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Wedding Etiquette Forum

Friend invited to shower and not wedding

My friend is getting married in July out of town. She already gave me my invite, but I can't afford to go so I rsvped no.  My roommate is also friends with the bride but hasn't received an invite yet. I figured they aren't as close so she wasn't going to be invited. Or maybe she's on the B list or something (I have a feeling she is having a B list due the timing of my invitation).

I just received an e-vite to her bridal shower and can see the list of everyone else invited, with many people (including my roommate) who I don't think are invited to the wedding. Maybe they all will be invited and are on the B list? Should I say anything to the bride? To my roommate or one of our other friends invited? Just leave it? "Not my circus not my monkeys" approach?

I don't really approve of her wedding to begin with (and as a result, our friendship has drifted lately) so maybe that's just clouding my judgement? 
Thank you for your advice!

Re: Friend invited to shower and not wedding

  • Your room mate's invite could still arrive and you, yourself, said you think the others aren't invited so you aren't sure. Stay out of it.
  • edited May 2016
    Double post.
                 
  • SP29SP29 member
    Sixth Anniversary 2500 Comments 500 Love Its 5 Answers
    Agreed- not your circus, not your monkeys.

    Definitely rude however. But it is true, these additional guests may end up B listed. Also rude, but it is up to them how they respond.
  • If your roommate or other people not invited to the wedding want to say something to the bride about this, that's up to them. Yes, what she's doing is very rude, but it's not your problem. Besides, if she already knows you disapprove of her wedding (I'll admit I'm curious about this part), she's just going to assume that you're nitpicking and trying to cause trouble for her, and there's no way she'll be receptive. Don't waste your time.
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  • Thanks everyone for the rational responses. Logically, I knew it wasn't any of my business. It's just harder when people close to you are involved. My roommate last night commented about how she wasn't invited to the wedding yet, so the question will probably come up to the bride anyways. One theory my roommate had was that maybe because the wedding is out of town, she is assuming no one would come anyways so why bother inviting people to that whereas the shower is local? Who knows, but not my issue. 
  • SP29SP29 member
    Sixth Anniversary 2500 Comments 500 Love Its 5 Answers
    Thanks everyone for the rational responses. Logically, I knew it wasn't any of my business. It's just harder when people close to you are involved. My roommate last night commented about how she wasn't invited to the wedding yet, so the question will probably come up to the bride anyways. One theory my roommate had was that maybe because the wedding is out of town, she is assuming no one would come anyways so why bother inviting people to that whereas the shower is local? Who knows, but not my issue. 
    Well that would still be rude. Same issue- don't invite a guest to the shower if they are not invited to the wedding (wherever it is located). Hosts should also not make assumptions on behalf of their guests- invite a guest if you want him/her there, let that person decide (hence RSVPs!).

    Does your rommie know you received an invitation?

    If I were your roomie I'd probably ask the bride about it, and say something similar to SouthernBelle- received your shower invite, noticed roomie got a wedding invite, I haven't received anything yet, did it get lost? Yes- no worries, just let me know the date/location! No, I'm not invited- Oh Ok. *promptly mail shower invite RSVP as no*.
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