“We Covered Meals And Open Bars For 300 People”: Bride Organizes A Huge Wedding, Gets Shamed By Her Family
Big weddings can get a bad rap. Too often, people spend way beyond their means, borrow from family members and create all sorts of drama. Other times shaky couples think a blow-out wedding will, somehow, resolve their relationship issues. But if it’s a solid marriage with two, well-off people, one would think there wouldn’t be any harm.
A woman shared her experience with a jealous family and a big wedding. She and her husband both have great careers and wanted to celebrate with a large, three-day event. Unfortunately, some of her extended family took umbrage and twisted the celebration into a personal attack against themselves.
Big weddings can seem like a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to have a massive celebration
Image credits: Álvaro CvG (not the actual photo)
So a well-off couple wanted to use their earnings and love of hosting events to really make their ceremony special
They planned multiple events, gifts, and other fun activities to take place over three days
Image credits: Dimitri Kuliuk (not the actual photo)
But some in the bride’s family decided that the whole thing was a ploy to show off
Image credits: Jonathan Borba (not the actual photo)
Jealousy got the best of them and they accused OP of wanting to rub her wealth in their face
Image credits: Liza Summer (not the actual photo)
Image credits: weddingwoe34
The size of a wedding can be a pretty clear indicator of wealth if the couple chooses it to be
It’s easy to roll your eyes when you hear “expensive wedding,” as it can seem, at best, foolish, to spend so much on basically a one-to-two-day event. Americans in particular will end up spending around five figures to host a medium-sized wedding. The national median wedding cost was roughly $33’000 in 2017, and this number has definitely only risen in recent years as inflation takes its toll. This does not include the honeymoon, by the way. Seeing as the average US worker makes $54,132 a year (2022,) it gets harder and harder to justify what ends up looking like a very, very all-out party. To be fair, like often in life, we have lies, big lies, and statistics. Many people will still spend less than $10’000 on their wedding and probably still have a great time.
The real issue in this story, however, is not the costs, as OP specified that they had no issue paying. Rather, the crux is a much older and more common concern, jealousy. Particularly when times are hard, people tend to feel more sensitive around those who are better off. Paradoxically, this emotion is stronger if it’s within the family. A rich stranger can make you jealous, but you can tell yourself that maybe they inherited it, or benefited from other advantages growing up. A rich sibling is ‘worse’ for people with insecurities. This seems irrational, but jealousy has been found to induce zero–sum thinking and, even worse, a desire to blame someone else.
Image credits: TranStudios Photography & Video (not the actual photo)
Envy and jealousy are generally limiting insecurities that can’t really be blamed on someone else
The general attitude of the family towards OP’s wealth is unclear from the story. Even if it was ambivalent, a wedding is, unfortunately, a pretty easy trigger. Envy and jealousy over wealth normally manifest after one party actually sees the other things. It’s possible to know someone is rich, but you only feel that pang of envy when they pull up in a Rolls-Royce. It’s pretty easy to compare things, a car, a wedding, or a house, and make quick judgments. Some studies show that not all envy is malicious. After all, you can envy your friend’s newfound success while also being happy for them. Normally, malicious envy happens when the person experiencing jealousy feels like the other party does not deserve what they have. Unfortunately, this might indicate that OP’s family doesn’t think she actually deserves her success.
The unfortunate truth is that malicious envy is also self-destructive. People who suffer from it, besides possibly sabotaging a relationship with a wealthy person, will often be less motivated to improve their own status. They have decided the world is unfair and would prefer to not even try. Conversely, benign envy has been shown to have the opposite effect. It can inspire a person to try more and work harder. At the end of the day, OP can not control the insecurities of her family. Instead of pride in her success, they chose petty jealousy.
Image credits: Emma Bauso (not the actual photo)
Commenters reassured OP that she was absolutely not in the wrong
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And basically the cousin was saying she'd have a big wedding if she could afford it, but since she can't afford one, then no one can have one. The cousin is a big baby and the OP can have whatever kind of wedding she wants and shouldn't conceded or "tone it down" to appease anyone else. Her cousin and Aunt are awful people.
Wow if this is considered "middle-class" I guess I must be destitute xD But class misconceptions aside this sounds like it was a blast, pity it created a rift in OP's family she seems sweet.
Definitely not "middle class"... but people are allowed to party however they chose/whatever way they can afford. The spectacle isn't what makes a wedding and the cousin needs to realize that. Making the op feel bad for her own happiness isn't cool.
Load More Replies...The saddest part was OP loves her cousin but clearly her cousin doesn't love her and OP just found out the hard way.
"How DARE you eat cookies when you know I'm on a diet?!" People need to grow tf up.
So what if she does have a rich, fancy life. Stop worrying about what she has and focus on what you have. Do you have a home? Are you starving? Do you have adequate shoes and clothes? So many others don't.
Jeez! Fir the "reality check" and "hard grift" people above, sounds like you have a case of envy, too. What do you care how she characterizes the event? It was HER WEDDING and she bore no, let me repeat, NO RESPONSIBILITY to consider or otherwise protect anyone else's feelings. Hard stop. If it were me, I would also reconsider my relationship with the aunt and cousin, because if that wasn't a shakedown (and I think it was), it was for sure a situation that had been brewing and those two took their very last shot at the bride and wanted to ruin the last happy moments of her wedding weekend. Crass act, those two.
Many weddings and funerals have someone who absolutely freaks out, often because the attention is on someone else. Your cousin is this person and the tell is how she and her mother managed to pull the bride from being the center of attention at your own event to consoling her. The mistake was indulging this behavior. The only response is a shrug and a “I’m sorry she feels this way.” No need to justify yourself.
I wonder if they were expecting the bride to feel bad and offer up money....
Load More Replies...I'd wager this is the kind of family where, if OP hadn't thrown a huge party, someone would complain they are penny-pinching and don't want to share anything with their own blood. Other than that, just my usual complaint: this is not "AITA", but a rather clear and uncontroversial story. There'd be so much more interesting threads in AITA, buuut oh well, BP always chooses these.
Lol! OP's cousin & aunt sounds like my in-laws. We worked hard to get to where we are so we can enjoy life a little. People who let jealousy control their ugly behavior have problems. NTA. OP deserves the wedding she wanted - end of story.
Your cousin is extremely immature and obviously jealous. So, don't go. I'm sure she'll regret it , but maybe she needs to learn about "consequences".
I don't know if it is just me, but I usually do not give gifts, if I am not invited.
Load More Replies...If this was the other way round, I bet the aunt would have told the OP to stop being petty and jealous.
Wrong guest list. At least no one got shot. Your family couldn't deal with being invited to a big, fun, 3 day wedding. You were inclusive and generous. Maybe they will eventually rise to the occasion and join in the fun, which would be great for everyone but it might take a generation or two to believe in their good fortune to be invited. I dealt with a similar situation at work. Realized everyone didn't need to know everything about what I did on my time off.
HA HA HA HA HA HA no. Ditch the bîtch, don’t look back. Not ever. There’s something wrong with that cυnt and her unhinged mother - get them out of your life right exactly now, this minute. That’s what I’d say to OP, if she ever had any possibility to read this ever. I stand by my statement, however; there’s something wrong with those two, get them out of your life. What if you - GASP!!!!!! - get a HOUSE BEFORE HER???!!!??!!?? HOW could she SURVIVE something so CRUEL??!??!! It’ll never get better, if she does this as an adult, things are already too late. Disengage.
is it just me, or does anyone else think the cousin suddenly stopping the tears is sus? think about it, shes "sobbing her heat out" but when op says that marriage is about love not money the cousin turns off the waterworks, makes me think that maybe she wasnt crying for op to offer comfort at all, she was really crying to guilt op into offering to pay for her wedding
NTA. The cousin is an entitled brat, being carefully taught by her equally entitled mother. Being uninvited to any function is a blessing. No stress, no expense. Count your blessings, and plan a nice weekend for you and your hubby. Be sure to post pictures on social media.
it sounds like O.P. knows they are fortunate to have the means for a big wedding, and made sure to do plenty to give everyone they knew the option to be part of it and enjoy it when I got married, it was one of the fancier weddings in my family. not huge or expensive, but we had a handfasting in a stone circle, the legal bit by a subterranean lake and reception in my mums lovely orchard with a large outdoor tent for the food and drinks. (everyone before that was registry offices and a town hall) my cousin has a very well paid job, and I felt a little put out that her wedding was a lot fancier than ours. (a good decade later) but I know that people don't actually compare them like that, and her wedding was lovely, and she paid for us to stay in an on site cottage as we had to travel some distance. my wedding might not be the fanciest in the family anymore, but it doesn't make it less special. and I thoroughly enjoyed attending hers as a guest.
I don't think O.P. was rubbing anyones nose in it. they wanted to have the kind of wedding they had the means to pay for, and share it with everyone they loved. I can understand feeling a bit inadequate when wealthier relatives have something grander than you do. but it doesn't sound like the O.P. ever meant for them to feel excluded. they wanted their family, regardless of income, to enjoy a really good party.
Load More Replies...NTA but you can't be naive about this anymore.... You are upper class now. When you gain status and/or wealth it's is going to alienate some people no matter how kind or humble you are or try to be. Next time you'll know and you can rein it in a little, if keeping these people comfortable is important to you.
NTA but I am surprised by the cold hearted responses here none the less. Lot of hate coming out toward her relative. I think it shows a lot of people here have problems with their own relatives.
NTA! They're insecurities and jealousy would come out eventually.
Ohhh, I so wished I'd been there! I'd just truly enjoyed it and the food and everything. Not for one moment would I have felt jealous or spend ine single thought on my own wedding. Getting married is not about how big the party is. If someone is rich and uses their wedding as an excuse to splurge and share their wealth, good for them and good for me that I get a piece of it if I'm invited. But this has absolutely nothing to do with me or my marriage. If OP's cousin can't see that, then they're not really for marriage
My cousin got a very rich guy and make a big ceremony. While me and my partner doing all we can with our savings and borrow money - we return all from the money gift later. Even if mine not big nor perfect, but is quite memorable for us! The questions is, am I had to unreasonaly curse my cousin for having a lavish wedding? Why on earth anyone want to wed that cousin with that kind of personality, aside of getting that kind of mother in law? If I am the parther I will run from that damned cursed drama queen.
It always amazes me that someone invited to something has to make it about themselves and not the event they are invited to. Yeah throw a big wedding to celebrate the families. But cousin makes it about her dinky one coming up. Boo hoo. Great you aren't invited. She prob lost out on a generous wedding gift from you. And if she had made you part of it I'm sure she would have milked you for lots more money because you have and she has not.
You just justified the cousin's envy right there. Good job.
Load More Replies...Like someone already said up there, NTA, but at the same time, a bit silly and not empathetic at all. You are showing off (even if for the "right" reasons and in a "generous" way). Most people only see parties like that when they watch celebrities/crazy rich people on TV. There's a little pang of jeleousy, getting sad for a moment, but then we just go back to our lives. Here, you literally showed your cousin what she will never have. She was close enough to touch it, to feel it, she was a part of it. She compared it to what her own wedding will be, and it looked so shabby in comparison. It's pretty understandable she got upset. Should she tell you that and blame you? No, she shouldn't, it was very immature. But you also should be a bit more thoughtful of how how people may react and maybe tone it down a notch. You want it or not, but it looked like you were showing off to people that are much less well off than you are. A circus, 3 day party for 300? Seriously...
I had a nice wedding and I'm not rich. We covered everything for our small wedding party so they didn't go broke being in a wedding. At no point did I stop to think about anyone else's wedding. The cousin is being a huge baby about it. And how nice of this couple to cover expenses of guests who needed help. That was such a nice thing to do. And don't ever tone anything down to appease others. It's your wedding do whatever you want. Other people can like it or not, but it's YOUR wedding. Eff the haters telling you to tone it down.
Load More Replies...Oh, these horrible first-world rich people problems. I feel so bad for you. LMAO
And basically the cousin was saying she'd have a big wedding if she could afford it, but since she can't afford one, then no one can have one. The cousin is a big baby and the OP can have whatever kind of wedding she wants and shouldn't conceded or "tone it down" to appease anyone else. Her cousin and Aunt are awful people.
Wow if this is considered "middle-class" I guess I must be destitute xD But class misconceptions aside this sounds like it was a blast, pity it created a rift in OP's family she seems sweet.
Definitely not "middle class"... but people are allowed to party however they chose/whatever way they can afford. The spectacle isn't what makes a wedding and the cousin needs to realize that. Making the op feel bad for her own happiness isn't cool.
Load More Replies...The saddest part was OP loves her cousin but clearly her cousin doesn't love her and OP just found out the hard way.
"How DARE you eat cookies when you know I'm on a diet?!" People need to grow tf up.
So what if she does have a rich, fancy life. Stop worrying about what she has and focus on what you have. Do you have a home? Are you starving? Do you have adequate shoes and clothes? So many others don't.
Jeez! Fir the "reality check" and "hard grift" people above, sounds like you have a case of envy, too. What do you care how she characterizes the event? It was HER WEDDING and she bore no, let me repeat, NO RESPONSIBILITY to consider or otherwise protect anyone else's feelings. Hard stop. If it were me, I would also reconsider my relationship with the aunt and cousin, because if that wasn't a shakedown (and I think it was), it was for sure a situation that had been brewing and those two took their very last shot at the bride and wanted to ruin the last happy moments of her wedding weekend. Crass act, those two.
Many weddings and funerals have someone who absolutely freaks out, often because the attention is on someone else. Your cousin is this person and the tell is how she and her mother managed to pull the bride from being the center of attention at your own event to consoling her. The mistake was indulging this behavior. The only response is a shrug and a “I’m sorry she feels this way.” No need to justify yourself.
I wonder if they were expecting the bride to feel bad and offer up money....
Load More Replies...I'd wager this is the kind of family where, if OP hadn't thrown a huge party, someone would complain they are penny-pinching and don't want to share anything with their own blood. Other than that, just my usual complaint: this is not "AITA", but a rather clear and uncontroversial story. There'd be so much more interesting threads in AITA, buuut oh well, BP always chooses these.
Lol! OP's cousin & aunt sounds like my in-laws. We worked hard to get to where we are so we can enjoy life a little. People who let jealousy control their ugly behavior have problems. NTA. OP deserves the wedding she wanted - end of story.
Your cousin is extremely immature and obviously jealous. So, don't go. I'm sure she'll regret it , but maybe she needs to learn about "consequences".
I don't know if it is just me, but I usually do not give gifts, if I am not invited.
Load More Replies...If this was the other way round, I bet the aunt would have told the OP to stop being petty and jealous.
Wrong guest list. At least no one got shot. Your family couldn't deal with being invited to a big, fun, 3 day wedding. You were inclusive and generous. Maybe they will eventually rise to the occasion and join in the fun, which would be great for everyone but it might take a generation or two to believe in their good fortune to be invited. I dealt with a similar situation at work. Realized everyone didn't need to know everything about what I did on my time off.
HA HA HA HA HA HA no. Ditch the bîtch, don’t look back. Not ever. There’s something wrong with that cυnt and her unhinged mother - get them out of your life right exactly now, this minute. That’s what I’d say to OP, if she ever had any possibility to read this ever. I stand by my statement, however; there’s something wrong with those two, get them out of your life. What if you - GASP!!!!!! - get a HOUSE BEFORE HER???!!!??!!?? HOW could she SURVIVE something so CRUEL??!??!! It’ll never get better, if she does this as an adult, things are already too late. Disengage.
is it just me, or does anyone else think the cousin suddenly stopping the tears is sus? think about it, shes "sobbing her heat out" but when op says that marriage is about love not money the cousin turns off the waterworks, makes me think that maybe she wasnt crying for op to offer comfort at all, she was really crying to guilt op into offering to pay for her wedding
NTA. The cousin is an entitled brat, being carefully taught by her equally entitled mother. Being uninvited to any function is a blessing. No stress, no expense. Count your blessings, and plan a nice weekend for you and your hubby. Be sure to post pictures on social media.
it sounds like O.P. knows they are fortunate to have the means for a big wedding, and made sure to do plenty to give everyone they knew the option to be part of it and enjoy it when I got married, it was one of the fancier weddings in my family. not huge or expensive, but we had a handfasting in a stone circle, the legal bit by a subterranean lake and reception in my mums lovely orchard with a large outdoor tent for the food and drinks. (everyone before that was registry offices and a town hall) my cousin has a very well paid job, and I felt a little put out that her wedding was a lot fancier than ours. (a good decade later) but I know that people don't actually compare them like that, and her wedding was lovely, and she paid for us to stay in an on site cottage as we had to travel some distance. my wedding might not be the fanciest in the family anymore, but it doesn't make it less special. and I thoroughly enjoyed attending hers as a guest.
I don't think O.P. was rubbing anyones nose in it. they wanted to have the kind of wedding they had the means to pay for, and share it with everyone they loved. I can understand feeling a bit inadequate when wealthier relatives have something grander than you do. but it doesn't sound like the O.P. ever meant for them to feel excluded. they wanted their family, regardless of income, to enjoy a really good party.
Load More Replies...NTA but you can't be naive about this anymore.... You are upper class now. When you gain status and/or wealth it's is going to alienate some people no matter how kind or humble you are or try to be. Next time you'll know and you can rein it in a little, if keeping these people comfortable is important to you.
NTA but I am surprised by the cold hearted responses here none the less. Lot of hate coming out toward her relative. I think it shows a lot of people here have problems with their own relatives.
NTA! They're insecurities and jealousy would come out eventually.
Ohhh, I so wished I'd been there! I'd just truly enjoyed it and the food and everything. Not for one moment would I have felt jealous or spend ine single thought on my own wedding. Getting married is not about how big the party is. If someone is rich and uses their wedding as an excuse to splurge and share their wealth, good for them and good for me that I get a piece of it if I'm invited. But this has absolutely nothing to do with me or my marriage. If OP's cousin can't see that, then they're not really for marriage
My cousin got a very rich guy and make a big ceremony. While me and my partner doing all we can with our savings and borrow money - we return all from the money gift later. Even if mine not big nor perfect, but is quite memorable for us! The questions is, am I had to unreasonaly curse my cousin for having a lavish wedding? Why on earth anyone want to wed that cousin with that kind of personality, aside of getting that kind of mother in law? If I am the parther I will run from that damned cursed drama queen.
It always amazes me that someone invited to something has to make it about themselves and not the event they are invited to. Yeah throw a big wedding to celebrate the families. But cousin makes it about her dinky one coming up. Boo hoo. Great you aren't invited. She prob lost out on a generous wedding gift from you. And if she had made you part of it I'm sure she would have milked you for lots more money because you have and she has not.
You just justified the cousin's envy right there. Good job.
Load More Replies...Like someone already said up there, NTA, but at the same time, a bit silly and not empathetic at all. You are showing off (even if for the "right" reasons and in a "generous" way). Most people only see parties like that when they watch celebrities/crazy rich people on TV. There's a little pang of jeleousy, getting sad for a moment, but then we just go back to our lives. Here, you literally showed your cousin what she will never have. She was close enough to touch it, to feel it, she was a part of it. She compared it to what her own wedding will be, and it looked so shabby in comparison. It's pretty understandable she got upset. Should she tell you that and blame you? No, she shouldn't, it was very immature. But you also should be a bit more thoughtful of how how people may react and maybe tone it down a notch. You want it or not, but it looked like you were showing off to people that are much less well off than you are. A circus, 3 day party for 300? Seriously...
I had a nice wedding and I'm not rich. We covered everything for our small wedding party so they didn't go broke being in a wedding. At no point did I stop to think about anyone else's wedding. The cousin is being a huge baby about it. And how nice of this couple to cover expenses of guests who needed help. That was such a nice thing to do. And don't ever tone anything down to appease others. It's your wedding do whatever you want. Other people can like it or not, but it's YOUR wedding. Eff the haters telling you to tone it down.
Load More Replies...Oh, these horrible first-world rich people problems. I feel so bad for you. LMAO



































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