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Anyone who knows about wine stains knows that you must treat it immediately or it'll probably live on whatever fabric it touched for good. Not only did the woman's cousin leave the wine stain on the dress upon returning it, but she also didn't mention it and left it enclosed in a plastic bag…
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"AITA for asking my cousin to pay me back for a dress she borrowed and ruined at a wedding?"
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Entitled cousin leaves large wine stain on borrowed wedding guest dress, woman demands she front the dry cleaning or replacement costs: ‘
Treat others the way you want to be treated—that includes others' belongings, too. I don't think any of us are made of money (and if you are, please reach out to me immediately). Money doesn't go as long of a way as it used to, and prices keep skyrocketing. So, when we loan someone else our things, we'd hope they treat them with the proper care they deserve and refrain from ruining them. In the unfortunate event that they spill a hefty glass of wine on a dress they borrowed from you for a wedding, then they're responsible for rectifying the situation at hand.
In this next story, a woman lends her cousin a wedding guest dress for an upcoming wedding she's attending. She had no issue with lending her cousin the item of clothing, but soon regretted it after it was returned to her in a plastic bag with a large wine stain across the front of it. Instead of offering to pay for the dry cleaning, the cousin refuses to take responsibility for it. Scroll to read.