AITAH for not wanting to leave a chair free in honor of my late wife at my wedding?

A man who lost his first wife 12 years ago is preparing to remarry in November. He has been with his fiancée for seven years, and he says she has always respected his past while understanding that his late wife is part of his history, not his present. He rarely mentions his first wife except in passing anecdotes, keeps no photos of her in the home, and has consciously worked to give his fiancée the central place she deserves in his current life.

Now, as wedding planning intensifies, both his mother and his late wife’s mother are pushing for symbolic gestures to honor the first wife during the ceremony: an empty chair reserved in her memory, and inclusion of photos or even a dedicated segment in the traditional bride-and-groom montage video showing moments from his first wedding. He has refused both ideas — partly for financial reasons (the venue charges per seat, including food and drink), partly because he is not spiritual and finds rituals uncomfortable, but mostly because he believes the wedding day should belong entirely to him and his new wife.

‘AITAH for not wanting to leave a chair free in honor of my late wife at my wedding?’

He met his fiancée seven years ago and feels she deserves to be fully celebrated:

I met my girlfriend seven years ago, I love her and she has always respected that I am a widower. I don't really name my first wife except on occasions...

and I don't have pictures or anything of her in my home, I want to give my girlfriend the place she deserves. I've had many bad experiences in a grief...

His first wife passed away 12 years ago when he was very young:

My first wife passed away 12 ago and I was really young at that time, it's been hard for me to move on but I did my best to get...

I met my girlfriend seven years ago, I love her and she has always respected that I am a widow. I don't really name my first wife except on occasions...

and I don't have pictures or anything of her in my home, I want to give my girlfriend the place she deserves. I've had many bad experiences in a grief...

My mother and family in general as been doing everything to make me feel guilty and honestly it's hard not to feel guilty when the words come from a person...

I know my girlfriend would agree because she's really kind and she has already said that she is not really interested in what others think because she is the one...

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This situation reflects a common tension in remarriages after widowhood: the groom has emotionally moved forward and wants his wedding day to belong exclusively to his current relationship, while family members (particularly from the late wife’s side) are struggling with unresolved grief and wish to keep her memory visibly present on such a significant occasion.

The proposal of an empty chair or a dedicated video segment is emotionally loaded. In grief and family therapy, such gestures at a second wedding often unintentionally signal that the first spouse still holds a central romantic place in the groom’s life — which can feel invalidating or competitive to the new bride, even if that is not the intent.

Dr. Alan Wolfelt, renowned grief educator and author of The Wilderness of Divorce and numerous works on complicated grief, notes: “Memorializing a deceased spouse during a remarriage ceremony can re-open wounds for the new partner and may prevent the couple from fully stepping into their new shared identity. The wedding day should be a clear celebration of the present bond, not a bridge between past and present marriages.”

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Practical advice is straightforward: the groom should calmly reiterate that the day is about him and his fiancée only. Suggest alternative ways to honor the late wife — a private moment, a separate family gathering, or a quiet visit to her resting place — outside the wedding itself. Setting this boundary now protects the marriage and prevents future resentment.

Check out how the community responded:

The online community absolutely lit up over this one — and the vast majority had OP’s back in a big way!

Most readers strongly agreed that the wedding day should belong 100% to the groom and his fiancée — no memorials, no empty chairs, no video tributes to the late wife:

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ritan7471 − NTA. Money aside, tribute chairs at weddings mean "if only this person were alive today, they would be sitting here" That's true if it would be OP's dead...

But this is OP's late wife. If only she were alive today, the assumption is that OP would be married to her and NOT marrying his current fiancée.

Even if he were divorced, it is unlikely his ex-wife would attend the wedding now, unless they parted on extremely friendly terms.

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It seems that OP's inlaws from his first wife just want her to be acknowledged because this is a difficult moment in their grieving process. If OP puts pictures around,...

then they can pretend OP hasn't moved on and his late wife still takes precedence. OP, don't do it. It takes something away from the most important romantic relationship in...

Think_Effectively − NTA I agree with you. This moment should be all about you and your current. Don't forget the past but celebrate the now and the future you will...

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(to cancer) She will always carry a piece of my spirit where ever she is now. But death has done us part and I would not (and did not) ever...

(Certainly not to the extent that your mother and late wife's mother suggest. ) And I am sure that my late wife would understand and not want to be included...

TarzanKitty − NTA Your parents and former ILs are requesting something totally inappropriate. If your late wife was still alive.

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You either wouldn’t be having a wedding or your former wife sure as hell wouldn’t be there. Your late wife and current wife should not coexist at your current wife’s...

dookle14 − NTA - it’s your wedding. Honestly, I think it’s inappropriate to “honor” your late wife at your wedding. This isn’t the place or time to celebrate her memory....

I think a delicate approach to this situation would be to suggest perhaps taking a visit to your wife’s grave with your first MiL (maybe on your first wife’s birthday...

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firefly232 − NTA … You need to shut this right down now. Don't make it an issue about money. Tell your mother and your late wife parents that you won't...

There are 364 days in the year to honour the memory of your late wife, but the wedding day is not the day to do that.

CrabbiestAsp − NTA. This is supposed to be a celebration of you and your fiance coming together, not a celebration of you, your fiance and your late wife coming together

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Quite a few people pointed out that giving in to these requests could seriously hurt the new wife and even damage the marriage long-term:

Charming-Vacation-26 − "my mother told me that it would be good to put an extra chair in honor of my first wife" I'm sorry Mom is completely wrong. In fact,...

Sorry Dude you're going to have to stand up to Mom on this one. If you don't, new wife will never see you as a man or lover again but...

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GreenTeaShaman − NTA, don't include your first wife in your wedding. You're right, it's about you and your fiance. It would be disrespectful to her to include all this stuff...

A handful of comments used sharp sarcasm or dark humor to drive home just how out-of-place the idea felt:

Last-Butterscotch-68 − You could make a dedication? Ask everyone to wear black? Actually why not ask your fiancé to just stay home?

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She might make your first wife’s family uncomfortable at the memorial, sorry, i mean wedding. Obviously NTA, this whole situation is completely macabre.

Haunting-Aardvark709 − I don’t understand why you invited your former in-laws to celebrate your new mariage and future wife. Rescind the invite. This request of a chair to honor your...

Across the board, people urged OP to hold the boundary firmly and not let guilt win:

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Efficient_Poetry_187 − No, just no. The video thing is absolutely wrong. You need to sit your mother down and tell her that your wedding day is about you and your...

not your late wife. It would be totally inappropriate and unfair to your fiancée to make your late wife a focal point on the day.

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WomanInQuestion − NTA - your wedding is not the time to showcase a previous marriage. Their requests are wholly inappropriate. It’s enough that your former wife will appear in some...

OhSoScandal − NTA It is a wedding, not a memorial. It is your wedding and your event to enjoy. If they want to honor your first wife, they can organize...

You are not erasing her memory; you are protecting the sanctity of this new chapter. Stand firm on this boundary — kindly, clearly, and without apology. Your fiancée deserves a day that feels completely hers, and so do you.

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What do you think — is he right to keep the wedding focused only on his present relationship? Or do you believe some small gesture of remembrance is appropriate? Share your thoughts below.

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