For four long years, a chasm of silence has stretched between Emily and her mother, a painful echo of a fractured past. The shadows of divorce and unmet needs shaped a rift too wide to bridge, leaving Emily to forge her path alone while her mother found solace and strength in the bond with her youngest daughter, Anna.
Emily’s independence became her armor, a stark contrast to the tender closeness her mother shares with Anna, who mirrors her own spirit and laughter. Yet beneath the surface lies a poignant story of missed connection, silent wounds, and a yearning for reconciliation that time has not yet healed.

WIBTA if I don’t invite my eldest daughter to my wedding?

















According to Dr. Terri Givens, an expert in family systems and relational dynamics, family estrangement often stems from unmet attachment needs and communication breakdowns that solidify over time. Givens notes that when one child leaves the parental home during a crisis (as Emily did at age 12), the resulting relational gap can be perceived by the departing child as a fundamental abandonment, regardless of the parent’s internal struggles at the time.
The OP’s history reveals a clear pattern of differential treatment, albeit possibly unintentional. The OP acknowledges a stronger connection with Anna due to shared interests and needs, and actively intervened on Anna’s behalf with the father, while acknowledging they never felt able to connect with Emily. This differential emotional investment fueled Emily’s resentment, expressed years later through severe accusations in emails regarding neglect and lack of defense. The OP’s attempt to stop the hurtful emails by involving a third party (the partner) was interpreted by Emily as another act of exclusion, leading to the final severing of contact. The OP’s past actions, especially concerning the father, were interpreted by Emily not as a lack of ability, but as a lack of will to protect her.
From a professional standpoint, inviting Emily without any prior successful, direct communication risks staging an emotionally volatile event for everyone involved. The OP’s motivation to invite her ‘to be polite’ is weak when the relationship is defined by four years of no contact and active hostility. A constructive recommendation would be to attempt one final, direct, brief communication acknowledging the depth of her past pain (specifically regarding the father and the feeling of being left behind) before the wedding. If this attempt fails or is ignored, extending the invitation is unlikely to mend the rift and might only serve to create awkwardness at the event, potentially validating Emily’s narrative that the OP only acts out of social obligation.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.


You invested the time and energy to go to therapy with one child, not both. Emily’s intellect and independence appears to have made you feel threatened.




I don’t blame her for cutting you out. Damn.

There is nothing wild about the accusations of you favoring Anna and neglecting Emily, that is exactly what you did. I hope Emily is getting the therapy she needs, your wedding is the least of her concerns.



![[deleted] YTA. You did favor your youngest.](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/90c56546d660688af048f96dcda40de0.png)
![[deleted] YTA](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/b46d7998b6b3678465c4a4b65e8d4c6e.png)
You were never a good mom. You played favorites, elevated your golden child, and now have the nerve to blame the very one you abandoned and mistreated.



The person in this situation is caught between a desire to extend an olive branch to their estranged eldest daughter before a significant life event and the reality that this daughter has actively cut off contact due to years of perceived neglect and favoritism toward the younger sibling. The central conflict lies in balancing social obligation and the hope for reconciliation against the emotional protection needed for themselves and the younger daughter, who actively opposes reconciliation.
Should the person send an invitation to the estranged daughter for the upcoming wedding, knowing it may cause disruption, or should they honor the wishes of their current partner and the younger daughter by omitting her, thereby risking further estrangement? The debate centers on whether a formal gesture of inclusion is necessary for potential healing or if it constitutes an unnecessary risk to the established peace and current family unit.







