AITA for making my grandma cry by uninviting her to my wedding?
What happens when a lifelong supportive relative drops a comment that suddenly feels like rejection of your true self? Many bisexual people navigate family acceptance carefully, hoping love outweighs outdated views.
This young person, planning a wedding to their boyfriend, uninvited their grandmother after she said she was relieved it was a man—implying she wouldn’t have attended if it were a woman. The grandmother’s tears left the OP wondering if protecting their identity went too far.

‘AITA for making my grandma cry by uninviting her to my wedding?’
The conversation began innocently about wedding plans.


The argument escalated quickly when the implication hit home.


The hurt stems from a single comment that shattered perceived unconditional acceptance. The bisexual person felt erased—reduced to “straight now” rather than fully seen. Uninviting was a protective boundary against conditional love.
Both carry valid pain. The grandmother may have spoken from generational bias without malice, yet the words invalidated identity. The OP reacted from betrayal, fearing future exclusion. Tears show regret, but don’t erase impact.
LGBTQ+ family therapist Dr. Arlene Istar Lev notes that “Conditional acceptance wounds deeply because it ties love to conformity” (from work on queer family dynamics). Honoring feelings while leaving room for repair prevents permanent rifts.
Reach out calmly, express exactly why the comment hurt. Listen to her perspective without excusing it. If she owns the harm and commits to growth, reconsider. If not, protect your peace—your wedding celebrates your authentic self.
See what others had to share with OP:
Social media split on this wedding uninvitation, with strong opinions on both sides of the generational divide.
Most supported the OP, viewing the comment as disrespectful to their bisexuality.






Several urged reconciliation or offered a softer view.





A few focused on the bigger picture of the decision.








This wedding fallout shows how one careless comment can crack decades of acceptance. Protecting your identity is valid, yet family ties often deserve a chance for repair if remorse is genuine. Your wedding celebrates your whole self—choose guests who truly do too.
Would you uninvite a loved one over a single hurtful remark about your sexuality? How would you decide whether to reopen the door after tears are shed?
