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Woman wearing glasses sits on a couch holding a tablet while another person sits nearby, suggesting a conversation or session.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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Update: AITAH for refusing a wedding "gift" knowing there will be strings attached?
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Woman wearing glasses sits on a couch counting cash, with a dog resting beside her.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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A genuine conversation, real feelings shared, tears, an apology, a deposited check, and a move into the vendor confirmation phase. The kind of outcome that makes you feel like the hard part is over. It was not over. The hard part had just switched tactics.
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Hiring a wedding planner without being asked was framed as a gift, a way to take pressure off. Small enough to seem reasonable, easy to explain away. But a wedding planner hired for a 50-person wedding by someone who had just been told to back off is not a gift. It is a foothold. The planner showed up already briefed, already operating under a different set of instructions, already booking venues designed for 200 guests because someone had quietly called ahead to explain that the guest list was expanding.
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The venue sabotage is what shifts the whole story from frustrating to genuinely unhinged. Booking out a restaurant's private function room under a fake name specifically so the couple could not have it is not a misunderstanding or an overreach. It required planning, a phone call, and a deposit. Someone thought about it, decided to do it, and did it. That is a level of commitment to getting your way that most people do not have the audacity to attempt at a family dinner, let alone during someone else's wedding planning.
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Without the fiancé's response, the update wouldn’t have any satisfying element, and i probably wouldn’t bother to write about the same frustrating mother-in-law again, but his response ends it in the way that most of these stories do not. No speech, no mother-son dance, no planner, no involvement, password-protected vendors, and a very clear warning about what happens next. The money went back the same day.
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The $25,000 was never a gift. It was a down payment on influence that did not pan out. Getting the deposit back on a sabotaged restaurant venue through a fake phone call made by the bride's mom is honestly the most poetic possible ending for that money.
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They are planning a 50-person wedding at a venue of their choosing. The guest list has not expanded. The planner is gone. Some lessons cost $25,000 to learn and some people teach them for free.
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Woman wearing glasses sits on a couch holding a tablet while another person sits nearby, suggesting a conversation or session.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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