AITAH for telling my friend I can’t listen to her complain about her wedding anymore?

A woman grew exasperated when her friend endlessly complained about minor restrictions on her dream wedding, fully funded by her parents with only two conditions: using a clergy member from their religion and adhering to religious dietary rules. After hours of listening, she told her friend to pay for the wedding herself if she wanted full control, sparking a heated argument. Other friends criticized her for being unsupportive during the bride’s “special time.”

Wondering if she was wrong to set a boundary, she turned to social media. The online community backed her, calling the bride selfish and praising her for standing up to unreasonable complaints.

‘AITAH for telling my friend I can’t listen to her complain about her wedding anymore?’

The story starts with a lavish wedding and two parental stipulations.

My friend's parents are shelling out a frankly mindblowing amount of cash for her wedding. Before someone says it, yes of course I am jealous (envious? idk), who wouldn't be?...

She is going to have the type of wedding many women dream of and could never have. Her parents have two requirements: she uses a clergy member from the religion...

Literally nothing else. If she wants to get married on the Good Year blimp while it's parked on mars I'm pretty sure they could make it happen. She just can't...

The friend’s constant whining pushes her to suggest paying for the wedding herself.

All she does is complain about these restrictions. I was sympathetic at first, because I get she feels kind of trapped in these restrictions for a religion she doesn't really...

But after hours and days spent listening to her complain and even cry about it I had enough. I told her if she wants her wedding totally her way, she...

Setting a boundary leads to a fight and pressure from other friends.

Once again today she calls me sobbing. She wants a specific food at her wedding but it will have to be made non-traditionally due to dietary restrictions. This is the...

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The "Kim, there are people dying" meme was playing on a loop in my head. I literally was so done at this point. I told her I couldn't listen to...

Now I'm getting texts from my other friends, how dare I do this to the bride?! She's engaged, that means no one can criticize her for the next 14 months...

is the most stressful thing that's ever happened to anyone. So now I need to apologize. I will say she apologized for calling me a c-word on the phone. I...

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only the heated words afterwards (like I said sorry for calling her bridezilla, which is apparently worse then the c-word because that's the thing everyone was focusing on).

Here's the thing, everyone wants to be a bridesmaid and get to stay in whatever Downton Abbey house she chooses. So they're all kissing her ass, imo. I don't think...

When a friend turns a dream wedding into endless complaints, is it wrong to stop listening?

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The core issue is an imbalance in the friendship. The bride, funded by her parents for a lavish wedding, faces only two reasonable conditions: a religious clergy member and dietary restrictions. Yet, her relentless complaints about these minor rules burden her friend, showing selfishness and a lack of gratitude. Refusing to pay for her own wedding despite having the means further highlights her entitlement.

Dr. Harriet Lerner, a relationship expert, emphasizes, “Healthy friendships require mutual respect and the ability to set boundaries” (The Dance of Connection, 2001). The woman’s refusal to keep absorbing complaints protects her mental health. Pressure from other friends, eager to join the lavish wedding, underscores her justified stance.

She should stand firm, explaining she supports her friend but can’t handle endless complaints. If the bride doesn’t change, reducing contact may preserve the friendship long-term. An honest conversation about mutual expectations could realign their bond.

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Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

Social media users supported her, calling the bride selfish and praising her boundary-setting.

Many highlighted the bride’s ungrateful and entitled behavior.

Eve-3 − Were you previously unaware your friend was spoiled rotten? Not sure how that could escape notice but you seem like you are a bit surprised by her s__t...

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Axilllla − NTA. She needs to count her blessings. This is supposed to be a happy day for her and she is only focusing on the “negative”. Those are barely...

Mika_Beets − If I ever write a book about spoiled people I'm calling it, "Daddy, I want a squirrel! " NTA.

Commenters praised her for standing up and urged her not to apologize.

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mrcoffeeforever − While “call someone else” may not have been the most empathetic of responses, you’re NTA for making it clear that you won’t listen to her nonsense.

[Reddit User] − I think you hit the nail on the head. . her other friends want so bad to be a part of this wedding, that they are giving...

Her parents are paying for everything and have set very reasonable parameters around it. I agree with you, if she doesn't like the restrictions, she can pay for it herself....

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[Reddit User] − NTA- I would apologize for the harsh words but stand behind the “I am tired of listening to you repeatedly complain about the same thing without you...

If you want your wedding your way then pay for it yourself. Your parents’ requests are reasonable given how much money they are giving you.”

Some used humor to underscore the bride’s absurd complaints.

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Flobbelob15 − Unlimited budget . .......or. ........bacon. Such an impossible choice. Why can't you understand the dilemma she is facing? A good friend would be there for her, supporting her,...

Dipshitistan − She . .. ummm . .. clearly IS a Bridezilla, and you're NTA for calling her attention to that fact.

Rasselkurt007 − NTA Im sorry for the brides future husband.

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Customdisk − NTA - Jewish Dietary restrictions aren't difficult to work around.

The online community agreed the bride’s complaints were selfish, her parents’ conditions reasonable, and the woman was right to set boundaries against endless whining.

Friendships require mutual respect, and setting boundaries is essential when one side overwhelms the other with complaints. Gratitude and honest communication can maintain healthy bonds. A wedding, while significant, shouldn’t excuse disregarding others’ feelings.

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What do you think about setting boundaries when a friend complains excessively about their wedding? How can you support a bride without burning out? Share your thoughts!

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One Comment

  1. You ‘hit’ a spoiled little rich girl BRIDE with reality – and think YOU are not the arsehole?!?!
    You’re not – but she’ll remember it in 100 years. Everything should be HER way – even if she’s not paying.