Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Be gracious. You have no idea what it us like to walk in her shoes.
+1 Wise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You really have no gracious/mature approach other than to take her at her word, tell her sincerely how much you will miss her being there, and then go have a fabulous wedding.
+1
She just spent a lot more money to go to Europe for a wedding. It's not money. There is more going on in this relationship that we don't know.
Anonymous wrote:OP -- GROW UP
Seriously -- GROW UP!!
If this woman has been a dear friend, been there for you through ups and downs and says she cannot attend (for whatever reason) -- let it go. Yes you are disappointed, but life is wayyyyyy loonger than your wedding day.
I had close friends who could not attend my wedding, i wished they had been there, but they were there for me for LIFE, that one day did not erase everything else.
Oh and by the way, GROW UP!
Anonymous wrote:I have been there OP. And it definitely changed my friendship with that person unfortunatley.
You really have no gracious/mature approach other than to take her at her word, tell her sincerely how much you will miss her being there, and then go have a fabulous wedding.
THere may well be more going on w/ her than you know (I'd bet there is) but there is no way to figure that out, nor does it really matter in the big picture. If she is unable or unwilling to attend your wedding then that's it. Try not to obsess about why, just be as gracious as you can and move on. See what happens over the next year or two with your friendship but prepare yourself for the fact that it already isn't the friendship you thought it was.
Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Damn. I had to lol at the comments about OP being a bridezilla. You twits probably haven't meet any actual bridezillas if you think OP is one. She is upset her very good friend can't come to her wedding and she has a right to be. If I had a friend who said she couldn't go to an important event of mine because of finances when she went to other recent events, I'd feel stung as well.
I don't think people are reacting to the "stung" (which is justified), but rather to OP's saying that basically this will change their friendship. Well, that and being jealous that friend attended another wedding and not HERS, which is now the reason the friendship will change.
No one has the right to dictate, judge, or shame for what someone else does with their time, money, or resources. Seems to me that friend has been a true friend when OP needed (first after surgery, etc). Now she is being called to spend money that she does not want to spend in order to attend a wedding that maybe isn't her thing. It's sweet to "be there in spirit", and decline gracefully if it's the truth.
OP is focusing too much on "her big day" rather than the whole scope of what happens between friends during a lifetime together.
Anonymous wrote:Damn. I had to lol at the comments about OP being a bridezilla. You twits probably haven't meet any actual bridezillas if you think OP is one. She is upset her very good friend can't come to her wedding and she has a right to be. If I had a friend who said she couldn't go to an important event of mine because of finances when she went to other recent events, I'd feel stung as well.