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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Not invited to wedding - AIBU?

506 replies

Cheesehound · 13/04/2025 08:30

Help me out Mumsnet hivemind, please. I don’t know what to do/think and what is unreasonable or not. I’m confused basically!

Background - the Bride and I have been close friends for 15+ years. We now live miles apart and have very busy lives and kids etc but have remained close, messaging and calling regularly. She is like a sister to me. She was also one of my bridesmaids when I got married. Last year she asked me to be one of her bridesmaids for her upcoming wedding later this summer and I very happily accepted. I’ve been busy arranging the hen do with the other bridesmaids, who I have never met and live close to the Bride. Bride has been a little vague on wedding day arrangements but I understood it to be a ceremony with celebrant at a stately home followed by a reception after.

Bride messaged me last week to say that she was having a legal ceremony followed by a meal the following day, which was attended by the other bridesmaids and their families, essentially meaning that she is now married and the wedding is now a party later this summer - albeit one where there is a celebrant, wedding and bridesmaid dresses, hair and makeup etc, the full deal that you’d expect of a wedding, except - she is already married…and I wasn’t there! The other bridesmaids didn’t mention it to me in our hen-do chat either.

I’ve gone back through our wedding WhatsApp and there is a small mention of legal arrangements needing to be made - as in one single message about it, not an invite, just a statement of fact. I’ve been really preoccupied with personal stuff lately but was sure I hadn’t missed anything and I haven’t.

I haven’t felt able to say anything as I don’t want to spoil this time for her but AIBU to feel hurt and disappointed that I wasn’t there? I’m paying £ towards a hen-do and the expectation was for my family (DH and 3 young DC) and I to go to the wedding later this year. I could have gone down by myself to be there.

My DH is angry on my behalf and is really not keen about going to the ‘wedding’ as it will be £ and was going to be a bit of a trek with our kids anyway but he was looking forward to it and now it’s well, feeling a bit flat.

What would you do? Would you say anything? AIBU? I don’t want to spoil our friendship but what friendship?!

OP posts:
Nanny0gg · 13/04/2025 10:40

NoBodyIdRatherBe · 13/04/2025 10:36

She didn’t invite her own parents, I wouldn’t be offended. She just needed some witnesses so they made a bit of a day out of it.

And left one person out?

Never2many · 13/04/2025 10:41

I can’t believe the number of people who are making excuses for this woman.

While it might be the norm to have a ceremony a couple of days before the party in lieu of legalities, it really is not normal to get married several months before the fake wedding, before which you’re expecting hen do’s and bridesmaids, and not telling everyone that you’re already several months in.

Let’s be honest here.

The OP has had her wedding day.

She’s married.

The OP is no longer a bridesmaid because the OP is already married.

The party in a few months time is a party. Fair enough if it’s a party to celebrate the wedding of several months before, but then guests need to be aware of that.

OP is no longer a bridesmaid. At the very least she’s an actress.

The friendship might be important to the OP but it certainly isn’t important to the bride.

And I wonder how many presents and/or cash she is expecting.

PinkiOcelot · 13/04/2025 10:45

HuffleMyPuffle · 13/04/2025 09:56

Some of you are just being vile and trying to get the OP to actually cause a fight with Bride when bride probably didn't see this as anything other than registering a birth or death.

Do you not go to a funeral because the legal bit was done in private? Or a baptism/christening because the baby was registered without you?

Why was it all hush hush then?!

grandnational · 13/04/2025 10:45

Never2many · 13/04/2025 10:41

I can’t believe the number of people who are making excuses for this woman.

While it might be the norm to have a ceremony a couple of days before the party in lieu of legalities, it really is not normal to get married several months before the fake wedding, before which you’re expecting hen do’s and bridesmaids, and not telling everyone that you’re already several months in.

Let’s be honest here.

The OP has had her wedding day.

She’s married.

The OP is no longer a bridesmaid because the OP is already married.

The party in a few months time is a party. Fair enough if it’s a party to celebrate the wedding of several months before, but then guests need to be aware of that.

OP is no longer a bridesmaid. At the very least she’s an actress.

The friendship might be important to the OP but it certainly isn’t important to the bride.

And I wonder how many presents and/or cash she is expecting.

What about UK Muslim weddings then, where the civil marriage (if held) is usually done separately? Do you think the big wedding with a religious ceremony is 'not a wedding'?

I've been at a couple of weddings where the legal ceremony was held beforehand - the 'proper' wedding was the big party with loved ones and extended family.

valentinka31 · 13/04/2025 10:46

Sometimes friends do werid unexpected stuff that hurts. Then you have to make a decision, because talking about it can make it much worse and/or no point because the fact is they did it, they chose to do this like this.

So I'd say unless you are prepared to lose the association all together, then I'd let it go, go to the wedding as planned, be the bridesmaid etc, go to the hen do, and just feel quite sad inside. Other choice is ask for an explanation and then you kind of lose the option of just letting it go, because it will always be something between you.

I imagine she did it because you are far away. But what was wrong was not telling you.

Watermill · 13/04/2025 10:47

I think it’s totally naff to pretend you are getting married, full dress, bridesmaids etc when it’s a total lie. They are already married, and chose not to invite you. I would be really hurt.

If you want to attend the pretend wedding, that’s up to you. I would find it really cringeworthy.

NoBodyIdRatherBe · 13/04/2025 10:50

Nanny0gg · 13/04/2025 10:40

And left one person out?

She left everyone out, including her own parents and family.

alwaysdeleteyourcookies · 13/04/2025 10:51

So I'd say unless you are prepared to lose the association all together, then I'd let it go, go to the wedding as planned, be the bridesmaid etc, go to the hen do, and just feel quite sad inside.

What an utterly shit way to live life. Why go to expensive parties that make you feel sad because so-called friends behave selfishly? If the friendship goes, it's not on OP.

FeelinTwentySixPointTwo · 13/04/2025 10:51

Gently, I think you're overthinking a bit, OP. As pps have said, lots of people have the "legal bit" before the wedding party and consider the celebration party to be the main event.

The fact that she only invited a few friends who live locally to the legal bit underlines the fact that she wanted it to be low key. Inviting you - even though you're a bridesmaid - resets the boundaries for the whole thing. Eg if you're travelling miles to be there then there's pressure to also invite groomsmen/family/whoever who live a distance away. And suddenly the small legal bit becomes an actual party. Which isn't what she wanted.

She obviously values you to have invited you to be bridesmaid. And she probably hasn't communicated this very well. But don't make this a slight on you when it most likely isn't.

I've been in the bride's shoes (sort of). Me and DH were planning to have a registry office wedding with just our mothers as witnesses. But then the dads felt left out. And the step-mothers on both sides. Which then meant we felt obligated to invite all the brothers and sisters. And their plus ones and kids because you can't really invite one half of couple, or not invite their kids. So two witnesses became a party of 20-odd who we then needed to cater for. It was lovely but it was certainly not what we had planned. Perhaps I should've kept it down to just two witnesses.. but that would've meant people feeling left out, like the OP here.

MissScarletInTheBallroom · 13/04/2025 11:04

Trovindia · 13/04/2025 09:59

Some of the replies here are mind blowing. Calling the actual marriage "the legal bit" and the sham of a pretence later "the wedding"?

It's the legal bit that's the wedding! A wedding is a marriage ceremony ie the "legal bit".

OP I would be very hurt in your shoes and I would have to have a conversation with the bride to find out what had happened and why I had been excluded.

I don't think that's making it all about you, you were supposed to be included and your feelings matter as well.

This is a very common thing to do and I have never seen anyone get so het up about this point in real life as they do on Mumsnet.

The only issue here is that the OP has been treated differently to the other bridesmaids and that the bride hasn't explained the reason for this.

JustMyView13 · 13/04/2025 11:12

I can 100% see why you’re miffed. And I can imagine feeling that way too.
I, like others, wonder whether she didn’t want to put you out (lugging the family up) for something that to her was more a formality. Was it originally just her, DH & 2 witness but family drama meant it had to become more?

Anyway, I think none of that matters.

What matters is her wedding is exactly as she and her DH want it. You’re obviously important to her, that’s why she’s asked you to be a BM & come to the event in the summer. You can either say something & create a drama, or take it in good grace, help her to celebrate in the way she wants to, and just make a mental note of this for the future. I’d do the latter.

shewasasaint · 13/04/2025 11:17

The only issue here is that the OP has been treated differently to the other bridesmaids and that the bride hasn't explained the reason for this.

It's a very important issue. The legal ceremony beforehand, not months beforehand, with witnesses is normal in some countries.

But the bride has behaved badly by not letting on to one of her bridesmaids till the day before. The other bridesmaids have never mentioned it in their chats. That's odd too. Hurtful behaviour.

Nanny0gg · 13/04/2025 11:28

NoBodyIdRatherBe · 13/04/2025 10:50

She left everyone out, including her own parents and family.

But I'm assuming they knew about it

Why invite 3 out of 4 bridesmaids plus partners and keep it quiet?

Assume there's a 'secret' WhatsApp group for that

Shelby2010 · 13/04/2025 11:32

It doesn’t really matter if the bride considers the summer party her ‘real wedding’. The fact is that she is married and if they decided (for whatever reason) not to go ahead with the party then she would still be married!

Roseyposeysuposey · 13/04/2025 11:48

I would be hurt too in your position.
The key question (and apologies if I’ve missed the answer in your posts) is how and when did you find out about the details of legal ceremony?

Was it before or after the event? Had you seen her or talked to her that week for instance and she hadn’t mentioned it very soon before the actual day?

At what point did you realise that it had happened and that the other bridesmaid had attended? How did she tell you? Did she tell you or did you find out via social media? You say that you saw photos. Was that how you found out?

If you had talked to her and she hadn’t mentioned it, even close to the day then that’s odd, isn’t it? Especially if you share other news with each other.

I don’t think you can decide whether or not it’s reasonable for you to be hurt until you know the full circumstances. Trust in your friendship. You mean enough to her that she asked you to be her bridesmaid don’t forget that.

You could just ask her a one liner, which is “why did you not invite me? “

See what her explanation is and then you can decide whether or not you should be hurt.

PinkyFlamingo · 13/04/2025 11:54

Cheesehound · 13/04/2025 08:37

Thanks @IntheSpaghetti - I think I will do this, just planning what/how to say it. I don’t want to make this about me but I am hurt.

Of course it's about you, it takes two to have a friendship and she's done something really odd by not inviting you

ohdearagain2 · 13/04/2025 11:55

One of my bridesmaids asked me to be their bridesmaid - she was getting married in Australia and then having a second wedding in France as her hubby was French.
I planned to go to the Australia wedding - she asked me not to as she wanted to try and make the French wedding more authentic - ie not people going to both but feeling emotional for the wedding they go to.

it didn’t really work - she herself was as not emotional as she was already married - but she did the planning with the best of intentions and it was her wedding after all

i also had a friend have a registry ceremony - sometimes there is space limitations

I think go with your gut - you love this person so would prob go to her village just for a party so see this as that

totally understandable your feelings are hurt though

PinkyFlamingo · 13/04/2025 11:59

Cheesehound · 13/04/2025 08:46

Absolutely @Ketryne - I haven’t said anything as of yet and honestly may never do. Our friendship is important to me. I would never go in all guns blazing as a) it’s not my way and b) I don’t want to upset her or make this all about me, it’s her thing. I might just have to sit on my feelings really and just enjoy the hen do and summer celebration.

More fool you then if you don't say anything, you say her friendship is important to you, sadly it doesn't look like yours is to her

TwentyTwentyFive · 13/04/2025 12:00

Nanny0gg · 13/04/2025 11:28

But I'm assuming they knew about it

Why invite 3 out of 4 bridesmaids plus partners and keep it quiet?

Assume there's a 'secret' WhatsApp group for that

Indeed. I'm honestly amazed so many posters seem to think excluding the OP (the one bridesmaid to not attend) is perfectly normal behaviour.

The actual wedding day didn't all happen last minute so it's obviously been planned elsewhere if it was never discussed on the WhatsApp group so they all chose to actively exclude one of the wedding party and the OP is meant to be fine about this.

PinkyFlamingo · 13/04/2025 12:05

roses2 · 13/04/2025 09:31

I think you are making a mountain out of a molehill, I've been to several weddings like this and also had one myself as DH is not from the UK.

There is the legal bit where everyone wears nice clothes, goes to the registry office, signs the papers and goes for a meal with a small group of people.

Then there is the "wedding day" where everyone gets dressed up in bridal wear, photographers, make up, large party etc.

I wouldn't be put out by her approach - completely normal.

I think you're missing the fact the OP wouldnt be bothered by this either, it was the fact it was kept a secret from her and she wasnt invited.

CantStopMoving · 13/04/2025 12:05

LuellaB · 13/04/2025 10:27

Hi OP, I’m doing this later in the month before my wedding in June. My sole bridesmaid (my sister) won’t be there, and very likely the best man won’t either - it’ll just be us and a couple of witnesses. I have said to a few other friends “oh if you’re around”, but it’s very much please don’t go out of your way, the wedding (in a church in another country) is in six weeks and that’s the real thing. It does feel odd that it wasn’t at least mentioned at some point, although to be honest I’m not telling my dad’s side of the family about the separate legal wedding to avoid a full palaver. It’s possible she just didn’t want a fuss! And who knows, perhaps she intended it to be very small and the other bridesmaids wanted to bring kids.

Depends on how you look at it. Your actual date of marriage is the first one. That is the date of your actual wedding anniversary and the ‘real thing’ as marriage is contract of which you sign at the register office on the UK. I can understand that some people feel they want to be there for the moment where you actually sign the marriage contract. Your second ‘wedding’ in church is actually just a blessing . A lovely celebration all the same and we have been to several of these weddings abroad but we knew going to it that that the couple were already married. Don’t diminish it in any way as they were lovely celebrations but saying ‘you are now man and wife’ when they already were is a bit odd.

Streaaa · 13/04/2025 12:06

I think it takes effort to exclude one bridesmaid and her family like this.

I cannot imagine why.
Not a single word on the WhatsApp group which would make me think there is another group?

I certainly wouldn't be arranging a hens do for after she is married.

I certainly wouldn't be dragging my family to an expensive party if it didn't suit.

Definitely ask why and reflect on the answers.

But too much effort was made to exclude you and your family for whatever reason.

Life is too short to keep people that hurt you around with such thoughtlessness.

I cannot imagine how someone would not be hurt by such actions.

TwentyTwentyFive · 13/04/2025 12:09

Streaaa · 13/04/2025 12:06

I think it takes effort to exclude one bridesmaid and her family like this.

I cannot imagine why.
Not a single word on the WhatsApp group which would make me think there is another group?

I certainly wouldn't be arranging a hens do for after she is married.

I certainly wouldn't be dragging my family to an expensive party if it didn't suit.

Definitely ask why and reflect on the answers.

But too much effort was made to exclude you and your family for whatever reason.

Life is too short to keep people that hurt you around with such thoughtlessness.

I cannot imagine how someone would not be hurt by such actions.

Exactly.

All those saying she probably sees the party in the summer as her wedding etc seem to be completely ignoring how much effort went into keeping all this a secret.

Blondeshavemorefun · 13/04/2025 12:10

Cheesehound · 13/04/2025 09:48

@AprilBunny Both sets of parents are alive and well - neither set were there. One lives locally and one further away.

Omg. That’s even worse

friends went to the wedding but the parents not invited

I would have been really upset if mini blondes did this

FeelinTwentySixPointTwo · 13/04/2025 12:18

I cannot imagine how someone would not be hurt by such actions

Try and use a bit of imagination then? The easy thing to do here would be to make it about you and be hurt. But it's arguably better for the OPs mental health and for the future of her friendship with the bride to reflect on the fact that she wasn't invited because they only asked close friends who live locally. No family or other friends travelled to be there.

Inviting the OP would have changed the expectations for all those friends and family who live further away, and turned the event into a Big Thing rather than the low-key local legal bit it sounds like the bride and groom were intending.

If you're only inviting close friends who live locally you're not as expected to host; nobody will be forking out for hotels and there's not as much of an expectation on other events (meals or whatever) taking place around the ceremony. Whereas if the OP has been invited then this potentially opens the floodgates to feeling obligated to invite family who live further away too.

Let's not forget the bride and groom's own mums, dads, brothers, sisters, and wider family (presuming they have family) weren't at this wedding. As it stands the bride and groom can simply explain they were just inviting local friends along as witnesses. But the minute you invite the OP that's changed and it opens the floodgates to a whole load more people being upset and disappointed.

The bride hasn't handled this brilliantly but the way to deal with it would be through an honest conversation, rather than allowing yourself to be hurt by something that really isn't about you.