-
01
AITA for refusing to give up my inheritance money to pay for my brother's wedding?
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
-
02
-
03
-
04
-
05
-
06
-
07
-
08
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
-
09
-
10
-
11
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
-
12
-
13
-
14
-
15
-
16
-
17
-
18
-
19
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
-
20
-
21
-
22
-
23
-
24
-
25
-
26
-
27
Brother demands that younger sister use $30,000 inheritance for his wedding, her refusal to share ignites dispute within family: "It's just money, but a wedding is once in a lifetime."
Weddings have a funny way of making everyone's common sense totally short-circuit. People who are normally rational and budget-conscious are suddenly throwing around words like "once in a lifetime" as a justification for spending the equivalent of a down payment on a house for a single day. Indeed, I had to stop my own mother from taking out a loan to pay for the live band that she insisted I needed to have at my wedding. But one woman's story takes the whole idea to a new level; her family isn't just asking her to chip in for her brother's big day. They're asking her to use her late father's inheritance to pay for the whole thing!
The $30,000 she inherited was explicitly intended to help her build stability and secure her future. Her brother, meanwhile, didn't receive as much because, according to their dad, he couldn't be trusted with money. Now, her brother and his fiancée are planning an over-the-top wedding they can't afford, and the family has somehow decided that she should be the one to finance it "because that's what Dad would have wanted."