Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She was right. I would never buy a flower girl dress without trying it on.
This. She probably wanted to see what it looked like before the dress was bought. Most brides want their day to be perfect and I'm sure you went to a lot of effort with detail for your wedding. Once people are past the wedding they somehow think others are crazy with their meticulous attention to detail, however it pays off on the day when it all comes together nicely. I'm sure she just wanted your daughter to look nice on the day and for photo's. She herself may have thought it would be more personal to have a shopping day rather than just sending an email. I mean your daughter is going to be in her wedding. Perhaps she wanted to meet her and bond too. It's a shame you didn't get along.
On top of that she hasn't had children and doesn't know your time is precious. She isn't a mind reader. I'd give her a pass.
I think all these people giving the bride a complete pass are crazy. You don’t need to have kids to know that asking someone to drive 1.5 hours each way just to try on a dress that could have been ordered online is totally inconsiderate and thoughtless. If she wanted to see how the dress fit before the wedding she could have FaceTimed or asked you to send pics. The dress was from Nordstrom for goodness sake- easily returnable. To then turn around and not have time for lunch is rich. I would have been extremely annoyed. If she really did pitch it as a way to spend time with my daughter I would have said something about it to her. Not angrily, but I certainly would have told her that I made the effort and spared the time to drive three hours based on my understanding that we were spending the afternoon with her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She was right. I would never buy a flower girl dress without trying it on.
This. She probably wanted to see what it looked like before the dress was bought. Most brides want their day to be perfect and I'm sure you went to a lot of effort with detail for your wedding. Once people are past the wedding they somehow think others are crazy with their meticulous attention to detail, however it pays off on the day when it all comes together nicely. I'm sure she just wanted your daughter to look nice on the day and for photo's. She herself may have thought it would be more personal to have a shopping day rather than just sending an email. I mean your daughter is going to be in her wedding. Perhaps she wanted to meet her and bond too. It's a shame you didn't get along.
On top of that she hasn't had children and doesn't know your time is precious. She isn't a mind reader. I'd give her a pass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have had her try on a few more dresses, if she really did want the experience, just for fun. And I would have had lunch with future aunt.
I also would have rolled my eyes at it, but it could have been worse. Sounds like the dress was probably reasonable in looks and cost, while she could have picked something awful and expensive. Or she could have had a little girl try on 100 dresses while tired and hungry.
As far as bridezilla behavior goes, this is low on the totem pole.
My DD asked her to have lunch with us and she said she couldn’t. I took DD to Claire’s afterwards so she got over it. Never driven a 3 hour commute for Claire’s before. I don’t recommend it!
Anonymous wrote:She was right. I would never buy a flower girl dress without trying it on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, but how would it be any better if you still drove those 3 hours roundtrip and then were stuck in the mall for 3 hours for trying dresses and a joint lunch in some crappy mall eatery?
Your time situation and exhaustion would be even worse.
She probably wanted it to be more personal than just sending an email with a link to the dress. Also, it's very understandable that she pre-chose the dress to avoid having to go back and forth if you liked some other dress out of 20 you tried, and the other mom liked something else too.
It was up to you to push back on the driving, esp since you have a baby. You chose to accommodate but now you feel annoyed. There is a lesson to be learned here.
My DD was looking forward to looking at pretty dresses with her future aunt. So the difference is it would have been a fun activity for my DD and a chance for us all to get to know each other better. That’s why I agreed to go. It was pitched as a fun afternoon for the girls. She clearly just couldn’t wait to choose a dress which is 100% her prerogative and absolutely fine. Just wish she had shared that info beforehand so we could decide if the trip out there was still worth it.
Thought it would be a nice bonding experience for DD and her new aunt, but it wasn’t
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a mom and have a completely different perspective. I would have been thrilled to be done with the dress shopping in 30 min. I live in the dc area so driving 1.5 hours doesn’t even seem like a big deal. She probably thought she was being nice to give you a chance to see the dress and opine on it. You sound like you are looking for. a reasoN to be offended
This is along the lines I was thinking. Thrilled not to be dragged around the mall! Tell DD...when she tries on the dress...it’s perfect! And 1.5 hrs is not a super long drive. My school drop-offs to work take an hour every morning and I don’t even think about it.