friend to me when we lived in the same place. I am hoping that she has gone bridezilla and this is temporary, but what if it's not? I worry if I miss the wedding then our friendship is done, or maybe in a month i'll just not get the official invite and it will be done for me, but I have flights already, young children and it would be good to know one way or another.

OP posts:
QueefQueen80s · 15/04/2025 09:24

I can’t believe people pay this much for going to weddings/hen dos..

CruCru · 15/04/2025 18:22

Someone upthread said to just not RSVP. Please don’t do this. Even if you don’t end up being friends any more, a place at a fancy US wedding may cost hundreds of dollars.

ohwhatisinaname · 15/04/2025 19:52

As a quick update, its a week later and I've heard crickets from the bride. I've officially cancelled my flights. Texted the bride the following (bachelorette = hen do, used her terms as she is the American), didn't hear anything back, which isn't really a surprise.

"Hi Bride, I wanted to reach out to you after the bachelorette party. I know that it didn't go the way that either of us were expecting, and after taking a break to think, I think that I can see things from both sides a little better. It is clear that the ball was dropped re. planning, and in retrospect you are right, it did not feel like a bachelorette/your party. There were no decorations, no games, nothing about you/husband to be. (Shitty) Friend texted me on the day of the party to ask me to bring XXX from my party, which I didn't have (as just one example), so clearly nothing was planned. You were understandably unhappy. It felt like you were upset and instead of talking, it became a self fulfilling prophecy of having a shitty time, made worse as people were constantly being taken aside for verbal beatdowns. As to why I left, I hate clubs. I stayed at the club with Friend 1 and Friend 2 as one was drunk/high and the other was phoneless. I tried to find you when you ran away from the club without telling anyone, you responded to my messages, which show an obvious timeline of what happened, I offered to find you, walk you home, do whatever you wanted. I knew another friend was with you, so I stayed to help get your friends home safely. I came down to breakfast to see you and have a fun day celebrating you at the beach club, only to be met with silent treatment. The thought of spending another day with arguments, set my anxiety over the edge, and I moved up my flight. I wish that we had spoken in person, but you blanked me, I messaged you, and you didn't respond. I honestly don't know where we go from here. I love you, I want you to be happy and to have the best wedding possible. After all this is said and done, I don't think I feel comfortable coming to the wedding. You deserve a stress free environment, to celebrate your love with your family and friends. I'm sorry for how this turned out. I would really like to take you out in NYC when I'm back next to talk properly. Please take care of yourself. If you need anything, I'm always here.

OP posts:
Elfie111 · 15/04/2025 20:08

ohwhatisinaname · 15/04/2025 19:52

As a quick update, its a week later and I've heard crickets from the bride. I've officially cancelled my flights. Texted the bride the following (bachelorette = hen do, used her terms as she is the American), didn't hear anything back, which isn't really a surprise.

"Hi Bride, I wanted to reach out to you after the bachelorette party. I know that it didn't go the way that either of us were expecting, and after taking a break to think, I think that I can see things from both sides a little better. It is clear that the ball was dropped re. planning, and in retrospect you are right, it did not feel like a bachelorette/your party. There were no decorations, no games, nothing about you/husband to be. (Shitty) Friend texted me on the day of the party to ask me to bring XXX from my party, which I didn't have (as just one example), so clearly nothing was planned. You were understandably unhappy. It felt like you were upset and instead of talking, it became a self fulfilling prophecy of having a shitty time, made worse as people were constantly being taken aside for verbal beatdowns. As to why I left, I hate clubs. I stayed at the club with Friend 1 and Friend 2 as one was drunk/high and the other was phoneless. I tried to find you when you ran away from the club without telling anyone, you responded to my messages, which show an obvious timeline of what happened, I offered to find you, walk you home, do whatever you wanted. I knew another friend was with you, so I stayed to help get your friends home safely. I came down to breakfast to see you and have a fun day celebrating you at the beach club, only to be met with silent treatment. The thought of spending another day with arguments, set my anxiety over the edge, and I moved up my flight. I wish that we had spoken in person, but you blanked me, I messaged you, and you didn't respond. I honestly don't know where we go from here. I love you, I want you to be happy and to have the best wedding possible. After all this is said and done, I don't think I feel comfortable coming to the wedding. You deserve a stress free environment, to celebrate your love with your family and friends. I'm sorry for how this turned out. I would really like to take you out in NYC when I'm back next to talk properly. Please take care of yourself. If you need anything, I'm always here.

I think your message was perfect. This is almost an identical situation to what happened to me when I was a bridesmaid. I’ve never spoken to the bride ever again. Like you the door was open for her to respond but she didn’t. So I was happy to leave the toxic girl to it.

I think you did the right thing. You seem confident and self assured but just for what it’s worth: you did nothing wrong here. Even your parting message was kind.

She will look back on this and cringe.

Her ‘big day’ cost her a load of mates.

♥️

Coolasfeck · 15/04/2025 20:23

£4.5k on someone else’s wedding? Wild!!!

I’ve been hearing about this new type of crack people have been smoking. Sounds like it’s good?

jenny38 · 15/04/2025 20:26

You sent a balanced, well thought out message. Not grovelling, and not angry. If I received this I would want to respond. If she doesn't, then that's her loss. Look after yourself op, you have behaved well

SpidersAreShitheads · 15/04/2025 20:36

jenny38 · 15/04/2025 20:26

You sent a balanced, well thought out message. Not grovelling, and not angry. If I received this I would want to respond. If she doesn't, then that's her loss. Look after yourself op, you have behaved well

She might not respond because then she’d have to acknowledge that she was partly to blame for it all, and that doesn’t sound as if that fits her narrative right now.

Good message OP, very fair and balanced. The lack of games/decorations were clearly a failure by the MOH so you could have gone even harder, but you didn’t.

I hope she sees sense and gets back to you but if not, you can hold your head up high. Cancelling the flights was the smart choice - hopefully you are feeling ok about it all 💐

NewAgeNewMe · 15/04/2025 20:41

It’s hard to lose a friendship of long standing and it hurts. You seem a good friend so her loss 💐💐

outofofficeagain · 15/04/2025 21:11

You have behaved impeccably. She has not.

I suspect she is too embarrassed to respond.

DancingDucks · 15/04/2025 21:12

I'm so glad that I got married at a time when you'd just go to the local Chinese restaurant for a meal and get pissed.

ThinWomansBrain · 15/04/2025 21:53

Motherearthisbusy · 10/04/2025 01:08

This sounds like a legacy friendship.
Don’t go to the wedding. Trust me you won’t be friends in a years time either way. Save your money.

if she's as awful as she sounds, it's unlikely she'll still be be married in a year.

Pull out of the wedding, and let her know why.
If your 'insider' friend still attends, you can keep a tally of the numbers boycotting.

RampantIvy · 16/04/2025 07:08

ThinWomansBrain · 15/04/2025 21:53

if she's as awful as she sounds, it's unlikely she'll still be be married in a year.

Pull out of the wedding, and let her know why.
If your 'insider' friend still attends, you can keep a tally of the numbers boycotting.

The OP has updated.

DoddlesMcDoddle · 16/04/2025 07:49

DancingDucks · 15/04/2025 21:12

I'm so glad that I got married at a time when you'd just go to the local Chinese restaurant for a meal and get pissed.

Yep, the best of times. Now women feel the need to keep up with the Joneses, when the Joneses are selfish rich twats.

Keep it simple. Inexpensive. Fun.

PopeJoan2 · 16/04/2025 08:16

I don’t agree about your message being good. I think it is all about you. Instead of just saying that you understand her frustration tmyou get into the blame game annd justify your own bad behaviour. And it perpetuates the conflict. A lot of mumsnetters love this kind of drama. For some reason they like to encourage people to hurt others. If I was the bride I would have preferred it if you just stayed silent. A polite no to the wedding invite would be enough.

The bride definitely owes you an apology but if I was her friend I would advise her to say nothing as a response in kind to your message would just escalate the feud. I hope you feel you can let this go now. And I hope that she has nicer friends to make her wedding day special.

DoddlesMcDoddle · 16/04/2025 08:33

PopeJoan2 · 16/04/2025 08:16

I don’t agree about your message being good. I think it is all about you. Instead of just saying that you understand her frustration tmyou get into the blame game annd justify your own bad behaviour. And it perpetuates the conflict. A lot of mumsnetters love this kind of drama. For some reason they like to encourage people to hurt others. If I was the bride I would have preferred it if you just stayed silent. A polite no to the wedding invite would be enough.

The bride definitely owes you an apology but if I was her friend I would advise her to say nothing as a response in kind to your message would just escalate the feud. I hope you feel you can let this go now. And I hope that she has nicer friends to make her wedding day special.

On the contrary! I think the message was nothing about OP, and was basically genuflecting and kissing Bridezilla's arse. OP was a wet lettuce in that message. She ignored the hurt she felt, and made it all about Bridezilla and didn't tell Bridezilla the home truths she needed to hear.

RampantIvy · 16/04/2025 09:03

PopeJoan2 · 16/04/2025 08:16

I don’t agree about your message being good. I think it is all about you. Instead of just saying that you understand her frustration tmyou get into the blame game annd justify your own bad behaviour. And it perpetuates the conflict. A lot of mumsnetters love this kind of drama. For some reason they like to encourage people to hurt others. If I was the bride I would have preferred it if you just stayed silent. A polite no to the wedding invite would be enough.

The bride definitely owes you an apology but if I was her friend I would advise her to say nothing as a response in kind to your message would just escalate the feud. I hope you feel you can let this go now. And I hope that she has nicer friends to make her wedding day special.

There's always one, isn't there?

I totally disagree with you. I thought the OP's message was a very balanced one.

DancingDucks · 16/04/2025 11:01

PopeJoan2 · 16/04/2025 08:16

I don’t agree about your message being good. I think it is all about you. Instead of just saying that you understand her frustration tmyou get into the blame game annd justify your own bad behaviour. And it perpetuates the conflict. A lot of mumsnetters love this kind of drama. For some reason they like to encourage people to hurt others. If I was the bride I would have preferred it if you just stayed silent. A polite no to the wedding invite would be enough.

The bride definitely owes you an apology but if I was her friend I would advise her to say nothing as a response in kind to your message would just escalate the feud. I hope you feel you can let this go now. And I hope that she has nicer friends to make her wedding day special.

Couldn't disagree more. To bride didn't exactly treat her friends well, I don't know how you can think otherwise to be honest. Being a bride doesn't entitle someone to behave in a shitty, entitled way.

Christmaschildcare · 25/06/2025 21:28

Did you ever hear from her @ohwhatisinaname x

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