Wedding Etiquette Forum

Weird situation:

Hello, 
I'm posting this here because I want to see if anyone else has experienced this or knows if I handled this the correct way. 

A few months ago, I was looking for bartenders for my wedding. I had been introduced to two women through a mutual friend who said they would do it, they were a team.  

Recently, one of the women were in a horrible motorcycle accident and ended up passing away.  

My mom heard what happened, she knew she was one of my bar tenders and she asked her friend if she could do it instead so I didn't have to worry about it. I didn't ask my mom to do this, but I'm not mad she did it. 

I talked to my friend who hooked me up with these initial bartenders and he said that she could still possibly do it. I felt bad when he told me that and explained what my mom did to remedy my bartending situation. 

I just messaged the other bartender and told her basically I was sorry with what happened to her friend and because of everything that happened I wouldn't need her anymore. I never signed a contract with her and I felt so bad I just profusely apologized. 

I just want to know if I did the proper thing or if there was a better way to go about it? I felt like it was a sensitive situation, so I waited a little while before telling her. I felt so bad. 

Re: Weird situation:

  • I think I would have let it be her choice.

    This. You should have asked her if she still wanted to work your wedding.
    Image result for someecard betting someone half your shit youll love them forever
  • ASHBOHOBO said:
    Hello, 
    I'm posting this here because I want to see if anyone else has experienced this or knows if I handled this the correct way. 

    A few months ago, I was looking for bartenders for my wedding. I had been introduced to two women through a mutual friend who said they would do it, they were a team.  

    Recently, one of the women were in a horrible motorcycle accident and ended up passing away.  

    My mom heard what happened, she knew she was one of my bar tenders and she asked her friend if she could do it instead so I didn't have to worry about it. I didn't ask my mom to do this, but I'm not mad she did it. 

    I talked to my friend who hooked me up with these initial bartenders and he said that she could still possibly do it. I felt bad when he told me that and explained what my mom did to remedy my bartending situation. 

    I just messaged the other bartender and told her basically I was sorry with what happened to her friend and because of everything that happened I wouldn't need her anymore. I never signed a contract with her and I felt so bad I just profusely apologized. 

    I just want to know if I did the proper thing or if there was a better way to go about it? I felt like it was a sensitive situation, so I waited a little while before telling her. I felt so bad. 
    Yah I wouldn't have replaced her without speaking with her first. You basically fired her for assuming she wouldn't want to do it.  She lost a friend and then losses a job, that sucks. Why didn't you just reach out to your friend who set it up before deciding?
  • I did talk to this friend who set me up with her and explain what my mom did. He did initially say that she could still do it, but if my mom had already gone and hired someone else to just give her some time and message her later. I had actually called my mom and told her this other person could still do it and she flipped out on me because "she went out of her way" and I didn't want to pick a fight with my mom when she was only trying to help. I did want to ask this girl to still do it and I tried to ask my mom if she could work with the other girl and she flat out told me no. 
  • Yeah I think it's weird that you/your mom assumed because one partner died the other could no longer work the wedding. What was the thought process behind that?

    The bigger problem IMO seems to be a boundary issue with your mom. She shouldn't be making hiring decisions for something you are paying for (I assume) and she shouldn't be flipping out when you honestly communicate to her that she's complicated a situation by acting thoughtlessly. Dealing with people who feel entitled to make decisions for you because they are "just trying to help" is going to get exhausting and frustrating quickly, so I'd use this incident as a chance to send the message you won't tolerate that kind of dynamic going forward.
  • Ugh, you really got yourself in a pickle. I know you didn't want to upset your Mom, but I agree with the PPs. It's really terrible to fire this woman after she lost her partner, especially without speaking to her first. 
  • I agree with PPs. Could they both bartend? For DD's reception we had three bartenders with around 155 people.
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