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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:
summerjumper · 19/02/2026 13:56

What mean, and nasty things he’s said and done. I wonder if he was ready to get married and now blaming you, when he didn’t have the guts to tell you he might not have wanted to when it came to it. Does he go out a lot or stay late at work too? Run for the hills and don’t look back. Defo do not have kids with this man. I speak from experience. Sending you lots of hugs and strength xxx

ItsOkItsDarkChocolate · 19/02/2026 14:03

BustyLaRoux · 19/02/2026 11:15

Well I am glad MN has helped you see him for what he is. But I am obviously gutted for you to find yourself in this situation. I was worried my post may be too blunt and have you run in the other direction and say “he’s really not that bad!!” (I have been there).

So now you see him. Grand performative gestures just to be perceived to be an amazing guy by others. Fragile ego needing constant praise and attention. Putting you down to make himself feel bigger. It won’t get better.

It isn’t your fault. He probably love bombed you and made you feel amazing. Your friends and family reinforcing what a catch he is, how envious they are! The boiling frog analogy is very apt.

It’s really positive you’ve clocked him for what he is. It’s painful, yes. But it’s the first step. Well done you! Some people take years and years (and end up utterly broken) to get to this stage. You’re here!

So now what?

The hard part now is keeping up the momentum. Trust me. It will be very easy to slip back into the old ways. Ignoring what you now know. Letting him
be nice to you, charm you, remind you why you fell for him. You’ll tell yourself he isn’t that bad. It’s not like that all the time. And maybe some of this is your fault too…… it’s a trap!!! Your brain will probably want to take the easier path. The one where you don’t throw a grenade at your life! The one where he can make everything OK again and you can slip back into the rhythm of the comfortable life you have and let yourself be loved and cared for. But you’ll know inside it isn’t real. It’s just for show. And it’s temporary. It will blow up again. You’ll decide to leave. Then you’ll lose momentum and end up staying and telling yourself it’s OK really. On repeat. Don’t fall for it.

Talk to your friends and family. Make it real. Tell them what is happening. It’s harder to stay once other people know what you know. It’s embarrassing. You may even feel ashamed that you married him. But tell them. They would want to know. They love you. My friends have been an amazing sounding board. No one judged (apart from one person!) and no one pushed me. But the unanimous opinion was “you deserve better. It’s not your fault. How can we help? We are here if you need us”

Look into the Freedom Programme. Not all of it is applicable. I remember thinking “but he isn’t like how you describe”. But it is helpful and empowering.

It’s hard, but doable. Each hurdle can be overcome. Small steps. Remember: this will pass. A year from now you will feel strong and empowered if a little battered emotionally. You’re young and you have so much to look forward to without this ass hat of a man bringing you down. You don’t need fancy holidays and grand gestures. Repeat: he is not a good man.

I am absolutely rooting for you. If ever you want to DM me, please do so. If not then good luck sister!!!! You can do this! 💪

Also, absolutely this! With bells on!!

ItsOkItsDarkChocolate · 19/02/2026 14:41

Littlejellyuk · 19/02/2026 10:16

@PeppyDenimSheep

The BustyLaRoux Comment nailed it 💯

In essence you married an inflated-ego owning, big gesture performative, posing, demeaning, nasty, little Jekyll and Hyde CUNT.

It will never get better in the long run.
Get your affairs in order and LEAVE. 💯

Well said! 👏🏻

k8jr · 19/02/2026 14:45

Wow. Your husband sounds like an arse.

I absolutely hate when people say that's just what men are like. It isn't. Good ones exist, and you shouldn't accept less.

He sounds like he has an inferiority complex. Is he always like this? Sounds like his negativity, moaning etc is a way to chip away at you, probably a way to try feel in control/control you/excuse his own poor behaviour.

Question if you're really that happy and if you want more for yourself. You're definitely not being unreasonable. He sounds unkind and deliberately rude.

Crudd99 · 19/02/2026 15:23

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.

And if they don't they happily go a long with them with a smile because they matter to you. He sounds selfish and resentful towards you.

MeMeMeMeOw · 19/02/2026 15:39

He gets worse with the OP's update.

GameOfJones · 19/02/2026 19:00

Oh lovely. Nobody should be swearing at you or calling you names. Least of all the person that's meant to love you. That isn't love, it's abuse.

Peppermintpatty24 · 19/02/2026 19:13

I voted yabu, purely for the fact that you went ahead and married that "thing".

ailsamaryc · 19/02/2026 20:48

He is jealous, and trying to pull you down

Kelly1969 · 20/02/2026 01:39

Aww I’m sorry OP, your hubby is so insensitive and frankly quite petty and childish, and sometimes it’s only something like a wedding that brings this kind of behaviour/attitude out into the open.
I assume he didn’t get ready in a cleaning cupboard?!
I think sometime wedding planners push their ideas on to the couple that they wouldn’t consider in a million years.
I think the letter idea is sweet do some but it’s not something I’d want to do, and if I did it wouldn’t be in public!
Im sure he’s not as awful as some are saying on here, but he should learn to consider your feelings

ChocolateDigestiveBiscuit · 20/02/2026 01:57

He doesn't like you, he's oddly jealous of you. It's going to get much, much worse. Divorce immediately. Your future awaits. Don't delay.

ChocolateDigestiveBiscuit · 20/02/2026 02:08

Yes, the alarm bells of gay, trans etc also rang for me. (Be how you are but don't marry a woman and be an arse to her).

Emonade · 20/02/2026 08:36

ChocolateDigestiveBiscuit · 20/02/2026 02:08

Yes, the alarm bells of gay, trans etc also rang for me. (Be how you are but don't marry a woman and be an arse to her).

This is mental. Gay men dont mardy women and then behave appallingly annd abuse them. He is a misogynist.

ChocolateDigestiveBiscuit · 20/02/2026 12:58

Emonade · 20/02/2026 08:36

This is mental. Gay men dont mardy women and then behave appallingly annd abuse them. He is a misogynist.

Oh my sweet summer child.

glitterchops · 20/02/2026 17:05

Emonade · 20/02/2026 08:36

This is mental. Gay men dont mardy women and then behave appallingly annd abuse them. He is a misogynist.

Unfortunately some of the most misogynistic men I have ever met in my life have been gay men. Being gay doesn't guarantee you of being an ally for women nor a decent person.

Iceyday · 20/02/2026 20:25

Very kindly OP, I believe your tears, anxiety and upset is your gut screaming at you to get away from this awful man and protect yourself.

You have been ignoring your gut, hence the tears despite his self serving big Valentine gesture.

Your gut knows the gesture was not about you, but about him.
It is desperate for you to wake up snd escape him.

When you do escape his emotional abuse of you, which it undoubtedly is, I believe your mental health will improve immeasurably.

Start with confiding in true friends, but ultimately trust yourself.

Emonade · 20/02/2026 20:58

glitterchops · 20/02/2026 17:05

Unfortunately some of the most misogynistic men I have ever met in my life have been gay men. Being gay doesn't guarantee you of being an ally for women nor a decent person.

Goodness

ElmBeechOak · 21/02/2026 18:06

BustyLaRoux · 19/02/2026 11:15

Well I am glad MN has helped you see him for what he is. But I am obviously gutted for you to find yourself in this situation. I was worried my post may be too blunt and have you run in the other direction and say “he’s really not that bad!!” (I have been there).

So now you see him. Grand performative gestures just to be perceived to be an amazing guy by others. Fragile ego needing constant praise and attention. Putting you down to make himself feel bigger. It won’t get better.

It isn’t your fault. He probably love bombed you and made you feel amazing. Your friends and family reinforcing what a catch he is, how envious they are! The boiling frog analogy is very apt.

It’s really positive you’ve clocked him for what he is. It’s painful, yes. But it’s the first step. Well done you! Some people take years and years (and end up utterly broken) to get to this stage. You’re here!

So now what?

The hard part now is keeping up the momentum. Trust me. It will be very easy to slip back into the old ways. Ignoring what you now know. Letting him
be nice to you, charm you, remind you why you fell for him. You’ll tell yourself he isn’t that bad. It’s not like that all the time. And maybe some of this is your fault too…… it’s a trap!!! Your brain will probably want to take the easier path. The one where you don’t throw a grenade at your life! The one where he can make everything OK again and you can slip back into the rhythm of the comfortable life you have and let yourself be loved and cared for. But you’ll know inside it isn’t real. It’s just for show. And it’s temporary. It will blow up again. You’ll decide to leave. Then you’ll lose momentum and end up staying and telling yourself it’s OK really. On repeat. Don’t fall for it.

Talk to your friends and family. Make it real. Tell them what is happening. It’s harder to stay once other people know what you know. It’s embarrassing. You may even feel ashamed that you married him. But tell them. They would want to know. They love you. My friends have been an amazing sounding board. No one judged (apart from one person!) and no one pushed me. But the unanimous opinion was “you deserve better. It’s not your fault. How can we help? We are here if you need us”

Look into the Freedom Programme. Not all of it is applicable. I remember thinking “but he isn’t like how you describe”. But it is helpful and empowering.

It’s hard, but doable. Each hurdle can be overcome. Small steps. Remember: this will pass. A year from now you will feel strong and empowered if a little battered emotionally. You’re young and you have so much to look forward to without this ass hat of a man bringing you down. You don’t need fancy holidays and grand gestures. Repeat: he is not a good man.

I am absolutely rooting for you. If ever you want to DM me, please do so. If not then good luck sister!!!! You can do this! 💪

Wow, great post, @BustyLaRoux.

AlexStocks · 21/02/2026 18:33

Some men simply don't like the trappings...? Does he normally like make-up and such? My own husband thinks make-up is gross and that's ok.

MarilynAE · 21/02/2026 19:05

He is a killjoy who has to slap down any appearance of fun and enjoyment. People like that show their (mostly jealous) feelings in a sneaky but brutal way calculated to make you feel insecure. try to see his comments for what they are...a sign ofhis own insecurities.

MarriedTwiceOneGrownUpDaughter · 21/02/2026 19:10

Tell him to go f* himself.

B33cka8 · 21/02/2026 19:41

It might be worth cutting your losses darling, he doesn't sound like a kind person and he doesn't seem to think of you and your wants or needs. Life is much much too short. And these are the things he says out loud!

B33cka8 · 21/02/2026 19:43

ItsOkItsDarkChocolate · 19/02/2026 14:03

Also, absolutely this! With bells on!!

Likewise, it's all this!

B33cka8 · 21/02/2026 19:44

AlexStocks · 21/02/2026 18:33

Some men simply don't like the trappings...? Does he normally like make-up and such? My own husband thinks make-up is gross and that's ok.

It's absolutely not ok to be rude and horrible about someone else because you don't like makeup. Let's not justify this shitty behaviour.

AnotherSunnyDay7 · 21/02/2026 19:55

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?

I'm a guy. This isn't "typical man" behaviour like your friends are suggesting. Your husband sounds like a di*k.