My Parents Refused to Attend My Wedding Because My Fiancé Was Poor — We Met 10 Years Later and They Begged to Build a Relationship

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When Emma fell in love with a humble teacher, her parents gave her an ultimatum: choose him or them.

On her wedding day, their seats sat empty, but her grandpa stood by her side.

At his funeral ten years later, her estranged parents begged for her forgiveness, but not for the reasons she thought.

Growing up in our pristine suburban home, my parents had a running joke about how we’d all live in a grand mansion someday.

“One day, Emma,” my father would say, adjusting his already-perfect tie in the hallway mirror, “we’ll live in a house so big you’ll need a map to find the kitchen.”

My mother would laugh, the sound like crystal glasses clinking, adding, “And you’ll marry someone who’ll help us get there, won’t you, sweetheart?”

“A prince!” I’d reply when I was a kid. “With a big castle! And lots of horses!”

I thought it was funny throughout my early childhood.

I even used to daydream about my future castle. But by high school, I understood there was nothing funny about it at all.

My parents were relentless. Every decision they made, every friendship they had, and every activity we attended had to advance our social climbing somehow.

Mom vetted my friends based on their parents’ tax brackets!

I don’t think I’ll ever forget how she sneered when I brought my classmate Bianca over to work on our science project.

“You aren’t friends with that girl, are you?” Mom asked at dinner that evening.

I shrugged. “Bianca’s nice, and she’s one of the top students in class.”

“She’s not good enough for you,” Mom replied sternly. “Those cheap clothes and awful haircut says it all, top student or not.”

A strange feeling churned in my gut when Mom said those words.

That was when I truly realized how narrow-minded my parents were.

Dad was no better. He networked at my school events instead of watching my performances.

I still remember my leading role in “The Glass Menagerie” senior year. Father spent the entire show in the lobby discussing investment opportunities with the parents of my cast mates.

…The story doesn’t end here, it continues on the next page 👇