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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Husband didn’t like how I looked on our wedding day

879 replies

PeppyDenimSheep · 17/02/2026 11:27

I’m not sure if I’m being overly sensitive or if I’m justified in feeling upset about this.
I got married last year and we only recently received our wedding photos. When we sat down to look through them together for the first time, there were lots of pictures of me getting ready with my bridesmaids before walking down the aisle. Obviously, my husband hadn’t seen any of that because he wasn’t in the bridal suite but when those photos came up, he quickly skipped past them without looking. I asked him to go back because I wanted to see them, there were special moments, like my mum helping me into my dress.
As he looked through some of the photos of me in my dress before I walked down the aisle, he said, “Jesus, there are SO many of you, you’re really playing up to the camera.” I actually found the wedding morning quite awkward. I hate being the centre of attention and I’m not a naturally “posey” person and he knows that. Having constant photos taken was outside my comfort zone but the photographer guided me and reassured me I would like how they turned out. Surprisingly, I actually liked the photos of myself, which is rare because I’m usually very self critical. My husband also made remarks about how the photographer seemed to focus on me all day and must have “loved” me. We had a husband-and-wife photography team, so it wasn’t a guy being creepy with me. I explained that photographers typically take more photos of the bride because of the dress, hair, makeup, and flowers, that’s just standard for weddings.

This isn’t the first time he’s made comments like that. In the lead-up to the wedding, he would say things like, “How comes you get a bridal suite? Why don’t I get a groom’s suite?” or make comments that he and his best man would be getting ready in a cleaning cupboard. He also said he could already tell the wedding would be “all about you.” Anyone who knows me knows I’m not that type of person.
A few days later, we showed the wedding photos to some family. My aunt asked him what he thought when he first saw me walking down the aisle and whether my dress was what he imagined. He replied, “I thought it was just a dress.” That comment, combined with the earlier ones, really upset me.
It’s also brought back other things from the wedding that didn’t bother me at the time because I was in such a happy bubblem, but now they do. The night before the wedding, he stayed up drinking with friends until 4 a.m. On the morning of the wedding, we had planned to exchange letters and asked the photographer and videographer to capture it. When my bridesmaid handed me his letter, I opened it in front of everyone with cameras pointed at me. (I already felt awkward being the centre of attention). When I opened it, it was actually a birthday card with a kids cartoon on the front and the word “birthday” crossed out and replaced with “wedding.” Inside, it just said, “To (my name), love (his name).”
People I’ve spoken to say he’s just being a typical man, that men don’t care about these things. I understand that and at the time, none of it really bothered me. But after the comments about me “playing up to the camera,” it’s made me rethink everything. Now I can’t seem to get it out of my head.

Am I being too sensitive?

OP posts:
Solost92 · 17/02/2026 13:37

Would you consider him to be "out of your league" at all? Like is he the handsome popular bloke and you're the kinda geeky quiet girl.

Honestly it doesn't sound like he likes you. We did the letters thing. Well I did. I bought him some cufflinks from a very expensive brand he always awed over and wrote him a letter. He told me he couldn't sleep so he went looking for it becuase he knew I'd do that for him. Obviously he didn't dp shit for me, becuase he didn't care about me.

Yours didn't even not do the letter. He actively did a shit, mean thing that was worse than not doing it.

Do you do alot for him? Do you make his life alot easier. He's not with you becuase he loves you, so why do you think he is with you?

My ex was with me becuase I enabled every part of his life. I did everything for him. All normal chores, I'd run his bath. I'd put his bloody socks on for him, he never had to think about his needs at all, just his wants.

Cardomomle · 17/02/2026 13:37

FunkyFringe · 17/02/2026 13:36

With respect, plenty of men don’t! I remember reading many moons ago about some women wanting to be a bride rather than being a wife, so some women don’t really care either.

That's nothing to do with this situation.

boxofbuttons · 17/02/2026 13:37

It doesn't sound like he likes you very much.

I could understand stuff like not wanting super posed wedding photography, wanting the wedding to feel fancy for him and his groomsmen as well etc. But these are things that could have been discussed before - not just making arsey comments about. Ditto not wanting to do sappy letter exchanges before the wedding - that's not for everyone and clearly isn't for him, but why not say so before rather than make it humiliating?

And then even if he genuinely hated your dress and didn't think it was that nice, anyone with a sense of kindness would say 'you looked lovely', even if they didn't believe it. But he's not even giving you the basic social courtesies you'd do for someone you didn't really know, and you're his wife.

Is he belittling and mean to you in other ways?

FOJN · 17/02/2026 13:39

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 17/02/2026 13:24

Can you accept that it is within the realm of possibility that for a certain type of person being invited to pass comment on their wife's wedding dress in front of other people would constitute "humiliation"?

Or that he wasn't intending to be "horrible", he was just shy, awkward or genuinely not interested?

Or has "the wedding" become such a be all and end all that in order to qualify as a decent husband (or wife depending on circumstance!) for someone who wants all the trappings, you also have to want it or at least make a very very good show of pretending to want it?

All I'm trying to say is that we know very little and that there are other possible explanations and perspectives on this.

And he's clearly not perfect. Might be a bit immature, perhaps a bit selfish. Clearly attached to a friend group that means a lot to him. Maybe he even feels resentful about the wedding. But who's perfect? Who doesn't have less than ideal reactions and emptions? I just don't think that behaving in the way that the OP has described makes him abusive.

Fascinating thread!

Why would it be humiliating to be asked about your thoughts on your wife's wedding dress?

Did you miss the OP saying that she wanted the wedding to just be the two of them and close family but he wanted to include his friends and the wedding just grew?

Hus comments about a grooms suite and getting ready in a broom cupboard give strong MRA vibes.

His comments have had the effect of belittling the OP on multiple occasions. I do not accept you can manage to consistently be an arsehole without even trying. His behaviour is intentional or he has a very unfortunate personality.

Myfridgeiscool · 17/02/2026 13:41

He wanted the bigger wedding so he could invite his mates. They were drinking till 4am together.
He needs a wife. He needs someone to make a home for him and provide him with some children. He wants the family man image I expect.

Over the last decade I’ve learned an awful lot about awful men and their awful behaviour.

This specimen needs ditching, pronto.

Lots of PPs are saying do not have children with this man. Heed this warning, we know what you’ve got coming next if you do.

CuriousOtter26 · 17/02/2026 13:42

Please don't have children with this man. You deserve so much better. The card would have broken me.

safetyfreak · 17/02/2026 13:42

You're a very lucky girl to have such a sweet and caring man! 🤐

pinkyredrose · 17/02/2026 13:42

Snowyowl99 · 17/02/2026 13:16

You obviously don't t like him Very much...do you want to separate,

Seriously? I think it's the husband who doesn't like his wife very much!

mikado1 · 17/02/2026 13:43

Sounds like it suits him nicely that you are generally someone who takes a back seat and doesn't like attention. He didn't like you getting ideas above your station or feeling confident on your own wedding day
This is very hurtful and very sad.
These are the red flags that will continue and will be the thing that ends the relationship whether now or later. I don't say it lightly but better now for you and your future x

WaltzingWaters · 17/02/2026 13:44

Honestly, I’m so sorry but it sounds like the beginning of emotional abuse. Little ways to put you down, destroy your confidence. Please keep this in mind and consider getting out of this marriage.

Calliopespa · 17/02/2026 13:44

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 17/02/2026 13:05

But not everyone talks like this.

Lots of men do, of course. Some out of convention, others out of genuine feeling.

I just don't think that's the measure of a good husband.

And we have no idea what he's like as a person and what their relationship is like day-to-day.

It is of course possible that the OP has just married the wrong man. That she needs someone who's more obviously like her in exactly these kinds of ways, because these are the things that really, really matter to her. Nothing wrong with that! But him not meeting her expectations is not necessarily abusive. Could just be a major personality clash.

But not everyone talks like this.
Lots of men do, of course. Some out of convention, others out of genuine feeling.

That's true up to a point - particularly immature teens.

But you would think by the time a guy is getting married he would be mature enough to manage a "flowery" word like "lovely" to refer to his bride.

Pinkwatch · 17/02/2026 13:45

Passingthrough123 · 17/02/2026 12:28

I fear you're at the start of a long, slippery slope into an emotionally abusive marriage (or worse) and if you were my daughter I'd be very, very worried for you.

He started to show you he was a bully before the wedding and now he's not even bothering to hide it. He will continue to put you down and chip away at your self-esteem until all that's left of you is a shell of the young woman you were before you married him.

In an ideal world, you'd leave him now. But until you're ready to do so, pull him up every single time he tries to denigrate and bully you and please, please confide in someone close about how he's making you feel.

I’m sorry OP, and I’m also sorry that the majority of the posts have surprised you. When reading your posts, I imagine you as being kind, perhaps someone who puts others first, but perhaps already with quite low confidence and self esteem. It’s taken guts actually to post what you have here and I hope you’re OK.

For me, the post above sounds scarily correct. I can’t imagine that the things you’ve described are the only things that are going to erode your self esteem further. Or was it the only such examples - bad as they are - and completely out of character to be shocking.

It was so much harder for women to walk away from this sort of behaviour in our grandparent and beyond generations. I hope that you will prioritise YOU and the rest of your life when reflecting on what’s happened and deciding your next steps. I would also not use the family who say this is normal as listeners, if you think it would be helpful I’d find an independent person such as a counsellor. For you Flowers

dentalflosser · 17/02/2026 13:45

If he is like this at the wedding then I’m afraid there could be issues if you both decide to have children. He could get stroppy when you have an ultrasound, when people talk to you about your pregnancy.
He could say that you’ve made the birth all about you even though we all know it should be about you as you’ve carried and nurtured the baby. If people direct questions to you about the baby then he could get mardy.
The list will be endless I’m afraid and I really suggest giving your future serious consideration.
Sending you a hug xx

mikado1 · 17/02/2026 13:46

WaltzingWaters · 17/02/2026 13:44

Honestly, I’m so sorry but it sounds like the beginning of emotional abuse. Little ways to put you down, destroy your confidence. Please keep this in mind and consider getting out of this marriage.

Sadly agree. He will be the husband who minimises any pregnancy or labour and never takes a picture of you with your baby.
His own self esteem is probably low and he's belittling you to boost himself.

PruthePrune · 17/02/2026 13:47

What's he like day to day?

whattheysay · 17/02/2026 13:48

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 17/02/2026 13:24

Can you accept that it is within the realm of possibility that for a certain type of person being invited to pass comment on their wife's wedding dress in front of other people would constitute "humiliation"?

Or that he wasn't intending to be "horrible", he was just shy, awkward or genuinely not interested?

Or has "the wedding" become such a be all and end all that in order to qualify as a decent husband (or wife depending on circumstance!) for someone who wants all the trappings, you also have to want it or at least make a very very good show of pretending to want it?

All I'm trying to say is that we know very little and that there are other possible explanations and perspectives on this.

And he's clearly not perfect. Might be a bit immature, perhaps a bit selfish. Clearly attached to a friend group that means a lot to him. Maybe he even feels resentful about the wedding. But who's perfect? Who doesn't have less than ideal reactions and emptions? I just don't think that behaving in the way that the OP has described makes him abusive.

Fascinating thread!

I don’t accept that being asked about your wife’s wedding dress is humiliating. For a certain person it may be embarrassing to be asked that and maybe they are shy about talking about feelings in front of other people but that does not make it alright. Most people can be embarrassed and not be cruel to their wife and not make sure their audience is well aware they are putting their wife down.

I don’t see how anyone can read the ops post and think oh poor thing he is not into weddings, he resents his own wedding so it’s understandable he will speak to his wife like shit and make her feel like shit because it’s clearly her fault he had to go through with the horror that is a wedding to become married.

All the things you mention might be within the realm of possibility but are we going to scrape the bottom of the barrel to find excuses for this man so that she tolerates his behaviour. That’s gaslighting her more than her husband is doing.

HighLadyofTheNightCourt · 17/02/2026 13:49

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 17/02/2026 13:32

Yes, that's of course entirely possible. I'm asking you whether you accept that there are other possibilities too?

If it happened as the OP states then the fact is he was incredibly unkind and there isn't really another possibility.

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 17/02/2026 13:50

Calliopespa · 17/02/2026 13:44

But not everyone talks like this.
Lots of men do, of course. Some out of convention, others out of genuine feeling.

That's true up to a point - particularly immature teens.

But you would think by the time a guy is getting married he would be mature enough to manage a "flowery" word like "lovely" to refer to his bride.

Is that "maturity"?

Or just a willingness to bow to convention?

Either way, some people just cannot or do not want to conform to this expectation, and I personally think that's fine.

Where that leaves the OP is another matter.

But @Calliopespa, do you think, going strictly by the information provided by the OP, the only possible conclusion anyone could ever arrive at is that the new husband is horrible and/or abusive?

ForEdgyHare · 17/02/2026 13:50

Jeeeeeeez OP this is just awful behaviour of him. Honestly if this is his reaction to a day that is - HELLO! All about the bride then whats he gonna be like when its your baby and you get loads of attention!?

MrsBrianJones · 17/02/2026 13:50

I'm so sorry this happened to you. It's not normal, he's cruel and despicable and you're not too sensitive. I know this is hard to hear but I'd throw him back, he's not Husband material and your life will be miserable especially if you have kids.

Imagine in labour and ' You're making it all about you/ why is it taking so long/ other women manage/ don't make all this fuss/ you're not ill...' and once baby is here, he could even be jealous of it.

If you were my daughter I'd do all I could to help you out of this. Better to get out now, you can absolutely start again and there's no shame in admitting he's not for you, that you thought he was but the marriage isn't working. Save yourself the misery of a life with this man.

Big hug!

AppleDumplingWithCustard · 17/02/2026 13:51

I don’t understand the huge fuss made about weddings and I cringe at some of the things that people include ie. the exchange of letters etc. but unfortunately you have hitched yourself to a nasty bastard. He doesn’t love you and it seems that not only does he not even like you, but actively despises you. I wouldn’t be making any long-term plans OP. In fact I’d be looking into regaining my single status.

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 17/02/2026 13:53

HighLadyofTheNightCourt · 17/02/2026 13:49

If it happened as the OP states then the fact is he was incredibly unkind and there isn't really another possibility.

Thanks for your reply! I find this level of certainty absolutely fascinating!

Ohnobackagain · 17/02/2026 13:53

StarlingTheConqueror · 17/02/2026 12:06

@PeppyDenimSheep I’m sorry. 💐💐

Im quite used to read posts on here that make me rage.
But your OP just left me with a deep sadness. Sadness for you agd tge life you thought you were going into, for a day that was such a happy time for you and this man basically shit all over it. And over you.

To answer your question in your OP, nope you’re not being too sensitive. He’s been awful, really awful.
im sorry. 😢

I agree with this @PeppyDenimSheep it’s really sad. He sounds awful.

wfhwfh · 17/02/2026 13:54

JayJayj · 17/02/2026 12:07

Don’t have children with this “man”
I would consider divorce.

His response isn’t a man response at all. You ask my husband and his friends what they thought about their wives when they first saw them, I can guarantee they would all say how beautiful we looked.

I agree with this. If he’s resentful of you being centre of attention at the wedding, he will be 1000% worse if you get pregnant. He’ll be resentful of your maternity leave; impatient with your tiredness; and ultimately jealous of the baby.

This is not a good man. This is a petulant man-child - and they often turn VERY nasty.

RapunzelHadExtensions · 17/02/2026 13:54

InterestedDad37 · 17/02/2026 11:33

It's not 'men don't care about these things', it's your husband doesn't care about these things. Plenty of men actually do.

I'm looking across at my birthday card from DP right now which was incredibly thought out, and filled both sides with the most wonderful and heartfelt words. He does it every occasion.

Your H sounds horrible OP and like he's jealous of you getting any praise or affection.