Q:DEAR AMY,
Hoping you can help me with an awkward guest situation. We sent out save the dates last fall and invitations in December. Both the save the dates and invitations linked to our website, which has a form to RSVP. At the top of the form, we put some instructions along with a note that says, âUnfortunately, due to limited space at the venue we arenât able to give everyone a plus one, but if we mistakenly left your partner or spouse off of the invitation, please let us know.â We thought this was a reasonably good way to limit plus ones: we gave people a way to gently remind us if we forgot to invite a serious relationship person without having to double the size of our venue. I know the standard advice is âJust get more space!â But we live in a very expensive city so there were approximately four venues in our budget that even had space for the people we wanted to come, much less random guests weâve never met.
The wedding is in about six weeks. Most people have RSVPâd by now, but there were about 20 still outstanding, so we sent out a reminder email. Many of them had already told us they were coming, so we werenât too worried about itâjust wanted to make sure we had dietary restrictions and the like taken care of. Lo and behold, two of the 20 people added uninvited plus ones to their RSVPsâeven though the only way to RSVP is on the page where it says to ask us before doing so.
Weâve mostly been accommodating of people who asked us about bringing someone we didnât invite. But itâs six weeks before the wedding, and these two people just decided to drop brand-new people on us. If they were regular guests, I would just have an awkward conversation and be done with it, but theyâre both members of the wedding party (and both on my side of the aisle, so my partner is not super sympathetic to the difficulty).
I know that etiquette usually calls for members of the wedding party to get a plus one, and if theyâd asked back when save the dates or invitations got sent out, Iâd have been less against it. Even after the first one, I was willing to just let it goâthat relationship has gotten reasonably serious in the time since we sent out save the dates, and while Iâm annoyed the guy didnât ask me, I can roll with it. But the other is some person weâve never even heard of, much less met. And since both men are in the wedding party, they are also coming to the rehearsal dinner, pre-wedding pictures, etc.
My partner wants to just disinvite the plus one weâve never met. Iâm worried that the groomsman wonât see the difference between his guest and the other/more serious relationship, and itâll cause problems. I also worry that Iâm being rude by not counting on plus ones from the get-go for the wedding party, even though this guy is chronically single. But I also donât want some random person Iâve never heard of to be in our wedding photos or at our rehearsal dinner, especially since he didnât even bother asking.
Am I being unreasonable to not want this plus one there? Would it be terrible to disinvite her, or to say that she can come to the wedding but not any of the wedding party activities?
âGuest stress
A:DEAR stressed,
â[E]tiquette usually calls for members of the wedding party to get a plus one.â
Correct. This is the general rule, and it applies specifically to you.
I like the way youâve handled guests generally: you arenât required to give every single guest a plus one, but you do want to make sure that partnered up people get to bring their person. And the way youâve worded that language to me conveys, âIf you have someone serious in your life, let us know, and if you just fancy inviting your friendâs attractive older brother in hopes this wedding will be the start of something special, so sorry but we canât accommodate that.â
But members of the wedding party are a standard exception to that rule, and I think for good reason. The standard line is that the only responsibility for a member of the wedding party is showing up on time, reasonably sober, wearing their assigned outfit. But realistically, you know youâre asking more than that! I mean, from the letter alone, youâre talking about a rehearsal dinner and pre-wedding photos, and those are completely fine expectations, but itâs kind of a lot being in a wedding party! Itâs a nice and expected courtesy to people who are particularly important to you, and who are particularly involved in the day, to allow them the privilege of bringing a guest (if they want to, and certainly they may not).
You refer to your friend as âchronically singleâ, and can I just say I hate that phrase? It makes being single sound like a disease. Maybe heâs perfectly happy being single, enjoying his life, and wants someone to go home with at the end of a full day of celebrating people getting un-singled. Maybe heâs miserable being single and really would like to have someone to slow dance with, someone to Uber home with, someone to scout out all the good hors dâoeuvres for him and save him the fancy bite-sized crab cakes while he takes still more pictures with you. Who knowsâbut what you do know is that heâs going to have more fun at your wedding with a date.
As for the photos and rehearsal dinner concerns, frankly, I think you need to get a grip. If the rehearsal dinner is really too tiny to fit one more in, fine, but I bet it isnât. But the photos? This is not a problem. No date of a groomsman is expecting to be in your formal wedding photos. If heâs randomly found the one person in the world who does expect that, then âActually Giselle, these photos are just for the bridal party, thank youâ should solve that handily. Like, âworstâ case scenario, she sits in a corner playing on her phone in the vicinity of photos, which is really not a crisis.
Youâre gonna do what youâre gonna do, and plenty of people in the comments will disagree with me on this, but heâs supposedly someone who is really important to you, who is a groomsman, and he wants to bring someone to help him enjoy your day. Just let him.
âAmy March
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