23-year-old woman with short, dyed hair kicked out of bridal party for refusing to wear a wig so that all the bridesmaids can be uniform: “[You can] support from the crows”

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    AITA for refusing to wear a wig in my brother's wedding?

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    I (23F) have decided not to wear a wig in my brother's wedding. When he proposed, I was thrilled. I cheered them on from my dorm room. But this wedding has stressed everyone out, and for me, it's come to a breaking point.
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    At the first bridal event, the bride handed out "experience packages" for her bridesmaids up to $3,000, including a destination trip. I'm a recent college grad with an entry-level salary. We discussed hairstyles. The bridal party agreed on updos, given the humidity.
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    Months later, the bride texts me that she changed the style and wants me to wear wig. I had recently done a big chop and dyed my natural hair, a major milestone for me. I asked if braids were okay. She said no, followed by texts about "uniformity." I asked her to send wig details. She didn't for months.
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    After her bridal shower, she asked if I'd bought a wig, told me the stylist cost, and when I didn't respond fast enough, she still signed a contract with the stylist. I tried to compromise. I'd install the wig
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    myself and have the stylist style it. She said no, her stylist wouldn't work behind anyone else's install. I said I was uncomfortable with both the price and process. She replied: "Because you cut and dyed your hair, there are now extra costs for uniformity." "Okay."
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    In therapy, I shared how I've often felt like the family scapegoat. My boundaries = defiance. My therapist said: "When people get used to you performing, they raise the bar every time." My gut said: I'm not wearing the wig.
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    I explained this to my parents. My mom called me selfish. My dad said, "You were a child. You couldn't say no," then added, "If the bride doesn't get what she wants, you're out of the wedding party." I texted the bride. She respected my decision, but I could "support from the crowd."
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    I responded: "What stings is being told I can only stay if I change everything about how I show up. That's not unity. That's control. I love you, but won't disappear." She forwarded it to my family.
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    She's been very controlling. Others have clashed with her and her maid of honor dropped out. My brother says she talks negatively about our family. When I brought that up, my dad shouted that no one's on my side and blamed my mental health. I was told I shouldn't attend the wedding at all.
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    My brother said he didn't care if I was in the wedding party, which lifted some guilt. I told him I'll still show up as myself. (INSERT EDIT) The bride finally sent a message saying I was condescending, my choice was last-minute, she's the center of this new chapter, the Bible says the wife comes first, and I "kicked myself out."
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    I responded with truth: I'd expressed discomfort early on. My words weren't cruel, they were clarifying. I shared scripture (Ephesians 5). Respect goes both ways. I respect their marriage, but I respect myself more.
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    She sent it to my brother. He text me: "I love you, but she comes first. If you can't fall in line, you're out. No more discussion." AITA for refusing to wear a wig and standing in my truth?
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    EDIT: I should note that once my brother said he didn't care if I was in the party, I agreed and said I would sit in the audience and support him. This is my only brother/sibling so ofc I want to be in his wedding!
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    mandles55 You're not out of line for not wearing a wig and not being a bridesmaid. But I do feel you are making a big deal out of it. It sounds like they were ok with you not being a bridesmaid, your brother supported you.
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    But it also sounds like you didn't do this in a quiet, polite, way. It feels slightly like you are making this about you and stirring up bad feelings about the bride, that's not ok, especially as your brother seems supportive.
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    IncidentCorrect3352 OP I understand your statement, but I had to leave a lot out. My whole intermediate family (brother included) lashed out on me multiple times for not complying and called me out my character. I've
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    been polite and also firm. I like the bride, I really haven't had any issue with her up until this point. However, if someone is going to be joining my life and it's not my decision, I am going to have a say on how they treat me.
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    Bloss ofto นทท
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    Hippopotasaurus-Rex The maid of honor dropped out too. That should tell you everything you need to know. The bride is insane. The father is insane. The rest of the family is just trying not to rock the boat (with bride/father because they don't want to be where op is). Op is absolutely not the problem here.
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    If I was supposed to be a bridesmaid and the bride told me I had to change anything about myself I'd laugh in their face. Either you want ME there, or you want an NPC, and I'm not an NPC.
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    That1WithTheFace NTA - Bridesmaids aren't your personal ornaments to your wedding. They should be there because they are important people in your life and not because they are the best decoration for your photos. It's no surprise other bridesmaids are dropping. Personally I would have not agreed to a wig at all, so the fact you've already tried to compromise on this is above and beyond what I think should be expected anyway.
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    Couch-Potato-Chips It's so weird because I think it's uncanny if bridesmaids look exactly alike. Usually when the bride has a diverse group of friends the vibe is much better at the wedding
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    BoysenberryPicker These people all sound & you deserve better. NTA. Continue with therapy & uninvite yourself from the wedding so you can focus on what & who matters most to you, starting with yourself
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    KTKittentoes Why are people so weird, and not in a good way?! I was engaged once, and my bridesmaids could pick whatever dark blue dress they wanted, and of course whatever hair and makeup they wanted. They're friends, not a bunch of decorations from Costco.
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    wrenwynn Gentle ESH. You're not wrong or ride or out of line for not wanting to wear a wig. However, you were given multiple chances to gracefully bow out and just attend as a guest and you kept pushing the issue. Not your brother. Not your soon to be sister- in-law. Not your family. You.
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    I think she's beyond ridiculous for treating her bridal party like props and trying to make everyone look consistent down to hair. But you had plenty of opportunities to just say "sorry, I'm not comfortable with wearing a wig so I'll just be a guest". And not
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    only did you not do that, you continued to escalate it by swapping scripture references in presumably some attempt to either shame her or justify your position as being morally superior. It's her wedding, her choice. You can say no, but you can't dictate what she wants. Let it go, the event isn't about you.
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    MixPlus Best answer so far. Yes, the insistance on uniformity is ridiculous imo, but once the bride said she was fine with the OP not being a bridesmaid, that should have been the end of it.

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