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When I got married, I was broke. Granted, I was also in my early 20s, so I didn't actually have any notion of what a wedding was supposed to be like, so I was super content with a modest day.
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However, other women spend much of their 20s attending weddings, taking notes, and dreaming of their own big day. The older sister in this next story had everything planned to a T, only to have her entitled little sister gripe about rushing into her own engagement without a plan, attempting to poach Big Sister's entire plan–starting with the dress.
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'AITA for refusing to give up my dream wedding dress because my sister can't afford it?"
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The image does not depict the actual subjects of the story. Subjects are models.
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There's nothing quite like a Golden Child pouting and begging Mom and Dad to make their sibling yield to their desires–no matter how petty, childish, and spoiled.
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The image does not depict the actual subjects of the story. Subjects are models.
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Apparently, people never grow out of their Golden Child stage, carrying that entitlement into their adulthood and becoming just like this woman's spoiled sister, Megan.
Older sister refuses to give up her wedding dress for her spoiled younger sibling, then gets grilled by the family for ‘ruining’ the Golden Child’s dream: ‘I saved up for over two years to buy [this dress]’
Remember back when we were kids, and we'd play 'Dibs' with our siblings?
Whoever called dibs on something was privy to their first choice in the matter. We played dibs for the best seat in the car, we played dibs for the biggest cookie on Granny's cookie sheet, and if we were buddies with our sister, we might even play dibs over a crush. Back then, it was all fun and games as we vied for competitive status with our siblings. But there's one thing in womanhood where calling first dibs on something is particularly important: A woman's wedding dress.
There's a certain faux pas about wearing the same dress as another bride. Symbiotic with a woman's originality, a wedding dress decision is a very meaningful choice for every engaged woman to make, and it's not without heavy deliberation that a gown is ultimately chosen. So when this woman painstakingly planned her wedding for two years and discovered that her spoiled brat younger sister wanted the wedding dress she'd chosen, she just about flipped, pulling the dibs card on the most important day of her life.