My Mother Tried To Give My Wedding To The Daughter She Chose-Neyney - Chainityai

My Mother Tried To Give My Wedding To The Daughter She Chose-Neyney

For years my mother treated me like the daughter she could borrow when useful.

The week she tried to give my wedding to my half-sister, I finally understood that being useful was not the same thing as being loved.

I was planning a lakeside wedding outside our town in upstate New York.

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It was not huge or flashy.

My father was paying for most of it.

He wanted to.

He said he had missed too many clean memories with me because my childhood had been built around damage he did not cause.

My mother had caused most of that damage.

She cheated when I was five, married the man quickly, and had Brooke not long after.

After that, I became the child from the first life.

The one invited sometimes.

The one photographed rarely.

The one expected to understand why the new family needed more room.

My father raised me with help from my grandparents, and later my stepmother gave me care without trying to rename it as rescue.

That mattered.

When Ethan proposed, my father cried before I did.

My mother sent a message with too many exclamation points and no real warmth.

That was normal for her.

Two months before the wedding, she called me at work.

I knew before answering that peace had ended.

She began sweetly, asking about the dress, the flowers, the weather plan, and whether I was excited.

Then she told me Brooke was engaged.

Before I could answer, she said Brooke and her fiance, Caleb, could not afford a real wedding.

She said my venue would already be decorated.

She said the chairs would already be out.

She said it would be meaningful for both daughters to share something beautiful.

I asked her if she was serious.

She said Brooke could have a small morning ceremony and I could still have mine later.

She said people shared celebrations all the time.

I told her no.

I did not dress it up.

I did not apologize.

I said Brooke could have a courthouse wedding, a backyard wedding, or a folding-table wedding in a church basement, but she was not using my venue, my date, or the event my father had paid for.

My mother went quiet in the way she did when she was not listening but planning her next approach.

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