MoralFaceSubscribe

Search

Search posts

WIBTA for taking my friend's ex as my date to her wedding after I got kicked out of her wedding party?

Elise Dubois

Beneath the surface of what should have been a joyous celebration, a tangled web of old wounds and fractured friendships unravels. The bride, once a friend, now an adversary, wields her power to control and humiliate, turning the wedding into a battlefield where past loves and betrayals clash painfully.

Caught in the crossfire of love lost and loyalty tested, the ex-girlfriend stands alone, stripped of honor yet determined to face the storm. As whispers of cruelty and exclusion swirl around her, an unexpected encounter offers a flicker of hope amidst the heartache, hinting at a chance for redemption or at least a moment of understanding in the chaos.

WIBTA for taking my friend's ex as my date to her wedding after I got kicked out of her wedding party?
'WIBTA for taking my friend's ex as my date to her wedding after I got kicked out of her wedding party?'

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

As renowned social psychologist Dr. Harriet Lerner explains, “When we give up our right to say no, we give up our right to say yes.” This situation reflects a severe breakdown in relational boundaries where the bride has weaponized her wedding status to exert control and inflict emotional distress on the OP, stemming from unresolved feelings related to the past relationship. The bride’s actions—demanding bridesmaid duties after removing the OP from the party, imposing arbitrary dress codes, and then explicitly mocking the OP with others—demonstrate a pattern of passive-aggressive control and boundary violation. The OP's initial attempt to manage discomfort by stepping down was met with further punitive measures. Her subsequent decision, shared with the groom's cousin who experienced similar exclusion, shifts the dynamic from victimhood to active agency. Their plan to attend and intentionally subvert the petty rules is a form of protest against emotional manipulation, prioritizing self-respect over forced compliance. The OP’s actions, while potentially creating drama at the event, are an understandable response to being publicly disrespected and marginalized. A more constructive approach in the future would involve clear, assertive communication about the need to end the friendship before the event, rather than waiting for the bride to dictate terms. However, in this immediate context, prioritizing their own emotional well-being by establishing a firm, shared boundary against mistreatment (even through rule-breaking) is defensible.

REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.:

The crowd poured into the comments, bringing a blend of heated opinions, solid advice, and a few reality checks along the way.

The original poster (OP) finds herself in a deeply uncomfortable position, navigating a friend's wedding to her ex-boyfriend while facing escalating mistreatment from the bride, including being removed from the wedding party and subjected to petty behavioral restrictions.

Given the OP's decision to attend with another similarly alienated guest and intentionally violate the imposed rules, the core question remains: Are the OP and her companion acting as justified individuals defending their dignity, or are they behaving inappropriately by choosing confrontation over quiet respect for the wedding event?

ED

Elise Dubois

Narrative Coach & Identity Reconstruction Specialist

Elise Dubois is a French narrative coach who helps individuals reframe personal stories after major life transitions. Whether it's a career change, loss, or identity crisis, Elise guides people to reconstruct meaning through narrative therapy and reflective journaling. She blends psychological insight with creative expression.

Narrative Therapy Identity Life Transitions