'It's not 'just a house,' it's MY house': Entitled 30-year-old groom steamrolls his brother's boundaries, inviting 14 friends over to his home just to save $200 on a hotel on the wedding day

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  • "My Brother Tried to Bring His Entire Wedding Party to My House"

    So, I (32M) live in a house I bought a few years ago after saving for what felt like forever. Nothing fancy three bedrooms, a modest yard, just outside Denver. It's mine; off for it, and I like I worked my a my space.
  • My younger brother (30) is getting married next month. Cool, I'm happy for him. I've been helping where I can, I paid for part of the rehearsal dinner, helped with the DJ.
  • But last weekend, he dropped this on me: "Hey, just a heads up, we're planning to get ready at your house the morning of the wedding." I thought, okay... him and the groomsmen? Fine.
  • Cheezburger Image 10513868032
  • But then he added: "And the bridesmaids too. There's, like, 14 people total. We'll get there around 6 AM."
  • FOURTEEN PEOPLE. In my home. Before sunrise. With makeup artists, photographers, hair tools, and God knows what else. Did I mention his wedding is an hour away from my house?
  • So I asked, "Why not get ready at the venue or the hotel you booked?" He shrugged and said, "Yours is nicer and it's free."
  • I told him no. Politely, at first. But he pushed. "Come on, man, don't be selfish. We don't have the budget for this stuff. You're not even using your guest rooms."
  • Right... because I live here? I use those rooms for office space and for my own friends and family when I invite them.
  • He actually tried to guilt me by saying, "You're always so particular about your space. It's just a house." Nah, dude. It's not "just a house." It's my house. It's my boundary.
  • When I held firm, he got mad and tried to turn my parents against me. They backed me up shockingly fast.
  • Now he's giving me the cold shoulder and keeps telling people I "bailed" on helping with the wedding. Meanwhile, I've spent hundreds already.
  • Let this be a lesson: some people think "family" means "free access to your stuff."
  • belle8008. Ah yes, the sacred wedding tradition of steamrolling your brother's boundaries in the name of love. Beautiful.
  • CarlaQ5. Nope! NTA. The family card needs to stop getting used for everything. His wedding party isn't your problem. If he can't afford the space, maybe he shouldn't do the wedding.
  • influx3k How about you ask first, instead of just saying you're going to use someone's house to get ready for a wedding. Crazy!
  • nosecohn ⚫ His attitude: You have more than me, therefore I'm entitled to some of it. (And by the way, people who have less than me are not entitled to some of what's mine.)

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