Weddings are significant events; they require a lot of effort, money, and time to plan out perfectly. There’s a lot of shared stress in the air for the planners. The bride and groom also have a lot of anxieties on their big day because there’s so much on their minds.
Today’s Reddit post comes from Mallvar; he asked a question on AITA (Am I the A**hole?.) He and his girlfriend had to attend a wedding event, and a few issues happened because he wasn’t happy with his girlfriend’s attire for the wedding. He said:
“This happened during this weekend, me being in my early thirties and my gf in her late twenties. I was invited to a wedding ceremony of a colleague and could bring someone with me. I asked my GF that I’ve been dating for a year if she would like to join me and she was really happy because she apparently loves weddings. Since we don’t live together I drove to pick her up so we’d have some time to spare before the ceremony.”
“As she comes out she looks really beautiful and has obviously put in time to fix her hair and make-up. She’s also wearing an off-white dress that was rather ornate. As she got in I told her that she looked stunning, but I asked if she could change to a different colored dress for the ceremony. I’m not one for etiquette by far, but one of the few things I have heard everywhere is that you should not wear a white dress to a wedding unless you’re the bride. She became pretty upset and wanted to know what was wrong with her dress. I said that it would be inappropriate to wear a white or off-white dress unless you’re the bride – and that it’s like wedding-law or something, trying to be lighthearted about it. She rolled her eyes and said that it was an outdated tradition about women and virginity and that when her friends got married everyone wore white and that it’s not a big thing anymore.”
“I told her that I don’t know what the dress code is for this ceremony, but since it’s not saying ‘all white clothes’ I still thought she should change to another color but white or ‘almost-white’ – because my colleague was getting married and we had no idea how she felt about it. My gf became really upset and told me that I was trying to control what she was wearing and that it was abu$ive, which honestly made me really upset and hurt. I said something along the lines of ‘F***, well you shouldn’t go to a wedding with an abu$er then’ and then I told her to f*** off out of my car. She began to cry and wanted to apologize and give me a hug, but I just told her to get out, which she did (EDIT: To clarify we never left the driveway by her home, I did not drop her off in the middle of nowhere or anything like that).”
“I drove off and she called and texted me a bunch. I answered ‘I don’t want to talk right now’ and then turned my phone off and attended the ceremony. The bride was the only one that was wearing white so I feel as if my gut feeling was the right one. When I got home my phone had blown up by texts from her and her best friend saying that I was being inconsiderate and controlling and should apologize for my behavior. I’ve vented to a few friends – most of them agreeing with me but some have said that it was an a**hole thing to tell her that she could not wear her dress – because it had nothing to do with me. I feel as if I was in the right since it was my colleagues wedding and it was better to be safe than sorry, but I’m also not sure if I was being an a**hole about the situation. So, reddit AITA?”
After receiving massive responses on his post, he published an update:
“UPDATE: I never expected this thread to get this many replies. I am incredibly thankful for all of you that have reached out and commented, and I really really appreciate that you’ve taken the time to tell me. My GF found out about the thread (don’t know if she knew my handle, or just found it) and we talked over the phone. She apologized and I apologized and it was a pretty good talk. She asked if she could come over, and I said no and that it would be best for us to go our separate ways. She got upset and asked why I wouldn’t even try to work it out. I basically just said good bye and then she said my d**k was small which actually made me laugh after what had been a pretty mature conversation and then she hung up. I’m pretty sad about it, she really made me feel happy but as many of you have commented – if this was our first disagreement and she called me abu$ive how would future disagreements look? I was hurt, but if she did think I was being abu$ive, it would be the right thing to do, and if she did not think I was being abu$ive and said it anyways I would not want to be with her. So anyways I think things worked out for the best for us both. Again thank you all, and I will keep trying to respond to all of you, but there are a lot off messages but I read through them all!”
The Responses
From his update, you can probably guess that he received tremendous support from Reddit’s community. For context, NTA means “Not the A**hole.” Here are some of the top replies:
Mother_of_Dogs3 wrote:
“NTA. Your GF should have known better. Unless you KNOW the couple AND it’s a request, you don’t wear white. She also overreacted and you did the right thing by asking her to not go and to get out of your car.”
beeeeeebee responded:
“Absolutely NTA – and your GF sounds like an attention-seeking nightmare.”
“Literally everyone knows you’re not supposed to wear white to a wedding. Even if she magically had not heard this rule, the second you mentioned it – a reasonable person would have changed dresses just to be safe. She clearly wanted to be center of attention/create drama… and when you wouldn’t allow it, she created drama another way.”
“I would honestly end this relationship unless you want to end up married to one of those JNMILs who wear white to their son’s wedding and then act mystified when the bride gets upset!”
ghostwriter623 said:
“NTA. If she truly “loves weddings” then she absolutely knows you don’t wear anything close to white to someone else’s wedding. Her excuses about doing so for a friend were ridiculous since 1) she doesn’t know this bride, and 2) this is a colleague of yours. Then, trying to shift the blame for the situation onto you? Yikes.”
This post has over 2.6k comments, read them all on Reddit here.
What’s Your Take?
What’s your take on this man’s situation? Let us know in the comments below!
Source: Reddit