AITA for refusing to change clothes at a wedding?

An Indian woman attending her cousin’s traditional Indian wedding in India wore a sparkling yellow net sari to the haldi ceremony—perfectly appropriate attire. To her shock, the American bride pulled her aside, called the sari “too gaudy,” and handed her a short mini dress to change into, claiming it would help her “blend in” with the American guests in short dresses.

The woman refused, explaining the mini dress would expose her eczema-covered legs, and offered to change if given a longer dress. The bride threw a tantrum, called her a bitch, and later mobilized her family and friends to harass her. Even months later, while quarantining together, the bride continues making cruel jabs about her appearance. The woman stood her ground and is now wondering if she was wrong for refusing to comply.

‘AITA for refusing to change clothes at a wedding?’

The wedding was a traditional Indian ceremony in India:

I'm Indian, so I wear saris basically everywhere because my parents are really strict about my heritage. Second, I have eczema, so my lower body is covered with scratches, dry...

This takes place 2 months ago, but I'm still getting hate for it, and passive-aggressive jabs at the dinner table and group chats.

So, I'm at my Indian-American cousin (male) to a beautiful American woman's (who we'll call Laura) wedding. Its in India so I pack mostly saris, lehengas and one maxi gown...

(There are a lot of events: mehendi, haldi, thaledivasum, madhereveppu, wedding rehearsal, sangeet, after party, evening party, two receptions, the ceremony, etc)

For the haldi, she wore traditional attire:

So for the haldi, I'm wearing a yellow net sari, which mostly everyone wears for haldi (because they smear turmeric on the bride and the women)

To my shock, the guests were mostly American women wearing short dresses. Laura pulls me aside and asks me to change because she felt MY dress was too gaudy, and...

See, I wouldn't have been averse to changing if she had given me a longer dress, but she gave a mini dress which showed off my legs, which were covered...

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So, I refused, but I told her that if she could find me a longer dress I would change. She told me I was a b__ch for dressing up like...

I left, and that night I was called by a lot of the Laura's family members and friends (don't know how they got my number) and told me I was...

because I wouldn't change after the bride had very politely given me a dress and asked me to change, and accused me of trying to upstage her.. So, AITA?

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OKAY: For all the people asking about the sari I wore, check out my profile. Just imagine it a bit more sparkly.

UPDATE: Laura and her hpusband, who we'll call Sunil, is atm quarantining with my family as they could not leave. She's still making these jabs at me, including talking about...

Also, for the people asking, everyone in my family thinks I'm NTA, and that Laura should apologise. My parents were horrified at her for asking me to change. So... I've...

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but she's still carrying on with the hate in full force. That's why I made this AITA post, because I could not genuinely see why she was angry at me....

UPDATE 2: I confronted her this morning. Basically told her she could shut up or leave. Told Sunil that with her extremely rude jabs at me, they couldn't stay here...

She told me that she forgot to tell me that the haldi had a dresscode for the women, which were dresses, and for the aunties: saris, and that she was...

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Also that even if people saw my legs, it's alright, because it's not my wedding, and the attention must be on Laura.. Needless to say, I kicked her out to...

UPDATE 3: She made an AITA post. Also apologized to me. All is well.. "Laura": u/laurelsofhonour

This incident exposes a toxic mix of cultural insensitivity, ableism, and bridal entitlement. The bride chose to host traditional Indian ceremonies in India yet demanded guests abandon cultural attire for her Western preferences—then targeted one guest for complying with tradition. Calling a sari “gaudy” at a haldi ceremony (where bright, ornate clothing is standard) reveals ignorance and disrespect for the groom’s heritage.

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The bride’s fixation on the OP’s eczema-covered legs—pressuring her to expose them and later mocking them—crosses into ableism and emotional abuse. Forcing someone to reveal a visible medical condition for “aesthetics” is cruel, especially when the OP offered reasonable compromise (a longer dress).

Cultural anthropologist Dr. Serena Nanda, author of works on Indian weddings, notes: “Indian wedding attire like saris is not just clothing—it’s identity, celebration, and respect for tradition. Imposing Western dress codes on traditional ceremonies while benefiting from the cultural spectacle is a form of cultural appropriation without reciprocity.”

The fiancé’s “take your meds” comment is deeply ableist. The parents’ pressure to “keep up appearances” prioritizes image over their daughter’s dignity. The OP was right to refuse and later confront—protecting physical and emotional health is paramount. The bride’s eventual AITA post and apology (after being kicked out) suggest she finally faced consequences. The OP owes no further forgiveness until genuine remorse is shown consistently.

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Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

The online community was overwhelmingly on OP’s side, declaring her NTA and condemning the bride for cultural disrespect, ableism, and bridezilla behavior. Many praised OP’s refusal and later confrontation.

Most agreed wearing a sari at haldi was completely appropriate:

disregardable − NTA. By American standards, saris are pretty extravagant dresses, but she should've put some thought into Indian heritage if she was holding an Indian wedding in India...

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Eli_Drottningu − NTA It's a wedding at India, with Indian relatives, she wouldn't dare to do this with your cousin's mother... Is just disrespectful of her, not just personally but...

00Lisa00 − NTA and it’s weird of her to hold an event specific to your culture and not want you to wear the clothing that is entirely appropriate and traditional...

Mizar1 − NTA, how the heck do you do a Haldi in India, and not wear a Sari? She's being TA for doing things last minute, and for disrespecting you...

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UniqueCommentNo243 − What? American lady comes to India to wed and does not want anybody to wear a saree? In a function where saree is traditionally worn?... You are gaudy?...

snailsandstars − I'm Indian... In an Indian wedding, I've never seen anything about 'upstaging the bride'...

On top of that, the haldi is a very traditional ceremony so it is quite inappropriate for the rest of the bridesmaids to be wearing short dresses... The bride had...

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sonedoyaar − She got mad...at an Indian woman...for wearing a traditional Indian dress...to a haldi, an INDIAN event... NTA obviously but holy s**t, white women really are something else...

Guina96 − So if I’ve got this right... she’s holding an Indian ceremony... then getting mad at her for wearing Indian clothing? Is she normal? Of course you’re NTA

Many highlighted the bride’s cruelty in shaming OP’s legs:

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thecandygirls − NTA. You have scars on your legs and it's obvious you are quite insecure of them. Crappy of the bride to ask you to change...

kaleiiii − DEFINITELY NTA... You were open to changing into an outfit that would make both you and her feel better, however the bride completely refused...

hummymai − definitely NTA. didn't your cousin say anything to defend you and your traditional dress?

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phoenix25 − NTA... saris are gorgeous... If they wanted an Americanized dress code, it should have been on the invitations.

[Reddit User] − NTA and honestly you had the right to refuse the outfit even if you didn't have scars on your legs. The mere fact that you were uncomfortable...

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Many supported kicking the bride out:

SpiritualMouth − NTA. I’m going to go out on a limb and say she knew of your heritage... She may be the bride, but it wasn’t the actual wedding itself......

Kutleki − NTA I always laugh when people get upset that their own bad behavior will make them look bad...

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This story shows how cultural insensitivity and ableism can ruin a wedding celebration. The bride’s demand to abandon traditional attire at a traditional Indian ceremony—then shaming OP for her eczema—was cruel and entitled. Refusing to change and later confronting the bride was the right call to protect dignity and boundaries.

What do you think? Have you ever faced pressure to change your appearance at a family event? Would you attend a wedding where you’re not truly welcome? Share your experiences in the comments—we’d love to hear!

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