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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:
outerspacepotato · 17/02/2026 16:41

PyongyangKipperbang · 17/02/2026 16:32

Its overwhelming sometimes to realise that something you have been normalising and telling yourself is "not that bad", brings such horror and disgust to others. It forces you to face facts that are so hard to accept.

I would suggest you look into some relationship counselling for yourself in the first place and then perhaps couples counselling depending on how your individual counselling goes.

No marital counseling. Her husband is emotionally abusive and it is not recommended to do counseling with abusers.

Blades2 · 17/02/2026 16:42

Why did you marry him?
he sounds like a huge dick

BufferingAgain · 17/02/2026 16:43

Don’t get pregnant, get an annulment

Sgreenpy · 17/02/2026 16:44

RosesAndHellebores · 17/02/2026 11:36

I'm on the fence. I got married 35 years ago. The photographer suggested coming to my mother's when I was getting ready. I said no - it felt like a ridiculous invasion of privacy and I didn't want any pictures of me putting on my tights with my hair in rollers.

We had photographs in the vestey and outside the church and a few more at the reception which we limited to 30 minutes because we preferred to be with our guests. No videos.

I kind of agree, weddings these days seem far too focused on 'the wedding day' rather than the marriage and 1000s of photos getting ready/first looks etc seem extreme.

Weddings DO seem to be all about 'The Bride' and not about the poor sod she's marrying 😉

OP look beyond the day? Why did you marry him and vice versa? What are the things that bind you together? Hobbies? Interests? Work? Shared values? Family?
Good luck.
P.s. I've been married 25 years this year.

tootyflooty · 17/02/2026 16:46

He sounds truly awful. My daughter married last year, and the pride on my son in laws face, then and every time I see them together, along with his speech was everything I could wish and more for my daughter, as a mum I feel so angry on your behalf, you deserve so much better. Please think carefully about your future with this poor specimen.

Kidsgotothatschool · 17/02/2026 16:47

PippaToryFripp · 17/02/2026 16:32

Sounds like you wanted the ‘insta worthy wedding’ and invested more time in planning it, than in your search for a life partner. Are you both very young?

Oooo so edgy…

PumpkinsAndCoconuts · 17/02/2026 16:47

On the chance that OP might still be returning at a later date (or somebody in a similar situation might end up reading this thread):

This behaviour sounds insensitive and not very loving. But these are (fairly) isolated incidents and do not tell the whole story.

Is he usually loving? Caring and thoughtful? Supportive
does he lift you up, encourage you? Is he your champion? Do you trust him? Can you talk to each other?

what would happen if you were honest and told your DH that his comments about the dress and you loving the attention hurt you?

those are the things that would ultimately matter most (to me).

edit: If you can’t (or won’t) tell him that his behaviour hurt you? Or if you tried and he was dismissive or otherwise hurtful? That would be an absolute dealbreaker to me…!

ThatCyanCat · 17/02/2026 16:50

PippaToryFripp · 17/02/2026 16:32

Sounds like you wanted the ‘insta worthy wedding’ and invested more time in planning it, than in your search for a life partner. Are you both very young?

It doesn't sound anything like that at all, and I suspect you know it.

Calliopespa · 17/02/2026 16:50

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 17/02/2026 13:50

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?

Edited

In answer to your second question, I wouldn't have thought it was the only possible conclusion anyone could come to, not by any means. People can come to all sorts of conclusions.

However, my personal opinion, on the information we have been given, is that he seems to have an issue that is preventing him behaving in a way that would be normally expected and I tend not to think, where matter of manners and politeness are concerned, that convention is such a negative thing after all. I realise not everyone thinks that way.

To me the most likely thing that is causing him to say or not say the things op has mentioned is insecurity or resentment on his part.

That is bringing my take to it, based on how I would behave and how the people I know would behave - which is really all I can do in response to the op's request for perspective. We will have to leave it to the people who feel "just a dress" was an appropriate response to give their perspective, because for my part I can't see a reasonable explanation without making it up, or supplementing the facts beyond what we have been given.

HighLadyofTheNightCourt · 17/02/2026 16:51

PippaToryFripp · 17/02/2026 16:32

Sounds like you wanted the ‘insta worthy wedding’ and invested more time in planning it, than in your search for a life partner. Are you both very young?

No it doesn’t 🙄

Pallisers · 17/02/2026 16:51

Is he usually loving? Caring and thoughtful? Supportive
does he lift you up, encourage you? Is he your champion? Do you trust him? Can you talk to each other?

Does anyone think that the man described in the original post -on his wedding day - is any of these things??

ZingyLemonMoose · 17/02/2026 16:52

Let me guess, he asks ‘when is international men’s day?’ And says ‘not all men’. Wanker.

Ilovepastafortea · 17/02/2026 16:52

It sounds like, for some reason your husband is jealous. Everyone knows that the Bride is the star of the show at the wedding.

As PP have said it looks like you have a husband problem.

Don't get pregnant just yet.

Nichelette · 17/02/2026 16:56

People who love us are supposed to lift us up. I know we all sometimes get grouchy on occasion, but this seems like more than that. You deserve better x

Cardomomle · 17/02/2026 16:56

Pallisers · 17/02/2026 16:51

Is he usually loving? Caring and thoughtful? Supportive
does he lift you up, encourage you? Is he your champion? Do you trust him? Can you talk to each other?

Does anyone think that the man described in the original post -on his wedding day - is any of these things??

😂absolutely not!

Cardomomle · 17/02/2026 16:57

Sgreenpy · 17/02/2026 16:44

I kind of agree, weddings these days seem far too focused on 'the wedding day' rather than the marriage and 1000s of photos getting ready/first looks etc seem extreme.

Weddings DO seem to be all about 'The Bride' and not about the poor sod she's marrying 😉

OP look beyond the day? Why did you marry him and vice versa? What are the things that bind you together? Hobbies? Interests? Work? Shared values? Family?
Good luck.
P.s. I've been married 25 years this year.

It's not about the wedding.
It's how he treats her.

FunkyFringe · 17/02/2026 17:00

HighLadyofTheNightCourt · 17/02/2026 14:03

It’s not really about the wedding though is it?

It’s all to do with the wedding, otherwise OP wouldn’t be in this situation! She readily admits that she was in a ‘bubble’ and I’m sensing that she got carried away by all the planning (including going along with the wedding planner’s somewhat cringe inducing suggestions). There’s something incredibly shallow about it all.

Now the aftermath, months down the line. The bubble seems to have been burst. She’s no longer the bride, but a wife. The DH, as described, admittedly isn’t the kindest person around, but it would be interesting to hear his take on this whole saga.

Marieb19 · 17/02/2026 17:02

Your husband sounds very immature selfish and a bit of an attention seeker. Hopefully he will grow up and recognise what he has got. Try to put this behind you but proceed with caution.

FunkyFringe · 17/02/2026 17:07

Ilovepastafortea · 17/02/2026 16:52

It sounds like, for some reason your husband is jealous. Everyone knows that the Bride is the star of the show at the wedding.

As PP have said it looks like you have a husband problem.

Don't get pregnant just yet.

A real wedding should not be a ‘show’ but an opportunity to formalise a lifelong commitment.
Yes, have a great party but remember that there are two equal partners.

Notonthestairs · 17/02/2026 17:07

Begrudging a bridal suite or a photographer taking pictures of the bride or being unable to say something pleasant about the bride’s appearance indicates petty jealousy.

What was stopping him asking for more pictures of himself? What was stopping him organising a grooms suite?
Too damn hungover to do anything but scribble nonsense.

And now months later still annoyed he didn’t get sufficient attention.

Cardomomle · 17/02/2026 17:08

FunkyFringe · 17/02/2026 17:00

It’s all to do with the wedding, otherwise OP wouldn’t be in this situation! She readily admits that she was in a ‘bubble’ and I’m sensing that she got carried away by all the planning (including going along with the wedding planner’s somewhat cringe inducing suggestions). There’s something incredibly shallow about it all.

Now the aftermath, months down the line. The bubble seems to have been burst. She’s no longer the bride, but a wife. The DH, as described, admittedly isn’t the kindest person around, but it would be interesting to hear his take on this whole saga.

No, it's what the wedding revealed; his nastiness, cruelty and resentment.
Look at what he said to her. There's no excuse.

stargirl27 · 17/02/2026 17:08

FunkyFringe · 17/02/2026 17:00

It’s all to do with the wedding, otherwise OP wouldn’t be in this situation! She readily admits that she was in a ‘bubble’ and I’m sensing that she got carried away by all the planning (including going along with the wedding planner’s somewhat cringe inducing suggestions). There’s something incredibly shallow about it all.

Now the aftermath, months down the line. The bubble seems to have been burst. She’s no longer the bride, but a wife. The DH, as described, admittedly isn’t the kindest person around, but it would be interesting to hear his take on this whole saga.

What? She says she was in a happy bubble on the day which caused her to overlook/not dwell on the husband's extremely poor behaviour, but that his recent reaction to the photos has brought those feelings up for her again. Not sure how you have deduced she 'got carried away' when the husband is the one who pushed for the bigger wedding! OP also says she felt quite awkward when taking the photos etc. - clearly not the feelings of someone who has got carried away by all the planning or a shallow person.

Even if she had got caught up in the wedding festivities, does this now justify her husband engaging in unkind and frankly humiliating behaviour?

Noodles1234 · 17/02/2026 17:09
  1. did you like the dress? His and anyone else’s opinion means zero.
  2. I’m not bothered too much on his comment of the dress or why you have so many photos. Strange comments maybe, but some men say silly things and yes generally there are more photos of the bride and subjective to some photos of inane objects, to others capturing moments and precious memories. It is natural for some brides to enjoy being pampered and thought of do a change - I also hate being centre of attention but this is the one day I think we finally have a moment to enjoy it.
    I am however feeling sad over the card moment, that is immature to have sent one like that, it’s not funny. And the drinking with mates till 4am, this day is about the two of you.
    Is he usually this immature? I wonder would it be an idea to keep any new high finances quiet just in case.
Sensiblesal · 17/02/2026 17:09

Did you model your wedding on an episode of love is blind?

exchanging letters being captured by the photographers.

maybe he didn’t like all the fuss & what seems like non traditional stuff that was added to the wedding. Or maybe this is the start of him regretting being married. I guess only you know based on if he is like this around you/non wedding things. If he is then you might want to really consider if he is Mr Right

Instructions · 17/02/2026 17:10

He sounds horrible.

I don't understand the people on this thread excusing him, but I suppose their existence makes it obvious why men like him think it is ok to be so cruel to the women they are supposed to love.

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