Arrogant Bride Slams Brother For Being Unwilling To Contribute $26K For Her ‘Dream Wedding’
If you ask any average person what day they consider the most important in their entire life, then one’s wedding will definitely be in the top ten. Indeed, for many people, a wedding still happens once in a lifetime, and of course you want it to be perfect, leaving just the most pleasant memories.
But a ‘dream wedding’ usually means a hefty budget, and while some newlyweds take out a wedding loan, others try to shift some of the financial burden onto relatives. As, for example, did the heroine of today’s story, the user u/RemarkableCrab3352.
The author of the post is a 23 Y.O. history student raising her daughter and planning a wedding with her boyfriend
Image credits: Shari’s Berries (not the actual photo)
However, the bride-to-be is upset over lack of money for her ‘dream wedding’
Image credits: u/RemarkableCrab3352
The woman asked her relatives to chip in and expected her well-off brother to contribute a hefty amount too
Image credits: Karolina Grabowska (not the actual photo)
Image credits: u/RemarkableCrab3352
To her indignation, he offered her four times less than she expected
Image credits: TranStudios Photography & Video (not the actual photo)
Image credits: u/RemarkableCrab3352
In the heat of the moment, the woman refused to take this money, threatening to uninvite the brother from the upcoming wedding for being ‘selfish’
So, the Original Poster (OP) is 23 years old, she studies history online, raising a 4 Y.O. daughter and about to marry her boyfriend who works in a research lab. As the woman herself admits, she did not manage to get a college degree, so now she is trying to catch up in order to become a history teacher in the future.
She and her fiancé are gradually saving money for their dream wedding, but what seriously upsets the author of the post is that this is a really long, long process. At the same time, there is always the example of her older brother and his wife before her eyes, who, working as doctors in a hospital and not planning any children, have the opportunity to save quite impressive amounts.
The author admits that all her family members are trying to contribute to her upcoming wedding, so she sincerely expected that her brother, as the most well-off of her relatives, would make the greatest financial contribution. And the brother did offer her money, but much less than the bride-to-be expected – £5K (around $6.5K).
Apparently, the disappointment was literally written on the OP’s face, because the brother asked what she was unhappy with. The woman bluntly stated that she expected at least £20K (~$26K) from him, and then added that if the brother does not want to chip in the required amount for the wedding, then she does not want to see him at the ceremony at all.
A completely expected argument then followed, and the future bride, offended by the ‘selfish’ sibling, subsequently dropped his calls. However, the only relative who condemned the OP’s behavior in this situation was her own dad, who said that she was being too harsh on her brother. And yet, preparations for the wedding go on, and the family continues to fund the author of the post anyway…
Image credits: Vera Arsic (not the actual photo)
Let’s say right away that the wedding budget often becomes a sticking point when organizing a ceremony, sometimes causing real family tensions and dramas. At the same time, there are no unambiguous traditions or generally accepted rules about who should actually fund the wedding preparations. Each family has its own way, although historically the main financial burden falls on the bride’s family with the groom’s relatives contributing smaller amounts.
“Budget should be the first discussion couples have together and with their families – otherwise, you are planning in a bubble that may not be your reality,” says Jove Meyer, a wedding planner from Brooklyn, N.Y., in an interview to MarthaStewart.com. “I know it is not fun or cute to talk about money, but it is super important, as it informs all of the other decisions around your wedding.”
“In any case, the only selfish person in this situation – at least based on the information that we have, looks like just the bride-to-be,” says Irina Matveeva, a psychologist and certified NLP specialist, to whom Bored Panda turned for a comment on this case. “After all, she and her fiancé are adults, her brother is also an adult who has a family of his own, and he is absolutely not obliged to finance her ‘dream wedding’ in the amount that she expected.”
“Perhaps, since childhood, parents and relatives had a preferential attitude towards the youngest daughter, and this influenced how she perceives the attitude of the whole family towards herself. But this is only an assumption. The reality, in my opinion, is that the brother’s offer looks quite generous, and her reaction in response is pure manipulation. And she should seriously think about this – if, of course, there was someone among her relatives who would tell her about it,” Irina presumes.
As for the commenters, they massively condemned the original poster’s behavior, believing that she acted rude and absolutely inappropriately here. And, of course, was being overly selfish. According to folks in the comments, if the wedding budget does not match her vision of a ‘dream wedding,’ then it is worth either waiting a little longer to save up more money, or just make a smaller event. ‘Have a wedding you can actually afford without bankrupting your family and friends in the process,’ one of the commenters reasonably urged the bride-to-be.
However, weddings often provide us with an inexhaustible source of truly bizarre stories. Like this one – about a woman flipping out at her brother for picking her ‘dream venue’ for his own ceremony. Or about this would-be maid of honor who refused to take part in her sister’s wedding citing a lack of money for a flight – yet was seen at a posh resort soon after. We, in turn, are looking forward to your comments on the story we’ve told, so please feel free to express your points of view below this post.
At the same time, people in the comments unanimously stated that it was the bride who behaved selfishly and inappropriately here
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This post is a year old. Jesus, BP, you're through the bottom of the barrel and scraping the next one down.
Your dream wedding is one you can afford. The point should be that you are marrying someone you want to share your life with, not putting on some lavish party where you play princess for a day.
I always feel someone who focuses on a fairytale wedding is not mature enough to be married.
Load More Replies...For what it's worth, the OP's Reddit account has been suspended. Probably because she's an entitled brat.
Is it just me, or is this one of the most b******t fabricated posts of all time? NO ONE is stupid enough to post this and actually be genuine.
You'd be surprised! If you heard the c**p I've heard, you will want to never talk to some people again.
Load More Replies...You cant be serious, nobody ows you anything, nobody is responsible you got pregnant as a teenger and cannot afford the Wedding you want. Your brother made an incredibly generous offer and YTA
I am not the type of person care about weddings, so maybe I shouldn't comment, but you should have the wedding that you can afford. When I bought my first house, I asked my parents, who where very well off, IF they wanted to contribute to it. I was disappointed when they only gave me $1000. But I didn't specify how much I wanted, never complained about it or held it against them, and it wasn't an optional party.
This. I agree, ”never look a gift horse in the mouth”. The bridezillas entitlement is huge. And who in their right mind would put that much money into a wedding if they in the first place don’t even have that kind of money and have to rely on others charity. And their brother’s nonetheless.
Load More Replies...Hey BP, why have you changed the currency from the post (Pound sterling) to Dollars on the list? There are other countries and currencies in the world you know.
Ffs. There's really nothing more to say than FFS. I'm seriously done with society.
Good for OP finding someone that will marry her. Maybe he thinks he's entitled to other people's money too.
As Freddie Prinze used to say in Chico and the Man, "It's not my job, man!" It's absolutely not a brother's responsibility to subsidize their sister's wedding! By the way, I paid for my entire wedding myself (I was the groom), and the entire thing including rings, venue, food, and champagne only cost about $3100.
are you missing something here? did you seriously just type that? yeah, you are missing something all right.
Another lame story. How many more ignorant and badly behaved people must be read about?
I would be really, really scared if you ended up teaching my children. You seem to have very warped ideas about many things. (1) your brother owes you nothing (2) a wedding is about making a public commitment to each other (and in the eyes of god if that is relevant to you), it is not about 'show'/perfection/fairytale/YOU!
Wow, I wouldn't give you a penny either. Also calling him a hospital doctor is stupid, am 100% certain you'll never be a teacher.
Rather than paying for the wedding, sometimes it's better promising to finance the divorce. It's usually cheaper and always money well spent.
How is it NOT your fault: You got pregnant. You are raising a daughter. You chose to study online history (of all things). You want a ridiculously expensive wedding. You are choosing to marry a man who can't afford the wedding you want--but I'm sure he will provide for you stupendously, after the wedding. LIFE IS ABOUT CHOICES. YOU MAKE THEM, YOU LIVE WITH THEM. GTFU.
'Dream wedding' must be one hell of an opulent ceremony, if it cost so much. And lady thinks she's entitled to her brother's money. Why would he pay for someone else's wedding?
As I said when I read this one on another Reddit-scraping site, it's not HIS fault she doesn't have the money, either. Nor is it his responsibility to give her money for a wedding she can't afford.
I've had a good think on this topic and all the people I know who have stayed married forever have had really small family/friends weddings, I'm sure some people get married for the big wedding rather than a strong lasting relationship
Agree! To me using the phrase "dream wedding" is weird... like why are you fantasizing about the wedding? Seems like it has outsized importance and is a sign of immaturity and a disconnection from reality.
Load More Replies...I like the doctor who claims they're having a wedding in a castle for 100 guests for under £10k. What are they feeding the guests? Sandwiches? Mine was 20 years ago, 55 guests, 3 course meal, photographer, DJ, flowers, wedding car, suit, dress, just over £10k. I'd be surprised if you could book a castle anywhere in the UK for under £5k, add in £50 per head for 100 guests (and you'd be getting really poor quality food for that) and that's £10k already.
This post is a year old. Jesus, BP, you're through the bottom of the barrel and scraping the next one down.
Your dream wedding is one you can afford. The point should be that you are marrying someone you want to share your life with, not putting on some lavish party where you play princess for a day.
I always feel someone who focuses on a fairytale wedding is not mature enough to be married.
Load More Replies...For what it's worth, the OP's Reddit account has been suspended. Probably because she's an entitled brat.
Is it just me, or is this one of the most b******t fabricated posts of all time? NO ONE is stupid enough to post this and actually be genuine.
You'd be surprised! If you heard the c**p I've heard, you will want to never talk to some people again.
Load More Replies...You cant be serious, nobody ows you anything, nobody is responsible you got pregnant as a teenger and cannot afford the Wedding you want. Your brother made an incredibly generous offer and YTA
I am not the type of person care about weddings, so maybe I shouldn't comment, but you should have the wedding that you can afford. When I bought my first house, I asked my parents, who where very well off, IF they wanted to contribute to it. I was disappointed when they only gave me $1000. But I didn't specify how much I wanted, never complained about it or held it against them, and it wasn't an optional party.
This. I agree, ”never look a gift horse in the mouth”. The bridezillas entitlement is huge. And who in their right mind would put that much money into a wedding if they in the first place don’t even have that kind of money and have to rely on others charity. And their brother’s nonetheless.
Load More Replies...Hey BP, why have you changed the currency from the post (Pound sterling) to Dollars on the list? There are other countries and currencies in the world you know.
Ffs. There's really nothing more to say than FFS. I'm seriously done with society.
Good for OP finding someone that will marry her. Maybe he thinks he's entitled to other people's money too.
As Freddie Prinze used to say in Chico and the Man, "It's not my job, man!" It's absolutely not a brother's responsibility to subsidize their sister's wedding! By the way, I paid for my entire wedding myself (I was the groom), and the entire thing including rings, venue, food, and champagne only cost about $3100.
are you missing something here? did you seriously just type that? yeah, you are missing something all right.
Another lame story. How many more ignorant and badly behaved people must be read about?
I would be really, really scared if you ended up teaching my children. You seem to have very warped ideas about many things. (1) your brother owes you nothing (2) a wedding is about making a public commitment to each other (and in the eyes of god if that is relevant to you), it is not about 'show'/perfection/fairytale/YOU!
Wow, I wouldn't give you a penny either. Also calling him a hospital doctor is stupid, am 100% certain you'll never be a teacher.
Rather than paying for the wedding, sometimes it's better promising to finance the divorce. It's usually cheaper and always money well spent.
How is it NOT your fault: You got pregnant. You are raising a daughter. You chose to study online history (of all things). You want a ridiculously expensive wedding. You are choosing to marry a man who can't afford the wedding you want--but I'm sure he will provide for you stupendously, after the wedding. LIFE IS ABOUT CHOICES. YOU MAKE THEM, YOU LIVE WITH THEM. GTFU.
'Dream wedding' must be one hell of an opulent ceremony, if it cost so much. And lady thinks she's entitled to her brother's money. Why would he pay for someone else's wedding?
As I said when I read this one on another Reddit-scraping site, it's not HIS fault she doesn't have the money, either. Nor is it his responsibility to give her money for a wedding she can't afford.
I've had a good think on this topic and all the people I know who have stayed married forever have had really small family/friends weddings, I'm sure some people get married for the big wedding rather than a strong lasting relationship
Agree! To me using the phrase "dream wedding" is weird... like why are you fantasizing about the wedding? Seems like it has outsized importance and is a sign of immaturity and a disconnection from reality.
Load More Replies...I like the doctor who claims they're having a wedding in a castle for 100 guests for under £10k. What are they feeding the guests? Sandwiches? Mine was 20 years ago, 55 guests, 3 course meal, photographer, DJ, flowers, wedding car, suit, dress, just over £10k. I'd be surprised if you could book a castle anywhere in the UK for under £5k, add in £50 per head for 100 guests (and you'd be getting really poor quality food for that) and that's £10k already.























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