⬇️⬇️
Continue reading below
ed Leah: “Did Camille seem weird at rehearsal?”
“She kept showing the photographer our bridesmaid photos from last year. Why?” came the reply.
“She came by today concerned about my hair “throwing off the symmetry” in photos.”
Leah: “You’re kidding!
It’s just hair!”
“That’s what I said.”
Leah: “Your pixie is adorable. She needs to get over herself.”
I put my phone away, trying to ignore my growing unease.
Three days before the wedding, my phone buzzed with a text from Camille:
“We need to talk. Call me when you can.”
I called immediately.
“Hey, what’s up?”
“I sent you an email,” she said, her voice oddly formal.
“Please read it and let me know your thoughts.”
Before I could respond, she hung up.
With trembling fingers, I opened my email. There it was… a long, cold paragraph:
“After our recent conversations, I’d like to remind you of my boundaries. I’ve been very accommodating, but I can’t allow you to disrespect my vision.
My wedding is something I’ve dreamt of for years. I’ve invested a lot in the photos and memories, and your inconsistency concerns me. While I sympathize with your health concerns, I’m not willing to compromise.
Since you can no longer fully commit, I need you to step down from the wedding.”
My heart raced. Step down? Three days before the wedding?
After everything?
I read it again, disbelief turning to anger. I called her back, but she didn’t answer.
I texted: “Are you seriously kicking me out of your wedding because of my HAIR?”
Twenty minutes later, her response came: “It’s not just the hair. It’s about respecting my vision.
I’m sorry if you can’t understand that.”
That’s when something in me snapped.
I created a meticulous invoice. Three dresses: $450. Shoes: $280.
Alterations: $175. Jewelry: $90. Bridal shower contribution: $125.
Bachelorette planning: $80.
Total: $1,200.
I attached it to an email addressed to both Camille and Jake:
“Since I’ve been removed from the wedding party due to my medical condition affecting my appearance, I’ll need to be reimbursed for these expenses. One dress is still at your house… you can keep it or return it, but payment is expected regardless.
I wish you both the best,
Ava.”
I hit send, then blocked Camille’s number.
The next morning, I woke to an email from Jake:
“Ava, I had no idea this happened. I’m talking to Camille.
This isn’t right.”
I didn’t respond. What was there to say?
That afternoon, my phone lit up with a text from a number I didn’t recognize.
“Ava, it’s Leah using Megan’s phone. Are you okay?
Camille told us you dropped out because you were insecure about your hair. What’s really going on?”
I sent her screenshots of Camille’s email and my invoice.
“Holy cow…” came the reply. “That’s cold-blooded.”
“Stay tuned!” Leah texted an hour later.
“We’re handling this.”
The next day, my doorbell rang. It was Megan, Leah, and Tara, standing there with wine bottles and determined expressions.
“We quit,” announced Megan, pushing past me into the apartment.
“You what?” I gasped.
“We all messaged her the same thing,” Leah explained, uncorking a bottle. “Pay Ava back or we’re out too.”
“You didn’t have to do that,” I said, feeling a lump in my throat.
“Yes, we did,” said Tara firmly.
“What she did was cruel. And honestly? We’re all exhausted by her bridezilla routine.”
“Jake called me,” Megan added, handing me a glass.
“He’s mortified. Said he had no idea you’d spent so much or that Camille was fixated on your hair.”
“What did she say?” I asked.
Leah snorted. “According to Tara’s cousin who’s doing the flowers, she had a complete meltdown.
Screaming, crying, the works.”
“I don’t want to ruin her wedding.”
“You’re not,” Megan replied with a shrug. “She did that all by herself.”
My phone pinged with a payment notification. $1,200 from Camille, with a note attached:
“I hope you’re happy.
You made this so much harder than it had to be.”
I showed the others, who erupted in cheers.
“Don’t respond,” advised Tara. “It’s exactly what she wants.”
I nodded, feeling a weight lift from my shoulders. “So what now?”
Leah grinned wickedly.
“Now we drink this wine and I tell you about how we’re going to botch that ridiculous choreographed entrance she’s been drilling us on.”
Two days after the wedding, a package arrived at my door. Inside was the lavender dress, still in its original packaging with tags attached.
There was a note from Jake: “The replacement bridesmaid’s dress never arrived. Thought you should have this back.
I’m sorry for everything.”
I texted the girls on our usual group chat, the one without Camille.
“Got the dress back. Apparently the emergency replacement never showed.”
Megan replied first: “Karma working overtime!”
Leah: “You should have seen her at the wedding. Half of us showed up late, nobody did the dance right, and her mom kept asking where you were.”
Tara: “She told people you had a “personal emergency.” I made sure to correct that narrative.
You should’ve seen her face… it was epic!”
I smiled, looking at the dress. Once, I had imagined wearing it beside my friend on her special day. It now represented something different: the price of standing up for myself.
“What should I do with the dress?” I texted.
Megan’s response came immediately: “Donation bonfire at my place.
Saturday. Bring marshmallows.”
I laughed out loud, then paused, struck by a better idea.
“Actually… I’m thinking of donating it to that organization that gives formal wear to patients undergoing treatment. My doctor mentioned it.”
The responses flooded in immediately with heart emojis, applause, and enthusiastic approval.
As I laughed, I realized something important: I hadn’t just lost a friend.
I discovered who my real friends were all along. And even with my new haircut and lighter bank account, I felt more like myself than I had in months.
Sometimes, the most beautiful moments come after the ones that break you. Sometimes, standing up for yourself costs exactly $1,200.
And sometimes, karma doesn’t need your help at all… it just needs you to step aside and let it work its magic.
Turns out, that’s worth every penny!
Source: amomama