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Wedding Party

Groom says no to Bride's maid choice

Hi!

My guy, Nate, has been extremely hands on with the wedding. It's a dream come true, actually, and it has proven to be a blessing. Today we had our first head-butting, though, over one of my choices for a bride's maid. I have a friend who is near, and dear to me who, yes, I don't always see eye to eye with, so we can be known to have a fight now and then. Honestly, we're both very passionate, artist type people, when we don't get along it's a bother, but when we do get along it's like she's the best thing in my life besides my guy.

In the past she has proven to have some major etiquette issues at parties, and is not known for being the most conducted person in the room. So, I get why Nate is so hesitant to let her into the wedding party. I told him that we can sit her down, confront her behavior, and work to better it. She's not the kind to blow her top at criticism, and honest feedback. I know she would want a spot in the line up badly, and I believe if we discussed things everything will be alright. Nate, though, well he just won't have it.

Has anyone ever run into this issue, or have any thoughts on how to handle this matter? I'm worried this is going to come down to the sheer fact I can't please everyone, and the Groom WILL come first. =/

Re: Groom says no to Bride's maid choice

  • She herself as admitted she has issues in public. Her drinking is one of those things. I don't think it's mean, or disrespectful to sit her down to have an honest talk about some things she has done in the past. Plus, helping her become better opens the dialogue to help me improve too. I mean, take this post for example - I come off terrible, as if I don't respect my friend the way she is, and as this post progressed we even discussed over skype some of the points you guys have brought up. She's happy for the feedback, and has given some points to myself.

    It's not an intervention, which is what I worry I presented it as, it's more to just get the two to talk, and communicate.

    Sorry about all that gals.
  • Ultimately, it's not up to him who stands on your side, just as it's not up to you who stands on his side.

    That said, if you do want this friend to be one of your bridesmaids, I think you are right that you have to accept her as she is. If you do want to encourage her to work on her issues, then do it without connecting it to being in your wedding party. You can have security available to appropriately deal with her if she gets out of hand at your wedding, but beyond that, you need to leave it alone.
  • Two things:

    1) you pick whoever you want for your side. Nate can do the same. Neither of you have a say in the others' choices.

    2) his person will not change for your wedding. A sit down talk will not work. Presumably she's an adult and has been this way for a long time. Your wedding won't change anything. So either take her as is, or don't.
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  • If her behavior is so out of control in your mind, don't invite her at all. And maybe help her get into rehab. If it's not that out of control, leave her alone. Wanting someone to change themselves for the sake of your wedding is like the ultimate bridezilla behavior.
    QFT


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  • MGPMGP member
    Knottie Warrior 500 Love Its 500 Comments Name Dropper
    edited February 2015
    levioosa said:

    If her behavior is so out of control in your mind, don't invite her at all. And maybe help her get into rehab. If it's not that out of control, leave her alone. Wanting someone to change themselves for the sake of your wedding is like the ultimate bridezilla behavior.
    QFT
    LOVE.  What makes brides think that people are going to want to change these things that haven't changed so far - just for someone else's wedding??  "You know I have wanted to quit drinking/lose weight/whatever for so long now and I never had the motivation to do something about it,  but now that Susie is getting married I better change everything about who I am at the core just so I can make the cut and be in the lineup!"  Said no one ever. . .  

    And the irony of the whole thing is that I can guarantee these brides aren't perfectly behaved supermodels themselves.  I would love to see a bridesmaid sit a bride down and say she won't stand up with her unless she loses her arm fat, fixes her crooked teeth, and gets rid of her bad highlights.
  • I don't agree with these replies. It seems like both your fiance AND you think this could potentially be a disaster.  Sounds like your fiance is just being brave enough to actually tell you how he feels.  I don't think he should have the final say, but I think you need to put some serious thought into this and include his feelings in your decision.  I, personally, don't think you should ever outright ignore your fiance/husband's feelings about any subject, wedding included.
  • Honestly, based on what you said, I probably wouldn't ask her to be in my wedding party because she has a history of being out of line especially when drinking based on what you've said. Do you really think that sitting her down and having a talk with her is going to get her to not drink or limit her drinking on your wedding day? I know at my wedding we started with momosas at 9:00 AM and we're drinking lightly through the day & come the reception I know several of the bridal party did drink too much, but I know I didn't have to worry about their drunk behavior. Once someone is drunk, how they said they would behave while sober, totally goes out the window. That aside, if she doesn't agree with the wedding colors, the style of dress that is selected for the BM or anything else, what kind of drama and stress is that going to bring to your life. For me, picking my BM was about who was important to me, but also wouldn't add any stress or drama to my life and the wedding planning. Do you feel like you would have to babysit her at any wedding functions like a shower, bachlorette party or even during your wedding to make sure that she doesn't get out of control? Yes, not asking her to be a BM could hurt her feelings, but when it comes down to it, if she's going to make this once in a lifetime experience possibly miserable for you, then don't ask her. Because once you ask her, you can't un-ask her if she acts up during an event unless you want to end your friendship with her forever. I vote for skip her as a BM, maybe have her as a reader & save the friendship.

  • scribe95 said:

    I have a slightly different take in that I still think the overall wedding party should be acceptable to both the groom and bride. I don't agree with the his side/my side thing. To me it should represent the couple as a whole and both of you should be comfortable with it. Marriage is about compromise after all. 


    So in theory, for instance, if a bride told her fiance she wanted her ex-boyfriend in the party I believe the fiance should get to object. 

    Having said that, I don't see a real reason to object in this particular case. It doesn't seem like she does anything crazy or illegal etc. I think your fiance is overreacting. But I also wouldn't sit her down and have any kind of a talk. Either she is close enough to you to have her as a bridesmaid as is or she isn't. I don't think there are special rules on behavior for your wedding.
    As you say, there should be a real reason to object. But as with a whole lot of WP drama, the reason has nothing to do with the wedding. If a groom is objecting to an ex-BF on his bride's side, he's insecure about the closeness of their relationship. That has nothing to do with the WP. When this guy is objecting to this friend, he has a problem with the bride's friendship. These are separate issues from the WP itself.
    If the couple has no problem with/no desire to control the other's relationships, this issue should never come up.
  • MGPMGP member
    Knottie Warrior 500 Love Its 500 Comments Name Dropper
    edited February 2015
    scribe95 said:
    I don't think there are special rules on behavior for your wedding.

    There are very specific and super special behavior rules for Bridezilla weddings. As well as strict appearance change timelines so people can fix all of their physical flaws before someone else's special day. Shouldn't you already know these things? :)
  • Someone my husband asked to be in our wedding is a known coke user and an obnoxious "I love you man" type of drunk.  Did I have a single thought of asking him not to be in our wedding? No, because this man is like a brother to my husband. My husband wanted him there. 

    I can't see a guy caring so much about his wife's choice of bridesmaid unless he slept with said bridesmaid at some point. 
    ________________________________


  • She herself as admitted she has issues in public. Her drinking is one of those things. I don't think it's mean, or disrespectful to sit her down to have an honest talk about some things she has done in the past. Plus, helping her become better opens the dialogue to help me improve too. I mean, take this post for example - I come off terrible, as if I don't respect my friend the way she is, and as this post progressed we even discussed over skype some of the points you guys have brought up. She's happy for the feedback, and has given some points to myself.

    It's not an intervention, which is what I worry I presented it as, it's more to just get the two to talk, and communicate.

    Sorry about all that gals.
     
     
    ******************quote box fail*************
     
    I understand your point, i really do...but i do not get why it would be different to have her in the wedding party versus having her as a guest.  Even as a guest she'll have access to booze and get just as drunk and cause the same scene as she would if she was in a dress that you picked out for her.
     
    The wedding party is important for the ceremony.  At the reception, they are the same as the rest of the guests.  So unless your FI thinks this girl is going to be drunk at the ceremony and make a scene while you are physically getting married, i don't understand his objection.  If he was telling you he didn't want her there at all that would make more sense to me than what he is suggesting.
  • Maybe you should have a conversation about her drinking problem and not about how her drinking effects your wedding. 

    Perhaps the bigger picture needs to be put into focus here and not your wedding.

    image
  • My FI has had some issues with people I've known over the years - it happens, not everyone gets along, and sometimes things that don't bother me too much bother him immensely. That said, though, as we've gotten more serious, I've drifted apart from these people, as they aren't people FI and I can both hang out with. 

    FI can't dictate who is and isn't in the WP, so you're going to have to create that boundary. But I would reflect and make sure you understand his concerns (and not just the literal concerns, but where they're coming from - is he afraid this person is embarrassing? Out of control? A bad influence on you and others? Some are valid, some are not.)

    What I will say is that you and FI need to talk, because this is a relationship issue, not a friend issue. You know who your friend is and what she's like.
  • delujm0 said:
    She herself as admitted she has issues in public. Her drinking is one of those things. I don't think it's mean, or disrespectful to sit her down to have an honest talk about some things she has done in the past. Plus, helping her become better opens the dialogue to help me improve too. I mean, take this post for example - I come off terrible, as if I don't respect my friend the way she is, and as this post progressed we even discussed over skype some of the points you guys have brought up. She's happy for the feedback, and has given some points to myself.

    It's not an intervention, which is what I worry I presented it as, it's more to just get the two to talk, and communicate.

    Sorry about all that gals.
     
     
    ******************quote box fail*************
     
    I understand your point, i really do...but i do not get why it would be different to have her in the wedding party versus having her as a guest.  Even as a guest she'll have access to booze and get just as drunk and cause the same scene as she would if she was in a dress that you picked out for her.
     
    The wedding party is important for the ceremony.  At the reception, they are the same as the rest of the guests.  So unless your FI thinks this girl is going to be drunk at the ceremony and make a scene while you are physically getting married, i don't understand his objection.  If he was telling you he didn't want her there at all that would make more sense to me than what he is suggesting.
    Yep. Your FI's reasoning makes no sense, in addition to it being not his business.
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