One bride-to-be thought she was doing everyone a favor when she discreetly uninvited her fiancé’s best friend from their wedding. The reason? His medical condition, catatonia, might lead to him zoning out during the ceremony—and she didn’t want her soon-to-be husband “babysitting” on their big day.
But after confronting the friend alone, asking him to stay home, and spinning the story to her fiancé that he simply declined the invitation, this Redditor is now questioning everything. Was she being reasonable or ableist? With the wedding plans paused and emotions running high, the story takes a sharp turn. Here’s what went down.

One woman shared on Reddit how uninviting her fiancé’s best friend from their wedding over his catatonia led to family backlash and personal regret










OP later edited the post:



















Boundaries are one thing. Exclusion based on a disability—especially one misunderstood or minimized—is something else entirely.
In this case, the bride’s main concern was that her fiancé, Freddie, would feel obligated to monitor his friend Calum during episodes of catatonia at their wedding. Instead of having an open conversation with both men, she spoke to Calum privately, convinced him to bow out, then told Freddie he had declined on his own.
That’s not communication. That’s control.
Catatonia is a serious medical condition. According to the National Institutes of Health, it involves a set of psychomotor symptoms—including immobility and unresponsiveness—that require understanding and sometimes supervision. But standing silently at a reception isn’t a spectacle. It’s part of someone’s lived experience. And removing that person from an event based solely on how their condition might “look” is textbook ableism.
Psychologist Dr. Devon Price notes that “ableism is most dangerous when it’s quiet, subtle, and wrapped in polite intentions.” The bride didn’t shout, mock, or belittle—but she minimized a diagnosis, disregarded her fiancé’s closest relationship, and made the entire situation about aesthetics rather than empathy.
Worse yet, she withheld the truth from the one person who deserved it most—her partner. Marriage is built on trust, and this deception struck at its core. Thankfully, after Reddit users called her out en masse, she came clean, offered genuine apologies, and even postponed the wedding to reset and reflect.
There’s nothing wrong with wanting a calm, simple wedding. But there’s everything wrong with pretending someone’s humanity is an obstacle to that calm.
Commenters condemned her for dismissing catatonia as a “personality trait,” calling her exclusion of Calum ableist and hurtful




Users criticized her secretive approach, noting it undermined Freddie’s friendship and trust, prioritizing her comfort over their feelings





Commenters stressed she should have discussed solutions with Freddie and Calum, not excluded Calum behind Freddie’s back





Users questioned why Calum’s stillness would disrupt the wedding, arguing aesthetics shouldn’t trump relationships




Commenters suggested alternatives like assigning someone else to support Calum, emphasizing inclusion over exclusion




What started as a bride’s attempt to “reduce stress” at her wedding turned into a profound lesson in empathy, humility, and communication. Excluding someone for being “different”—especially without talking to your partner—isn’t a solution. It’s a betrayal. To her credit, this Redditor owned her mistake and took steps to rebuild the trust she broke. But was it too late? Would you forgive someone for hiding your best friend’s absence? Let us know your thoughts below.










