OP, I am very sorry you are having such a stressful wedding. I will share some wisdom I have gained from 14 years of awesome marriage, amazing, soul-shaking marriage, and hope you take it to heart.
Over the years, we have been to many, many weddings. Most of those people did not last. You will if you remember a few things.
First, that a wedding is just a party, not representative of your marriage. At my wedding, we had many "issues." An uninvited guest, a heroin addict who had been repeatedly rude to me and had stolen from me numerous times, showed up. She passed out in our hotel room--how she got there we will never know--and left her "gear" down at the party. We were glad we were the ones who found it and promptly hit a dumpster...not my wedding night fantasy.
I never would have imagined this, but these days, she is many years clean and sober and a really great mom and actually a good friend to me. You can't always tell people's by their actions because we all make mistakes, often selfish ones. Admit it; you've made mistakes...granted not as bad as that chick, but ones you would take back.
Additionally, I was left alone in my room with no hairbrush...I had to do my wedding hair with a comb. I told myself it was my fault I encouraged my friends to drink and make merry and that if I felt sorry for myself or got peeved with everyone for "messing up" my wedding, I would be mad at people who came there to celebrate my new family.
If that wasn't bad enough, our photographer went to the wrong place...my hubs drew up a bunk map. Oops! No wedding photos.
I sent my brother, my man-of-honor, downstairs before the ceremony began, accidentally beginning the ceremony twice. He was super embarrassed.
Everyone got too trashed, even my groom (our bachelor parties were pretty wild, too--it's good I am laid back!). When I look back on our wedding, I only think about the amazingness of marrying my number one booty call.
My point is that absolutely things will go wrong, and people will be jerks. Don't be surprised; plan on it and have a laugh at how dumb people are, then move past it and have fun.
Several years ago I was in a wedding party where the bride tripped out because the groom (who was visually impaired) was taken to a strip club. Strippers aren't allowed to touch their guests, and the groom had no say in this, but the bride almost called off the wedding. It was a great indicator of things to come in their marriage. Drama and fighting, all the way. Divorce talk comes around more often than Christmas.
I don't know how many weddings I have been to like this, but we've outlasted a lot of other couples. I really have come to believe that how a couple copes with wedding anxiety directly correlates to how they will cope with their life together.
Don't be those people. I guarantee you that if you react to problems with your husband's friends or his friends' wives, he will grow to resent you. The first thing these men do when they split with their wives is go back to hanging with their old friends.
I am being so blunt because it's so important. You seem like a great girl who just really loves her future hubs and wants it all to go smoothly, and you want to keep drama at a minimum. Yes, you made a mistake inviting those girls to be in the wedding party, but just as marriage is unconditional, so should be your relationships, even the ones that aren't friendships but just relationships of requirement. When you marry him, you are taking the whole package...that includes his friends and his friends' girls. If you don't learn to smile and be cordial (you don't have to like them and you don't have to be fake, just minimalistic), there will be angst in your relationship, even if you can't sense it. If you start trashing his friends to him, or worse yet, giving him ultimatums about them, I promise it will damage your relationship. No question.
Look at it this way: these girls don't know you. They don't know how fly you are. All they see is the super-stressed girl who let it get her down. And yeah, you can be hit with mono, dress problems, etc., and still roll with the punches, but I don't blame you for not. We are all human.
Finally, it is stressful to be in a wedding party, even if your responsibilities are a minimum. These ladies were absorbing your energy in the process of trying to forge a new relationship with you, and that energy became negative. Not your fault, but you can't blame them for reacting. If you want to control everything your acquaintances say, it's never going to happen and you will start to get paranoid. We all blow off steam. It's the guy's fault for being a dumbie and emailing it to the wrong person. You really can't even blame him for getting upset. My hubs was just in a wedding party this week that cost us 200 dollars for the ugly tux, another 100 for the bachelor party, and incidentals, and the bride publicly went off on facebook about how everything was going wrong. It felt ungrateful, and though we love her and the groom, we def. vented about it.
Show your character as an awesome woman; show your husband you are a wife to be proud of and handle it with grace and charisma. Turn the other cheek. Accept his friends...the whole package. You will add years of trust to your marriage. Tell these people you understand they didn't mean to hurt you and although they won't be in the wedding party, you do want to get to know them...a fresh start.
You don't have to like them to accept them. I wish more people understood that...marriage is about compromise, and not just about Chinese food or tacos.
Do this, and you can give those gifts to your homies with your head held high, knowing you have done your part to make things right with these friends of your hub. If they continue to trash talk, see them only at parties. Don't go out of your way, still smile and be polite, but eventually you will all probably get past it. And know if you have tried your best, it's not you, it's them.
Good luck, and I hope you have a wonderful wedding.
