There’s no better therapy than going down a deep, dark Reddit rabbit hole to read about other people’s problems (note: this statement was not approved by a licensed therapist). This week’s AIATH viral discourse centers around a wedding-style drama, naturally, because nothing encourages the people in your life to show their ass more than becoming a jointly taxable entity with your lover. Specifically, a wedding dress was at the center of this controversy, and it goes a lot deeper than some of the scammy bridal messes I’ve seen on TikTok. Trigger warning: you’re about to be real mad on behalf of a total stranger after I break down this wild Reddit story about a bride who demanded to wear her husband’s late mother’s wedding dress.
Viral Reddit Story: “AITAH for refusing to let my brother’s fiancée wear my late mother’s wedding dress?”
What happened?
The story, posted on March 2, 2025, starts with a 30-year-old woman who lost her mom five years ago. The Redditor wrote that her mom “wanted [her] to have [her wedding dress], whether [she] chose to wear it at [her] own wedding, repurpose it, or just keep it as a memory.” She describes it as “one of the most sentimental things” she owns. But that didn’t stop her incoming SIL, 29-year-old Laura (who is marrying her older brother Jake), from asking OP a wild question over coffee.
Even though their relationship is “not super close,” Laura asked her future SIL if she could wear her late mother’s dress for her ceremony because Laura “always dreamed of wearing a ‘meaningful’ dress when she got married” and thought it was the perfect way to “honor” her husband’s mom at the ceremony.
Instead of, IDK, slapping Laura’s coffee cup off the table, OP told Little Miss Princess that while she “appreciated her sentiment,” she was saving her OWN mother’s wedding dress for her OWN future wedding day. Laura, the level-headed bride that she is, shockingly didn’t take rejection well.
Laura told OP it was only fair she wore the dress since she never got to meet OP’s mom (???), and then, as a final delusional cherry on top of the cake, Laura told SIL that her “mom would have wanted her to wear it since she’s joining the family.”
Who was the asshole?
Bridezilla Laura was obviously declared the bad guy by the comments, but she wasn’t alone in earning that title. After SIL cleared NTA, “stood her ground,” and suggested Laura try a piece of her mom’s jewelry or shoes, her brother came to his bride’s defense. Jake told his own flesh and blood (the only other person to call his mom “Mom“, SMH) that she was “being unnecessarily difficult over ‘just a dress.'” OP shared that even some extended family members have told her she needs to think of how this would be a “touching tribute” for the “bigger picture.”
Let’s start at the top, shall we? The fact that Jake calls it “just a dress” is a clear indicator that neither he nor his spoiled little wife should get their hands on it. It’s not a dress; it’s the last gift OP has from her mother in this life, and anyone who understands a mother/daughter relationship should get that. It’s not SIL’s burden to prioritize her brother’s wedding over her own because hers isn’t happening now.
Everyone asking her to think of the bigger picture and what her mother would want should actually just STFU and listen! The OP’s mom explicitly told her daughter that she wanted her to have the dress. Notice how she didn’t add any caveats for if Jake got married first (which she surely would’ve considered since Jake is three years older). The top comment summarizes it perfectly: “Your mother left it to YOU. Your decision is final. No one gets to tell you otherwise.”
What should a family member do when a bridezilla oversteps?
SIL, if you’re reading this, please, for the love of God, heed the advice down-thread to “make sure [the dress is] kept in a safe place they can’t take or damage it to OP!” Your fam, unfortunately, sounds dangerously entitled, so it’s better to be safe than sorry with your most prized possession. If they can’t take you up on the generous compromises you suggested, that’s on them.