One-Year Anniversary Special: Audience Favorites, BIG Giveaway & a Toxic Engagement Story

Older. Employed. Owned a car. Buying a house. Apparently, those were the “red flags.”

This week marks one year of Here Comes The Drama (yay!), and I’m sharing a deeply personal, most bizarre wedding story where an engagement triggered years of emotional manipulation, financial pressure, and escalating abuse. From blessing requests gone wrong to explosive ultimatums, we unpack how toxic family dynamics can surface during major life milestones. This story is heavy, but important.

Plus, we’re celebrating one year of Here Comes The Drama! 🎉 Subscribe to my podcast and YouTube channel, and comment “Entered” on this episode’s YouTube video for a chance to win one $150 Visa gift card or one of two $25 Amazon gift cards. Winners will be announced on March 12.

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Must-Hear Insights and Key Moments

  • The Podcast Turns One – We’re celebrating one full year of Here Comes The Drama with a special giveaway: a $150 Visa gift card or one of two $25 Amazon gift cards.
  • Would You Rather: Wedding Edition – I’m answering your toughest “would you rather” wedding dilemmas, from feuding relatives to money with strings attached, during our one year special episode.
  • The “Blessing” That Became an Interrogation – What should’ve been a respectful conversation spirals into grilling, accusations, and power plays.
  • Control Disguised as Concern – Parents frame normal age gaps, financial stability, and independence as red flags to maintain control.
  • Financial Manipulation & Wedding Ultimatums – From demanding a master’s degree to refusing wedding support, money becomes leverage.
  • The Attic Incident – Screaming, verbal abuse, and a father apologizing to the boyfriend instead of his daughter push everything over the edge.
  • Choosing Safety & Ending the Cycle – Moving out, going no contact, and protecting future children becomes the ultimate act of healing.

Words of Wisdom: Standout Quotes from This Episode

  • Control doesn’t always show up as anger, sometimes it shows up as “concern.”
  • When your independence threatens someone, the behavior will escalate.
  • Green flags can look like red flags to people who benefit from your dependence. 
  • Money with strings attached is never a gift. Protecting your peace sometimes means choosing distance, even when it’s painful. 
  • Ending the cycle is an act of love for the next generation.

*This conversation is for entertainment and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional advice. Please seek a licensed professional for your specific situation.

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Team Dklutr Production

Blog Transcript:

Note: We use AI transcription so there may be some inaccuracies

Christa Innis: Hey everybody. Welcome back to another episode of, here Comes The Drama. I’m your host, Christa Innis, and I’m extra excited for you guys to be here today because it’s our one year anniversary. I can’t believe I’m saying that out loud because I still remember the. Coming up with this idea, feeling like it was so out of my reach.

And here it is. I just am so grateful to all of you guys for listening to sending in stories, to just sharing your support. It just means so much to me. So before I get too mushy and share too much about the podcast, I wanna read, this week’s review. It’s from Lady Tony. It says, when I was pregnant with my daughter in 2024, I got hooked with the skits on Insta.

Then I came across this podcast, craving for Drama. Satisfied. I love that because we all secretly, or maybe not so secretly, love the drama. Especially when it’s not our own. that’s the reason why, you know, I came up with this podcast. You guys wanted more stories, you wanted to hear more stories, talk more, hear more drama.

 and you guys were sending me so many, and this is a fun way to share more of myself, to meet other people. It’s been a lot of fun. so before we jump into the full part of the episode, like I said, I wanna just celebrate something big here and that is, the podcast is a year old today. We also hit 250,000 downloads, which was well beyond my expectations.

I think I’ve said this before, but I thought we were gonna hit like 25,000 in the first year. That was my initial goal. so I’m just blown away by the support, the love, all the stories you guys share with me, people willing to come on the podcast. I’ve met so many amazing people that have been, just.

Eager to come on the podcast and just be real and have conversation. and it’s been really great for me to just expand because as I’ve said before, you know, I work from home. My husband works from home, and I, you know, it’s great to just meet people, but with having a toddler, we don’t. Always get out as much as we want to.

 and so this is a great way to meet people from all over the world, all over the country. And, that’s just been such a blessing, such a gift to be able to do that. 

The One Year Anniversary Giveaway 

So, to say thank you to you guys after my blabbing here, I wanna tell you guys that I am doing a one year giveaway. not to be confused with the giveaway I’m doing for the new year.

It’s a little different, so pay attention to, to these specific details. but first I wanna share some fun stats about this podcast. So in the year, we have done 52 episodes. We had 34 unique guests. Many were on multiple times. I think maybe like five to 10 were on multiple times. I know my best friend, Yvette has been on like three or four at this point.

 and some of the people I’ve interviewed, their episodes have not come out yet. And then I have some in my roster that are scheduled and have not been interviewed yet. So lots more exciting episodes coming out. This podcast has reached 50 different countries, including obviously the United States, well, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, New Zealand.

Ireland, Sweden, Philippines, Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, India, Mexico, France, South Africa, and many, many more. so that’s very exciting. And yes, I know the UK includes many different countries. just kind of looking at my stats here quickly. so it’s just. Mind blowing to me still, just to know how many of you guys listen to it every single week.

And it makes me that much more excited to, also putting a lot more pressure on myself, but more excited to get the content out to you. So back to this giveaway, one listener will win a $150 Visa gift card, and two listeners are going to win a $25 Amazon gift card. So to enter, make sure you subscribe to the podcast.

 subscribe to my YouTube channel and comment. Entered. The reason we are doing YouTube is because that’s an actual trackable way. I can’t see if you’re subscribed and I don’t have a list of subscribers, on my podcast. So unfortunately I can’t do it that way. So subscribe to my YouTube channel and then for this video, just come underneath it.

Just say Entered. You can say like, Hey, I love your channel. Hey, this is my favorite video. Hey, I’m getting married this year. Hey, I love the color purple. And then put entered if you want, just for a little extra detail, whatever that is. just comment on this video. We upload all of my podcast episodes on YouTube full, and then we do little clips as well.

So we’ll make it very clear which video we’ll put on the cover, so you know which one to put on there. So again, $150 Visa gift card for the grand prize winner. and then two $25 Amazon gift card winners. So, super easy to enter. Subscribe to my YouTube channel, and comment entered on the video.

And just to say, just to cover all my bases, this giveaway’s not affiliated with or sponsored by YouTube, apple Podcast, Spotify, Amazon, or Visa. It’s just. My personal way of giving back to you guys and saying thank you. All right. That was enough blabbing for today. But you know what, who am I? What am I saying?

Would You Rather — Weddings, Boundaries, and Hard Calls

We’re getting into more blabbing now. So let’s get into today’s episode. you would think I’d be a little more well rested for this episode. I’m currently drinking this Gorge Energy drink, not sponsored at all. my husband put this in my stocking this year. Isn’t it cute? If you’re looking at the video,

More caffeine than I’m used to. I did not get great sleep last night. It’s been a doozy. and yeah, we stayed up too late watching Stranger Things. I’ll get into that later. Okay. Let’s get into, would you rather, and then I have a long story so I don’t wanna take up too much time before that, would you rather seat feuding relatives together or leave one uninvited and deal with it forever?

Ooh, that’s hard. Seat feuding relatives together or leave one uninvited. That’s gonna depend on my own personal relationship with them. Right. I hate causing drama or like causing something to happen. But if I’m thinking of like a situation where two people just can’t get along and, let’s say it’s someone that’s like closer to me, I would probably rather just not have someone invited if I knew they were gonna cause more drama at the wedding,

 seeing people together that I know aren’t gonna get along is just, it’s just asking for it at that point. So I think I’d rather just not invite one of the party. Okay. Two, would you rather your dad be late walking you down the aisle or your stepparent insist on being included last minute? I think I’d rather have my dad be late walking me down the aisle.

Hopefully not too late. cause that’s a problem. But again, all these things are very nuanced because if you’re close with your stepparent, I would hope you kind of include them in some way. It doesn’t have to be like them walking you down the aisle, but maybe you give them flowers and take photos with them ahead of time.

Maybe you do like a special moment with them. but again, it’s gonna depend on how close you are. If your stepparent is insisting, then my thought is maybe you’re not that close, so that’s why I’m gonna go with the late dad. Okay. Would you rather cover costs for a broke bridesmaid or ask for a step down?

Absolutely cover the cost. If this person means enough to me where I ask them to be in the wedding, I would absolutely be like, don’t worry about it. I will cover it for you. I’ve been in, not my own wedding, but I’ve been in other weddings where, a friend of mine reached out to me as like the maid of honor and was like.

You know what? I’m in three other weddings this year. I don’t think I can afford the bachelorette party. And I said, if you really wanna go, I will cover it for you. Like don’t worry about it. Please. Like, I wanna make sure you’re there for blank, actually come to think of it, I did have a couple bridesmaids, I wouldn’t say broke bridesmaids at all.

I’m not calling them that, but other ones that had other obligations like maybe other vacations planned or, they were having a baby other things going on where I just told them like, let me know where I can step in. I would never ask them to step down if they couldn’t afford something because the reason I’m asking someone to be in my wedding is ’cause they mean a lot to me.

 so I don’t know. I just don’t like that of like, oh, you can’t afford this, or You don’t wanna spend this. You can’t stand up in my wedding. Nah. Would you rather your maid of honor, ghost planning, or take over everything? that’s a tough one. I had the most amazing maid of honor, Yvette, who’s been on my podcast many times.

She would never either. God, I’m so bad because it’s like I can’t just pick one. Okay, I’m gonna pick one. I’m gonna say take over everything. I would rather, because think about this. If your maid of honor is ghosting you, they don’t care. They don’t wanna be there, they don’t wanna be a part of your wedding.

Who knows what’s gonna happen to your relationship after your wedding day. so there’s a lot of things, a lot of issues going on there. So if I can have them just take over the wedding. Hopefully they’re good at it. I don’t know. Okay. would you rather someone bring an uninvited plus one or bring their kids to a child free wedding?

Ooh, gosh. These are tough ones.

I think I would rather have someone bring an uninvited plus one. Because a very, a specified child-free wedding is not gonna be set up for more kids. Plus I think that’s gonna cause more drama. ’cause imagine if there was someone else that was like, oh, I can’t bring my kids. Okay, I’ll leave them at home.

Or I’ll call a babysitter or whatever. And then they come and this other person came with their kids. So I think that’s gonna cause more drama, an uninvited plus one.

Course, depending on the person, but, I think that’s fine. ultimately it’s not fine, but I think that’s better. maybe they just needed a ride or, I don’t know. They don’t wanna come alone either or not ideal. Would you rather have a guest leave early and post about it or stay and complain the entire night?

Well, if they’re posting about it, are they posting like. Why they left earlier, why the wedding stopped? ’cause that’s what I’m thinking. Leave and post about it because if it’s my wedding day, I am not paying attention to what people are posting. I’m not gonna see until the next day. So sorry. If they took the time out to post about why they left my wedding early, then it had more of an impact on them than they would like to think.

Okay. Would you rather go over budget or cut your guest list in half? That’s hard because to me, people were the most important thing to me when planning everything out. it was really hard. There were a few people that were like on the, I don’t know, like I haven’t talked to ’em in a couple years, but when we were friends or when we did work together, we were really close.

So there was a lot of people like that. Cutting in half would be really hard though.

Now, I think I would say I would rather. Cut my guess list in half. Then I think I’d rather go a little over budget. It just depends on how much. Right. okay, last one. Would you rather accept money with strings attached or pay for everything yourself? Pay for everything myself, I’ve talked about this before.

We had help on both sides and then we paid for a good chunk ourselves. but we never had any meddling parents. both of our parents, or say all four of our parents were so helpful. They never overstepped. They, they’re talented in their own ways. And so I just found different ways to include each of them, especially our moms.

Um. Never did they once say, I’m taking this from you, I’m doing this, or go behind my back and change something. They were both so supportive, um, and they would never hold money or gifts over our head. Um, so yeah, I, I always really sympathize with people that have to kind of like balance it all out because.

In general, even though it is a gift, you do feel like, okay, they gave this to me, so I want to give that same respect back. I’ve never been in a, like in a bad relationship where it’s like a mother-in-law or a mom like holding money over the head, being like, okay, if I give you this money though, I get to invite my 50 friends from church, or I get to, um.

Change up the flowers or I get to, you know, whatever. I’ve never personally had to deal with that, so I’m, I’m sure it’s very difficult when you’re in that position. 

When an Engagement Triggers Control, Not Celebration

All right, let’s get into it. This week’s line reaction, wedding story submission. All right. Huge fan of your videos for years. I actually started watching them while I was engaged, and the Ferris and Sloan saga genuinely got me through the worst of it.

Oh my gosh. Okay. I, I’m trying to think of how to say this. I love hearing that. But I also hate hearing that, if you know what I mean. Like, I hate hearing that people relate to the character so much because when I came up with it, it was just like so dramatic, so out of line, so wild. Like something I could never picture in my personal life.

Um, but I’ve had so many people say, thank you for creating this, because it allowed me to feel like heard and seen and like I wasn’t alone. Um, so. I’m glad for that part, but I’m really sorry that you had to go through this. Okay. My wedding story really began when my then boyfriend of a year and a half, and I decided we were ready to be engaged.

My parents and brothers had met him several times. I’d met his family and everything always seemed fine. My parents acted like they liked him. My mother even told extended family. We would definitely get married. When we’d only been dating for six months. Okay, wait.

So they said we’d definitely would get married when we’d only been dating for six months, which is an entirely different story. No one ever openly had a problem with him. He’s quiet and shy, and I always felt my family was intimidated by the fact that they couldn’t read or manipulate him. He didn’t give them anything to work with.

I, on the other hand, am a total blabber mouth and they often use that to make digs at me or gather information to use against me later. Oh gosh. Okay. By winter of 2021, we’d been talking seriously about engagement. We were also meeting with our priest for spiritual counseling. When we told him we were considering getting engaged, he was excited, but he also told us we need to book the date immediately.

If we wanted him to marry us within the next calendar year, there were only three slots left. Otherwise we’d have to wait an additional year, which we didn’t want, so we booked a date right then. Even though we weren’t formally engaged yet. Ooh, I like it. But I can see where the drama might come in.

There’s a lot of people that want to have a say over the date, which I don’t understand. I mean, I get like, so me personally, I get like checking in with family. Like we would, we always hold our family, like we wanna spring wedding. Um, and our venue, it was cheaper if you got married in March and on a Friday night.

So we were like, or not Friday night, but Friday. Um. So we kind of like threw that out there to like our parents at least. But everyone else we were like, if you can be there, be there. If you can’t, you can’t. Um, my boyfriend wanted to do the right thing and ask my parents for their blessing. I warned him that they were very controlling and wouldn’t be happy that they would be, that they would use the opportunity to bully him.

So you’re telling me she never saw any issues? With the family and him, or they never said anything about him, but right off the bat she’s like, they’re gonna bully you. They wanna control you, what? While he agreed it was ultimately my choice, he said he was raised to respect parents and still wanted to ask.

I reluctantly agreed and told him. I would let them know that he wanted to speak with them. Side note, I was living with my parents at the time. One morning I told my dad that my boyfriend wanted to ask him something important over Thanksgiving weekend. At first, my dad seemed excited and supportive. Then he said he needed to tell my mother.

I went to class and didn’t think much of it. When I got home, they were waiting for me and told me we needed to have a serious talk. Wait, but he didn’t even say anything yet. They must have like had like a clip. They sat me down and began grilling me with the most bizarre concerns about my boyfriend.

Okay, so this is like a bullet point list One, he was four years older than me. We were 22 and 26. Completely normal. Yeah. I think that’s a completely normal age gap. His job paid more than mine. Why is that a problem? And also what is this obsession? What people’s jobs pay If you are not paying the bills, why does it matter and how do they know what he makes?

Anyway? Three, he had a car and I didn’t, they had actively prevented me from getting a license up to that point. Okay, so they just don’t like that this guy is going to kind of be like your new family. It sounds like they were controlling you into not getting a license. Not, I mean, not getting a car.

That’s really odd to me. Number four, he was in the process of buying a house and they demanded that my name be on the title before marriage. Okay. As someone that has a daughter, if this was her partner, I feel like these are all great qualities, like he has a good paying job. He has a car, he’s in the process of buying a house.

These are all great things. You would be like, wow, he’s got his shit together. He loves you. He wants to take this to the next level. Like next step. Like why are they so like, Nope, you need to do this, this, and this. Why are these red flags to me? These are green flags. Um. Also like putting his her name on the house before marriage.

I mean, I don’t know, like legality stuff of that. I mean, I get like putting your, I mean, it’s not like she’s even talking about moving in yet, but I don’t know. Whatever. Okay. Last one. They even implied that he might be abusing me, which was completely untrue. Why would you say something like that, if anything?

He protected me from their ongoing abuse. Someone like that. And I’m not gonna make you know accusations because I’m only reading a story. I don’t know anyone in this story personally, someone that’s so used to controlling you and making choices for you. When they see another influence come in that’s allowing you to be a little more independent or kind of go away from their grasp, they’re gonna try to do all those things.

They’re gonna try to like point the finger at him and say, oh, he’s bad. He’s trying to hurt you. He’s trying to do all these things because they. They realize that when you get more independent and start thinking for yourself, you’re gonna realize that they’re the problem. On Thanksgiving day, my boyfriend still showed up, polite, respectful, and hopeful.

After dinner, he asked my father if they could talk. My father refused and said, now is not a good time. I don’t think it’s appropriate for you to ask me on Thanksgiving and make the holiday all about Jessica. Do they hate their daughter like this is, this is absurd. Like I don’t, I don’t think I ever use that word.

This is just like, yeah, I mean, in my mind, 22 is young, but that’s not for them to decide. She’s an adult. I think I was still living at home at 22, but I moved in with my boyfriend now husband at. 24. 24. I think we were dating at 23. You can’t, I mean, at that point you can’t. They just wanted her to stay like under wraps, under their control Q, the most awkward dinner imaginable.

My brothers kept making weird jokes about how women only get married because they’re gold diggers and kept putting, pushing, and kept pushing political arguments. No one wanted. Why do they hate her so much? So this was their problem with him making more money because it’s gonna look like she’s a gold digger.

I, I don’t know. This is wild. The next day was my cousin’s wedding. The whole family was acting strangely, but my boyfriend and I tried to enjoy ourselves. At the reception. I casually mentioned to my dad that I like the napkin color and would want something similar to that for my own wedding. He gave me a disturbed look and walked away without saying a word, dude, what is their problem?

‘Go Wait in the Attic’ — The Moment Everything Broke

The day after that, my boyfriend went back to my parents’ house for the conversation they had decided to have. The moment he walked in, it felt like a war room. They told him to sit down, then turned to me and told me to go wait in the attic. I wish I was kidding. Go wait. In the attic, where do you live? Is that, is that your room or do we need to call someone?

Hopefully you don’t still live there. This is like giving housemaid. Why are you in an attic and why do they want you to go there? This is scary. My boyfriend tried to insist that the conversation involved both of us, but my father demanded that I leave. I wouldn’t wanna stay with the dad. I’d be like, um, no.

She’s gonna stay with me, otherwise we’re both gonna leave for 40 minutes. They grilled him about his intentions and demanded. One that he agreed to financially support me getting a master’s degree, which I never wanted. Okay, wait. So first she’s a gold digger, but for marrying someone that’s making more money and now they’re telling him he has to financially support her in getting a master’s degree, but she never even said she wanted that.

Number two is that he put my name on the house title before marriage, even though the house was still under construction and no title even existed. This is, this is insane to me. Completely insane. I, I don’t even know, like, what do you do at that point? Like eventually I was allowed back in the room, my boyfriend again explained that a title didn’t exist yet, but they refused to accept it.

Then they turned to me yelling about how I thought I was going to pay for a wedding. They announced they didn’t believe in weddings. They don’t believe in weddings. Aren’t they married? And it’s not for them to decide. They wouldn’t, they said they wouldn’t pay a cent because weddings were a waste of money.

Okay? Just ’cause their marriage sucks, doesn’t mean they can put it on you, despite having had their own 50 K wedding in the nineties. So they have $50,000 wedding in the nineties, which today. Let’s look this up guys. A $50,000 wedding in the nineties is what in today’s world,

guys. $50,000 wedding in the nineties is equivalent to a 100,000 to $150,000 wedding today. And they’re trying to say, that is so freaking wild. Okay, here’s my philosophy, or here’s my theory. They’re either not doing well financially and. Maybe marriage wasn’t what they thought it would be because they’re unhappy people.

And so they’re thinking if their wedding was $50,000, they see how money has changed. They’re thinking they’re gonna have to cash, they’re thinking they’re gonna have to lend all this money to them, and they’re realizing they’re not happy in their own marriage and it was a scam. Um, so. They’re trying to be like, okay, well, she needs to get something out of this, so he needs to pay for her master’s degree.

I don’t know. That’s the only thing I can think of. I told them I didn’t need their money. They kept pushing. So my boyfriend finally said he had savings for a small wedding. My father scuffed looked him up and down and said, well, I guess we have a saver. They are jealous. They are so jealous of this boyfriend because he is doing well financially.

He has his shit together and he’s happy. He’s happy with their daughter and they’re not happy. There may, maybe they didn’t save money. They spent all their money on their wedding, and so now they’re living with the repercussions of their actions. Repercussions. Repercussions. Oh my gosh, these people. Then my mother launched into a how wait.

Then my mother launched into how I couldn’t get married the next year because I was also graduating and the family wouldn’t attend two parties for me in one year. That’s when I told them, we already set the date Oh, to be a fly on that wall.

They went ballistic. I’m laughing because I’m so uncomfortable and I’m not even there. Like, oh my gosh, this is terrible. This is terrible. They went ballistic, screaming verbally, verbally abusing me. Oh my gosh, and completely losing control. I finally snapped, yelled back, and stormed out. My father followed not to talk to me, but to apologize.

To my boyfriend for my behavior saying I’m sorry. She’s crazy. So now the dad’s like, Hey buddy, we’re friends. All these women, they’re so crazy. Get out of here. Get out of here. We walked down the block to the car and just stared each other. Finally, my boyfriend said, holy shit, you are right. He is like, yeah, you know what?

Um, I think I’m gonna take some time to think about this. Oh my gosh. That same day he offered to let me move in with him. He said he’d always suspected that my parents treated me badly, but he had no idea it was this dangerous. Um, and don’t tell, I mean, I know this is happening, this was in the past, but don’t tell your parents his address because they sound incredibly toxic.

Incredibly dangerous, abusive, like. Holy cow. This is, this is not good. We never got their blessing. We never got an apology. Two days later, after yet another argument, I packed my things and moved in with my in-laws at my husband’s insistence. I wish I could say I went, no contact with them, but the saga continued throughout our engagement.

Wedding and even the birth of our son and daughter. Girl, you’ve got so many stories to share. I, I have a lot of questions. Maybe I’ll reach out. Um, the fact that they were still invited to the wedding, they didn’t wanna offer anything, not saying parents have to or need to, of course not. Absolutely not.

But. It’s not like they were holding a string over your head. They were literally screaming at you. They never once supported you. They made fun of your boyfriend, then boyfriend. So to have them be a part of the engagement, your wedding, and now the birth of your son and daughter, I can see now why you relate to Ferris and Sloan story so much.

Choosing Safety, Breaking Cycles, and Protecting Peace

Oh, their first postpartum visit to our home is another insane story. One that ended with my husband banning them from our house entirely, but I think I’ve written enough for now. Oh, this poor girl. Oh my gosh. She really relates to Ferris and Sloan. It was, wasn’t until my grandpa. My only remaining tethered to them passed away in March, 2024 that I finally went no contact.

I am so proud of you. Like it’s so complicated. Relationships are so complicated, and you know, I’m not someone that you should be like, I’m not someone that’s like, oh, go no contact, because every relationship is nuanced. You never know, but based on what I know here. This was long overdue and I’m so proud of you and I’m sure it was very complicated and very hard to get to this point.

They still slander me daily on Facebook. These are emotionally, mentally, whatever else, spiritually emo i, immature parents. The fact they treat you like this and post about you on Facebook, like, ugh, tell ’em to grow up. Anyway, I hope you enjoyed my story. I feel like it has the right amount of chaos to be one in one of your videos.

And for the record, we did have a beautiful ceremony and reception. It was one of the best days of my life. Second only to the birth of birth of my children. And yes, my mother wore a black dress. No one really noticed. Okay, well I’m glad the mom. Elise, I’m assuming, behaved yourself at the wedding and hopefully the dad, they still had their wedding that they wanted, and it still was a beautiful day.

So I’m glad for that. I’m glad that some people were able to close their mouths on this special day and let them enjoy it. But that is a wild story. If you ever feel like writing in more and sharing the rest, please do. Um, a lot of people say like. Writing these stories out of things that happened to them or things that they’ve seen is kind of therapy in a, in it, it’s kind of therapy in itself.

Um, it allows you to really go through your emotions again and really understand what happened. And then hearing other people’s stories allow you to see that you’re not alone and you’re not crazy. Um, because I think sometimes like our mind plays tricks on us and it’s like, oh, it wasn’t as bad. It wa you know, it didn’t happen like that, but it was your experience.

So I think writing it out can be really helpful, um, and understanding yourself, understanding what happened. Um, and hopefully in sharing this, other people can relate to you and maybe give some advice. Um. Or if other people are in the early stages, maybe you are in an engagement right now where their parents or your parents or some other relative is acting like this.

Um, so maybe we can share some advice as well. Oh my gosh, this, this poor couple. I’m really happy for you guys being able to go No, no contact. I think a lot of times children can bring that out in people because you’re like, I don’t wanna subject my child to this, and the cycle ends with me. Proud of you guys for that.

Alright, let’s end this episode with some confessions and then we’ll, we’ll get on with our days. All right. This is your biggest wedding regret. We always like to mix these up on Instagram, so that was the question of the week. Here we go. My father-in-law tried to influence what I was wearing on my wedding day, but I refused, so he made me cry.

What’s with these father-in-laws trying to influence what the bride wears? I read another story like that about him picking out Amazon dresses because they were affordable, like he wasn’t even paying for it. I don’t understand that this regret. It says not getting a professional photographer and not enough pics with my parents.

I think that’s one of the number one regrets I see. Photographer is so worth it getting a good photographer or videographer because I will tell you, I still see my wedding photos. We have them hanging, I have ’em in a photo book and it’s, it was so worth it to me not trying to do a small ceremony on a beautiful, small chapel that I’ve always wanted.

Okay. That makes me sad. I think a lot of times we get influenced by other people around us, or we see movies or we see what our best friend did and we’re like, ah, I need to have a wedding like that. I need to have a big wedding. I need to do this. And it, it pulls us away from what is actually true to us.

Um. I wish I had switched out some friends in my wedding party for my cousins. That’s hard. That’s hard when you regret having or not having someone in your wedding. All right, last one.

I let my friend do my hair and makeup. She’s, I let my friend do my hair and makeup, but she is no longer in my life. She turned out to be narcissistic. Well, that’s a whole can of worms. I, I’m sorry. I’m sorry that happened. Um, is the regret because she was not good at hair and makeup or the regret is because you’re not friends anymore?

Because if she did it well, who, who really cares? Because you could just be like, oh, it was a hairdresser. If it was that she’s not your friend. You only did it because she was your friend at the time and it was a bad hairstyle and makeup then. Yeah, that’s, that’s, that’s a regret I would have. Fun fact, I did my sister’s hair and makeup on her wedding day, and I’m four years younger than her.

Um, I’ve always loved doing hair and makeup. I’m no. In no way, shape, or form a professional. You, you guys can see I’m learning every day. Um, but makeup was not something that, like my sister completely enjoyed I think at the time. Um, and I remember doing it for her prom too, and her, um, another dance too. Um, so that was like fun.

But I don’t think I’ve done it for anybody else. Yeah, I don’t know. Anyway, that was a wild episode, wild story. Again, thanks for being here, you guys. This is my one year. Birthday of the podcast of Here Comes the Drama. Um, it’s just been so much fun to create so much fun meeting all these people, hearing your stories.

Um, so if you guys love the podcast, please share it with a friend. Um. It just really helps the podcast get out as well and hear, have more people hear about it. Um, I’m just so incredibly grateful. And of course, as a reminder, we’re doing our year giveaway, um, three prize winners, so make sure you subscribe to the podcast, subscribe to my YouTube channel, and comment on this video.

All you have to do is just make sure the word entered is in it. You can put anything else in there or nothing at all. Um, and the winner will be announced on March 12th. Um, we will reach out to you, we’ll comment on your, um, comment, and then we will also go through email after that going through the correct steps so we make sure we contact the right person.

All right guys. Thanks for hanging out with me. It’s been an amazing year and there’s so much more to come that I cannot wait to share. All right, guys, have a good one.


Mustard Dresses, Missing Bridesmaids, and Vegas Meltdowns

Would you still call her a bridesmaid if she skipped your wedding… to buy a car?

I’m diving into one of the wildest submissions yet, the friend who threw a fit over a free mustard dress, ghosted the bridal prep, and flat-out didn’t show on the wedding day because her parents were offended. Yes. It gets worse.

I also react to a viral Bridezilla story packed with outrageous demands, from $2,000 bridesmaid costs to rewriting heartfelt toasts. Plus, I roast some spicy wedding takes that had me saying, make it make sense!

Note: This is a re-share of a previously Patreon-only episode — now unleashed for everyone who loves a little bridal chaos.

Join me on Patreon and get bonus content every month! 

My new book Here Comes the Drama: A Ferris and Sloan Story is live!

Get the book!

Episode Chapter Markers

00:00 Introduction

01:50 Bridesmaid Boot Camp: Wedding Trivia

04:45 Bridesmaid Confessionals: Real Stories

10:48 Wedding 911: Listener Dilemmas

15:52 Bridezilla Court: Reddit Stories

16:09 Bridesmaid Drama Unfolds

17:02 Bachelorette Party Demands

18:35 Wedding Budget Woes

19:45 Bridesmaid Appearance Control

20:31 Bridesmaid Costs and Expectations

23:04 Savage Wedding Takes

26:31 Crazy Wedding Confession

Must-Hear Insights and Key Moments

  • The Mustard Dress Meltdown – A bridesmaid spirals over a gifted dress and turns the friendship icy.
  • The No-Show That Shocked Me – She skipped my wedding for a brand-new car purchase. Priorities?
  • Bridezilla Reddit Deep Dive – From insane budgets to forced Vegas trips, this bride broke every rule.
  • Savage Wedding Takes – Family pressure, glam expectations, and MOH salary debates get roasted.
  • Patreon Confessions Unlocked – Behind-the-scenes chaos now shared with the full drama squad.
  • Boundaries vs Bonding – When being “too nice” costs you peace — and a dress.

Words of Wisdom: Standout Quotes from This Episode

  • “If you’re mad about a free dress, maybe the dress isn’t the problem.” Christa Innis
  • “The second someone tells me to dye my hair for a wedding? I’m out.” Christa Innis
  • “This isn’t a royal coronation, it’s a ceremony… relax.” – Christa Innis
  • “Some people don’t want to be in your wedding — they want a front row seat to complain.” – Christa Innis
  • “At that point? That’s not a bridesmaid. That’s emotional sabotage in heels.” – Christa Innis

*This conversation is for entertainment and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional advice. Please seek a licensed professional for your specific situation.

Join the Drama with Christa Innis:

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Your stories make Here Comes the Drama what it is! Share your unforgettable wedding tales, hilarious mishaps, or unbelievable moments with us. Whether it’s a wild confession or a story worth a skit, we can’t wait to hear it.

Submit your story today: Story Submission Form

Follow us on social media for updates and sneak peeks at upcoming episodes. Your stories inspire the drama, the laughs, and the lessons we love to share!

Team Dklutr Production

Blog Transcript:

Note: We use AI transcription so there may be some inaccuracies

Christa Innis: Hi guys. Welcome back to another episode of, Here Comes The Drama. I’m your host Christa. This is a very special episode if you can see me. I’m wearing my Grinch sweatshirt and my very merry holiday headband, which ironically was the quote unquote villain in one of our recent skits with a Elise and Paige.

But I love this headband. It’s very festive. Um, today is Christmas. Um, I’m recording this like a month in advance though, so my mind can’t quite wrap around that yet. Um, being a mom or just I guess anyone really just automatically puts me in the panic of checklists, what things I need to get done for the holidays and, you know, all that good stuff, whether it’s work, personal, family, everything.

I feel like I’ve been recording so much just to catch up. Um, so that’s why my mind’s just kind of all over the place. So if you are feeling that way because of the holidays or whatever’s going on, I’m right there with you. Um, so this week’s gonna be a little different because, um, it’s the holidays and preparing for that.

I’m taking a little, little time off recording because. There’s so many other projects, you know how that goes. Um, so today I am actually gonna play a prerecorded episode that was originally made for my Patreon. And if you guys have been with me for a little while, you know, I didn’t do Patreon for that long.

Just felt like I was being pulled in so many directions and I really wanted to give my full attention to, um, my podcast. So it was a lot to record those extra episodes. So. Um, I’m gonna do a couple wedding dilemmas that were sent to me. Give some advice on those, and then we’re gonna jump right into this episode from Patreon called Bridesmaids. Then we’re gonna jump right into a Patreon episode that was called Confessions of a Bridesmaid Secrets Scandals and Wedding Woes.

So first, let’s jump into these little wedding dilemmas that were sent over to me. They’re of course, of course, anonymous. These are ones that people send me. You can DM me, you can email me, whatever that is.

The Mother-in-Law Dance Dilemma & Thank You That Triggered Me

“Okay, it says, hi Christa. I was wondering if I could get some of your advice. My daughter is getting married in a few months and we absolutely adore our son and we absolutely adore our soon to be son-in-law. However, my future son-in-law has an on again off again relationship with his mother. She has stated many times to anyone willing to listen that she is not attending the wedding, she already knows that she will be in so much pain that day because of their estranged relationship. Is it okay for me to offer him a mother-in-law, son-in-law dance so he is not left out of that special moment of his day, or would that make things worse after the wedding if she really doesn’t show up and see pictures of that? Please let me know what you’d think. I’d love to get your advice on this. Love all your skits.”

Okay. This is a very complicated situation, right? I, first and foremost, I think it’s amazing that you’re thinking of him on his wedding day and how you can help make it better. Ultimately, I think you need to talk to your daughter and see if this is something that she would support and thinks that she’d be comfortable with.

Um. And it’s gonna ultimately be their decision because I get it, you wanna help, you also don’t wanna overstep. Um, like I said, it’s a very complicated thing. Relationships are complicated and yes, you don’t want the mother to be hurt. Um, and if she, but she’s already made it very clear, I’m not going to the wedding, it’s very estranged for me.

It’s gonna be very painful. So at that point. Talk to your daughter. If she seems okay with it, then I would talk to him, take the pressure off. Just be like, I just wanna offer this. If by chance you wanted to take me up on it, I’m there to help you in any way I can. And then let them ultimately decide you don’t want them to be put in a place where they feel like they have to say yes, and you don’t want him to feel, um, uncomfortable, like, or kind of put in a corner where he’s like, yeah.

I can’t say no, or I can’t say no to you because, or I can’t say yes to you because my mom’s gonna see something. Um, so. It’s really just communication with them first and, and every relationship’s gonna be completely different. Some people are gonna hear this and be like, absolutely not. That’s overstepping.

Other people are gonna say Yes, absolutely. So if you have a close relationship with him, you guys respect each other and you look at him like a son, then I don’t see any personal problem with it. Talk to your daughter first. Get her approval and if she’s okay with it and loves the idea, then I would move forward and ask him.

I love that though. I think that’s that’s a great way to. Step in the role and show that you are taking him in as part of the family.

Okay, this one says. The baby delivery skit. My husband was best man and his friend and our kids’ godparents wedding. That was a week after my due date. We got the invite the same week I found out I was pregnant. Anyway, they are very close, and my mother-in-law was going to be here to help with our toddler.

So I said that in this one instance he could go because they were so close and he was the best man, but only if our baby had been born since the wedding was out of state. Anyway, baby was born a few days early, so he went to the wedding and gave them a fairly expensive gift. We just got the thank you card and it was only addressed to him with a thoughtful note about him still still going to the wedding.

I’m sorry, but the gift was from both of us, and I was an equal participant in him being able to go, despite me being a weak postpartum with a toddler. Why am I so triggered by this? Okay. I read this and I was like. Kind of shocked. Like I would never just thank the husband whether he couldn’t come or not.

Um, at our wedding, we actually had a best man who, um, his wife had just given birth, I wanna say maybe a month or two prior. So it was very clear that she wasn’t gonna be able to come, and we completely understood that. We would never have just said thank you to him only for coming. We wrote a thank you to the whole family because we really appreciated the gift no matter what.

And the fact that she let him go or he was able to go, I shouldn’t say let him, but that he was able to go. Despite just having a child, um, was meant a lot to us that he still made the Far Trek. So I get being triggered by it. I wouldn’t get hung up on it because some people just don’t understand etiquette.

Um, but for me personally, I would still think the think the wife, of course, because you guys are a partnership. Um. And I would absolutely be writing that out to both people. So that’s my personal take on that. If you guys are watching this on YouTube, comment below what you would think. I wouldn’t only thank people that came to the wedding.

That’s just the same as people that couldn’t come to the wedding for some reason and still sent a gift. I wouldn’t not send them a thank you because they weren’t physically at the wedding. If they sent a gift, they participated in any way, shape, or form. I’m gonna be sending them a thank you. All right guys.

That’s all I have. Of course we’re gonna jump into that prerecorded episode. But before we get to that, I just wanna take a moment to say thank you all for being here. I’m so grateful, especially, um, this time of year, I think it’s just a real, a time to really just look back and just be grateful for everything.

Um, so I wanna wish you all a warm and peaceful holiday season no matter what you celebrate, or even if this time of year is just really stressful and you just can’t wait for it to be over. I just really hope you find moments of rest, joy, and connection. So without further ado, please enjoy my Patreon episode, confessions of a Bridesmaid, secret Scandals and Wedding Woes.

Christa Innis: Today we’re focusing all on bridesmaids. As I should know a thing or two since I’ve been a bridesmaid. Including twice made of honor almost 10 times and I’ve seen and heard it all plus I’ve gotten millions of stories from you guys.

So let’s kind of walk through what you can expect for this episode First up is going to be bridesmaid boot camp. It’s going to be a rapid fire guessing game to test your wedding knowledge. we’re going to have bridesmaid confessional, real unfiltered confessions from the archives.

Next is going to be wedding 911 listener dilemmas where I dish out my best advice. So we’re going to see just what comes up when you guys, , want some advice. the next segment is going to be called bridezilla court, a wild bridesmaid story caught straight from the depths of Reddit. Then we’re going to go right into here comes the roast spicy takes on wedding trends.

So I’m going to give you guys my honest take on some of these crazy things that come up. And last but not least, what would one of my episodes be without a crazy bridesmaid story? So, nothing quite. Brings out the drama, like a real life story, right? So I’ve got one from the archives that, I’ve not read yet.

So we’re going to react in real time together. grab a drink, settle in and let’s kick off this series with some major bridesmaid drama. Okay. First up is bridesmaid boot camp. So I’m going to go through these rapid fire trivia questions and throw some wedding facts at you, and you just do your best guess, , as you’re listening.

Bridesmaids: From Roman Armor to $6,800 Dresses

Okay, number one, true or false. Bridesmaids used to dress like the bride to confuse evil spirits. This is True. In ancient Rome, brides made stress identically to the bride to ward off evil spirits and potential kidnappers. Imagine dealing with that kind of drama. So it’s kind of funny how it’s changed so much over the years.

It used to be like, let’s distract everyone from the actual bride so she can get married and no one can try to, like, take her or, throw drama on her day. Now it’s like, don’t look anything like the bride unless she specifically requests it. Okay, number two. What’s the most expensive bridesmaid dress ever recorded?

Okay, so when I saw this question, I’m like thinking of what I’ve spent on bridesmaid dresses luckily the most of them I’ve spent like 99. I’ve spent a few that were over 200 But for the most part I would say around 150 it was like average the most ready for it 6, 800. It was a Vera Wang dress for a celebrity wedding and no, the bride did not cover the cost. Guys, that is insane. That is like a mortgage that has twice, triple a mortgage. I don’t even know. Like that is insane to spend on a dress. I mean, I guess if it’s a celebrity wedding, they have the money to spend.

I don’t know. I don’t know. Okay. Number three, bridesmaid duties used to include what unusual task. Okay. There’s a lot that has changed over the years. So You might think of this, but I don’t know. I was kind of shocked by it holding onto the dowry and guarding the bride on the way to the groom’s house.

So basically the bridesmaids were the original wedding security team. The dowry is a transfer of wealth, property, or money from the bride’s family. And so. They would protect this to the groom or its family as part of the marriage arrangement. I’m like, that’s like a lot of pressure on a bridesmaid. I’m glad that’s not the case anymore.

Like, I’m glad we’re just there for fun and support and, you know, all that good stuff. Okay, the last one, number four. In what country is it considered bad luck for bridesmaids to wear matching dresses? This is so funny because we used to do matching dresses all the time in the U. S. The answer is China. In China, it’s believed matching dresses attract bad energy so bridesmaids wear different colors.

Okay, I love this because we’re kind of getting away from the trend of wearing matching dresses. even like my own wedding, it was, I had like a specific like family of colors and then all the bridesmaids were able to pick out their own style because I feel like Everyone has their own style, their own body type. Like let’s not shove everyone in the same dress.

Okay, next up, we’re going to do some bridesmaid confessionals. Dun, dun, dun. Okay. that’s my own, music we got going on here. Okay. Here we go. I’m just going to react to these in real time, guys.

Just Say No: Navigating Bridesmaid Pressure and Wedding Drama

I said no to being a bridesmaid at my brother’s wedding because I don’t approve of his choice, or him in general. Okay, so this is a two part thing. So it’s not just that she doesn’t approve of the new guy or girl coming in, she does not approve of her brother. I mean, there’s a backstory here. There’s some drama here that I’m very curious about. My thought is Okay, well, here’s the thing.

Here’s where I want to go with this. There is so much pressure to say yes to being in a wedding because it’s your brother, sister, whoever’s wedding. And I want to give the free will to everyone right now, if you don’t know you already have it, but you can say no to being in a wedding. I know, it’s crazy thought.

But here’s the thing, like, there’s so much pressure being in a wedding and if you don’t enjoy that or you don’t support the couple, don’t say yes, because you’re going to be miserable. like lucky for me. And that’s probably why I talk about weddings and stuff. I love weddings. I love being a part of weddings.

there was a time. I would say late 20s, I was in a wedding like every single year, if not a couple a year, and I loved it. I love being crafty. I love seeing how I can be useful and helpful, but it’s exhausting. You’re spending a lot of money. You’re spending a lot of time. That’s also pre kids, like, I was married.

So I had a lot more free time. Now, if I was in a wedding, It would be a lot harder. It’d be a lot more Zoom stuff and, traveling would be a lot more harder, and so it’s okay to say no. you gotta know your own limits and what you’re interested in. Okay, next confession.

I said no. Friend insisted. I kept saying no. The bride had a full on meltdown and wouldn’t stop.

I finally said yes to being a bridesmaid and 2, 000 later is what I spent. I should have stuck with no. Here we go. This is a common theme. If you have a gut feeling and want to say no, please say no. The fact that the bride had a full on meltdown because you said no, that’s not a bride. This is someone that just wants you up there as a number.

Or other bridesmaids, said no to her already. And so she’s putting the pressure on you to say yes. 000 later, no. I’m curious what that was all on. My guess is we’re talking dress, shoes, hair, makeup, maybe a bachelorette party, a gift. Those things add up. So even if you’re like, I don’t want to spend a lot of money, little things add up.

 if the bride really wanted you to be a part of the wedding and said like, I’ll pay for your dress or I’ll help you with blank. Then sure, but a no means no. even if you have the money and you just don’t want to be in the wedding, that’s up to you. That’s terrible.

Financial Fiascos: When Bridesmaids Go Broke for Weddings

Okay, next confession. The first time I was a maid of honor, I was in complete shock. I had no idea the protocol. I went into debt. Wait, what? You went into debt. I had no idea I was responsible for the wedding party dresses. Whoa, in what wedding? And gifts for everybody. You got scammed. You got scammed. You should not be paying for somebody’s wedding party dresses and the gifts as the maid of honor.

No, no, absolutely not. Bridesmaid gifts are from the bride. That’s it. End of story. And those aren’t even like a guarantee. Every wedding that I’ve been in, There was a different type of gift. I never expected one from the bride, but the maid of honor never bought the gifts It’s not the maid of honor’s responsibility.

You got scammed You got used by a friend whoever you were the maid of honor for and I am so sorry you went into debt you guys Oh my gosh. I feel so bad for this bride. Here’s the thing. It’s hard when you are the first out of your friend group maybe like the first bride or you’re the first maid of honor or first bridesmaid and it’s hard to ask, like, what’s expected?

I don’t understand this. And then you say yes. And if you come from different backgrounds or you have different, finances, financial situations. It’s going to be hard to afford the same things. And especially I have found in your twenties, people are at just completely different levels. I was invited to a bachelorette party once, and I was a bridesmaid and they wanted to go to, I don’t even remember what it was, maybe Ibiza.

And I was like, you know what? You guys go and have a great time. I’m going to sit this one out because I don’t even remember how old I was. Maybe 27. I was like, I do not have the money to go to Ibiza. I just don’t. and it’s gonna be like a long, trip. I was just like, you know, if I’m gonna go out of the country, I’m gonna plan a trip with my now husband.

But, yeah, so We need to know our own limits and be okay with saying no to people because it’s just if the bride is expecting you to spend all that money and cares more about her day than your own finances and your own, your friendship, they’re not a friend. They’re not a friend.

Okay, this kind of goes into like both sections. So we’re gonna just gonna read this as a confession. I have a situation for you. My cousin was invited to be a bridesmaid at her friend’s wedding. At the time, the friend didn’t know what she was doing for the wedding. So it was just preliminary.

Later, the friend decided it was going to be a destination wedding. This significantly increased the cost of everything to do with the wedding. Yeah. Yeah, that one. My cousin had just bought a house and could not afford to be a bridesmaid anymore. She told her friend, and the girl said that she could take out a loan.

What? Take out a loan to be in the wedding? No, we’re not doing that. We’re not taking out loans for people. That is the worst financial advice I’ve ever heard. I’m not a financial expert, but I know that’s bad advice. My cousin right, rightly thought that was ridiculous and they haven’t spoken since. Okay.

This bride, this is a bridezilla. This is a bridezilla. We’re not doing that. We’re not telling people to get loans to be in our wedding. If someone says I can’t, like, if I really, really, really wanted someone to be there, like, let’s say it was like a best friend of mine, she said, Hey, I just bought a house.

I can’t afford to be there. I’d be like, you know what, let me cover it for you. Don’t worry about any expenses. If she still said no, I’d be like, you know what? support that. You’re still my friend. Like, let’s hang out another time. This is ridiculous. We are we’re not treating our friends that way. That is insane.

Okay. Segment number three, wedding 911. I got some listener disasters that we are going to talk through right now and, see what kind of advice I give them. And just a little disclaimer here. I’m no expert. I don’t give the best advice. I just give advice for what works for me. And a lot of times my advice might end with, well, whatever works best for you. So I’ll give some scenarios and, what I think might be a good idea. But you know your situation best. So more power to you. Here we go. 

No More Pressure: Bridesmaid Boundaries 101

Help. The bride just told us we all have to wear shapewear and lose weight to look uniform. I’m sorry, in the bridesmaid dresses. No, I’m already saying no. I’m fuming. Do I push back or suck it up?

Suck it up? No, no, no, no, no, no, we’re not doing that. I would say thank you for your time. Thank you for your friendship gonna have to walk away now because a friend that cares more about my body size and my shape and a wedding dress does not care about me. There’s no sucking it up for someone like that. No, someone that literally tells you to lose weight I’m anti losing weight for your wedding.

I’m pro do what makes you feel the best for your wedding day, but we don’t need to shed for the wedding. unless that you or yourself are like, Hey, I’d like to like lose some weight. Sure. More power to you. But no, we’re not having people tell us that we need to lose weight. We need to love our bodies the way we love them.

Okay. Next one. My best friend is getting married. And she expects us to chip in for her dream bachelorette party weekend in Minocos. I love her, but I can’t afford this. How do I tell her without running the friendship? Okay. This is easy for me coming from an outside perspective. Cause I get it when it’s like your own friend, but your friend, that’s not your friend.

That’s not your friend. She expects you to chip in for her dream bachelorette.

I get it. So with all my, friend groups, when I was a bridesmaid, we would all chip in for these different bachelorette parties, split the cost amongst everyone that goes. Bridesmaids pay a little bit more because they like pay for the house. And I feel like every bachelorette party was a little bit different, but that’s going to be very expensive.

I mean, you’re talking a few thousand. Probably. And here’s the thing, too. Some brides get so caught up in the social media aspect of it. Like, they want to be influencers or they want to boast about it on social media. So they want the curated, gift bags. They want the curated setup. And that just takes away from the whole thing. And this is coming from someone that loves the creative part of it. I love putting stuff together. I love making those cute little gift bags. But if you make it more about let’s post on social media and go viral, or let’s have people like ooh and ah over it, that’s taking away from the actual experience of it.

It’s supposed to be about celebrating and like being friends, have a night away or a weekend away, whatever. so I would just tell her, you know, I love you. But just like you said, I love you. But I can’t afford this. I want to be there to support you in any way I can. but this is a little too much for me.

If you want to do that with your other bridesmaids and they can all afford it and are happy with it, then more power to you. Please do that. I feel like I’m saying more power to you a lot this episode. Please do that, and I would love to take you out for dinner. Blah, blah, blah. Like, for example, at my own bachelorette party, I gave no expectations. ‘I said, Hey, here’s three cities I would maybe want to go to for maybe like a long weekend.’ I told all of my bridesmaids, including my maid of honor. I said, don’t feel like you have to come, please, please. There’s no pressure to attend anything. my bridesmaids did not come and that was fine. It happens. It’s okay. One ended up coming to my town and we just went out to dinner and we had like a nice day, the two of us. I didn’t expect it. It was fine. Okay, so if telling your friend that ruins your friendship, then she wasn’t a friend to begin with. 

Next one, our bridesmaid dresses came in and mine doesn’t fit at all the boutique messed up my order and now the bride is telling me I need to pay for a new one even though it wasn’t my fault. What do I do? Okay, if it’s in fact the boutique’s fault. Like, maybe they, ordered the wrong size, they messed up your sizing, they will order you a new one. I actually was a part of a wedding once where this happened to a friend of mine who was a bridesmaid as well, they ordered her a size 2 bra big I want to say or I can’t remember the too small or too big.  And she had to go back and get them resized and they were going to order another one It was a boutique and they did it what will happen with that is they’ll just put that dress on the rack to sell at a discounted price I’m, no expert. I don’t know 100 but no. You shouldn’t have to pay for a new one if the boutique messed it up. So I would call them.

Okay, last one here is, uh, The bride just sent us a spreadsheet of wedding expenses and expects each bride to contribute 400 towards her hair, dress, and makeup. I’ve never heard of this. Do people actually do this? Okay, the only time I heard this happening is another crazy bridesmaid story where she was taking money from them and using it towards her wedding. So, no, this is not normal. You should not be paying anything for the bride. If anything, the bride should be paying for your hair and makeup.

So, we’re gonna say no to that. And, again, if she says, well, then you can’t be in the wedding, then you say, well, have a great day. I will look at the pictures later.

Okay, segment number four. Here we go. Bridezilla court. You be the judge. I did some research and I found a crazy Reddit story. This kept coming up as like a very crazy one. So here we go. I have not read the whole thing Let’s react you be the judge who’s in the wrong here. 

16 Bridesmaids, 1 Nightmare Bride

This bride has 16 girls to be bridesmaids in the year and a half between the engagement and the wedding all But six dropped out Three of them were her sisters. Wait, so three of the six that dropped out were her sisters? Okay, that’s That’s a bad sign. What’s going on here? If she has 16 and 6 dropped out, I’m no math whiz, but that’s like 40%. She insisted on 16 different shades of blue and 16 unique dress styles for each bridesmaid. Then threw a fit when the store didn’t have that many options.

Well, why don’t you look first to see like, hey, does this store have, dress options and then we’re gonna like bring the bridesmaids in. That’s a lot of shades of blue. She’d probably want it to look like, dark to light and like they’re perfectly lined up. Like that’s like very I mean, that would look very beautiful.

However, it’s not really practical. I don’t know. She demanded that everyone pay for a week long bachelorette party in Vegas, including covering her share. Okay, so here’s the thing. I mentioned how all the bachelorette parties I’ve gone on, we cover for the bride. That’s just what we do. And I’ve paid everywhere from a couple hundred dollars.

Actually, probably the lowest was like a hundred dollars when I was 20. And all the way to probably like 1, 500, 2, 000 for like a full like week long trip that we did one time. That being said, the bride never, never said, you have to do this. The bride even tried to pay for her part. She did not demand that everyone had to come. She did not demand it was a week long. Like we planned all this stuff and it’s one of my best friends and all best friends went. So it was like a girl’s trip. that is insane.

She got angry when bridesmaids opted out. I was a single mom and college student at the time.Her parents gave her 20, 000 budget for the wedding, but she ended up spending 100, 000. How do you spend 100, 000 when you don’t have it? I don’t know. Also these days if she’s planning a big fancy wedding, 20, 000 unfortunately does not cover a lot. it’s insane how expensive they are. She insisted they cover the difference.

Okay, I don’t know how this parent -adult relationship works. They took out a loan and they are still paying it off. Okay, what’s with these loans? So she overspent for the wedding and her parents took out a loan to pay for it. See that is terrible. That’s the keeping up the Joneses things that I hate.

If you cannot afford it, Why are we having these crazy over the top weddings if you cannot afford it? At that point, it’s more about the show. It’s more about people’s perception of you and less about the actual marriage. And I swear, like, so many of these end up in divorce, like, I know that’s, very generalization, but like, because they don’t focus on the actual, like, hey, we’re stepping into marriage together. They’re like, literally just making it about this big day. Like, yes, we want the day to be special and exciting, and yes, it’s gonna be cost some money, but when you do all this, it’s like, no, that just takes away from it.

Okay, she wanted all the bridesmaids to have their hair color the same, and even asked the two blondes to dye their hair? They declined. Okay, the second I’m asked at my hair for a wedding, I’m out. Despite paying for nothing for the bridesmaids, traditionally the bride covers at least one expense, like dresses or hair and makeup. She demanded that we purchase specific shoes, jewelry, dresses, and cover our own hair and makeup.

So this is the thing too, Like in my own wedding, I had a makeup artist and I had a hairstylist. I said, you guys want hair and makeup, let me know. It is not a requirement. I had some that did their own hair and makeup. I had some that just did their own hair. Some that just did their own makeup. Whatever they wanted was up to them. I would never demand something and then not pay for it myself. Not pay for it for them.

Okay. On top of that, she required everyone to stay the entire weekend at the hotel where she was getting married. I don’t get this required thing. Like, how is she gonna, make you do that? In total, the cost excluding a wedding gift ended up being over 2, 000 per bridesmaid. That actually sounds low. When I look at all the things that she asked for, if you’re talking about a week in Vegas, that’s gonna be 2, 000 itself. Talking about flight, you’re talking about meals, you’re talking about hotel, that alone is gonna be like 1, 500 or 2, 000.

This was a largely poor to middle class area and most of us are college age. There is no way in college I would have been spending that. The bachelorette parties that I to in college were one night, we usually stayed at someone’s house or a cheap hotel, and we went to bars. That’s what we did. So I would maybe have spent a hundred dollars. Maybe two, depending on how crazy.

There’s no way I’ve been spending that in college. She also had three separate engagement parties and bridal showers. No, no, just, I don’t even know what to say to that. The final straw for me was that she demanded to review my toast a month before the wedding so she could edit it. So I’m guessing this is a maid of honor that wrote this. Then she completely rewrote it herself.

I don’t even have anything to say to this bride, because this is just all terrible. this is so terrible. Okay, someone writing a toast or a speech for your wedding or engagement party or whatever event is supposed to be, like, comes from their heart. They do it to say words that, mean something to them. To, like, make you feel good on your day. If you rewrite it yourself, what’s the point? literally, what’s the point?

Oh, here we go. At that point, I decided to skip the wedding altogether and ended our friendship. So, that was the straw that broke the camel’s back. They did end up getting married, and six plus years later, he seems absolutely miserable.

So we’re looking from afar, it sounds like they’re not friends anymore. He looks miserable, so they spent all this money. so, I’m wondering if she’s one of the six that dropped out. I, gosh, I have so many questions, but I’m also like, this girl sounds terrible. It makes me wonder, like, if they had a feeling, gut feeling that this bride was gonna act this way, or if it was one of those where as soon as she got engaged, like, a bridezilla just turned on.

I’ve never experienced this first hand. All the times I’ve been a bridesmaid, I’ve never, never seen any of the brides act in this way. They’d all been friends I’d been friends with for a while. Some of the engagements were long, some were really short. They were all different, but. I had never seen bridesmaid behavior like this.

This is insane. Yeah, I would have been long gone. I don’t know about you guys.

Alright, segment number five. Here comes the roast. These are some savage wedding takes. I don’t know how savage I’ll get, but we’ll see. Alright.

Bridesmaids: Close Ties, Clear Expectations 

Here’s my opinion. First things first, asking people to be in your wedding just because they’re family. Oh, I think I talked about this earlier, but no, if you’re not super close with someone or you just don’t want them in your wedding. You do not have to ask them because here’s the thing. I hear so many stories where the parents pressure siblings to ask, you know, the other sibling to be in the wedding maid of honor, best man and they purposely don’t ask them because they don’t have that relationship they can’t trust them with certain responsibilities and then when they give in and they have them in. They are so let down because they’re not giving the speech, they’re forgetting the rings, they’re forgetting their dress, they’re not eyeing on the dress, and I’ve seen it all before.

I saw one recently where she I was asked to have her sister in the wedding, her younger sister, who had little to no responsibilities. The sister just complained the whole time. Showed up with like a wrinkly dress, couldn’t even iron the dress. And it’s just, you gotta listen to your gut. I don’t think you should have someone in the wedding just because they’re family.

Okay. This next one. Ooh, okay. If you have 10 plus bridesmaids, you just wanted an audience. I disagree with this. I disagree with this. I’m sure it happens sometimes where you just ask people just to have a big wedding. But I’ve been in weddings where there were 12 bridesmaids and let me tell you the bride had a really close and great relationship with each person.

It was a big Italian wedding for a couple. I’m trying to think actually there’s been a few. Yeah, there was one with ten, one with eleven, one with twelve. I had nine bridesmaids, I know. but there’s some different like points in my life. So we’re talking about college friends, we’re talking about cousins, siblings, high school friends, post high school friends, and then like I have two sister in laws, so you have to think about just what makes sense for you. I’ve also been in weddings where there were just three bridesmaids, and that was awesome too. I’ve been to weddings where there’s no bridesmaids, so that’s such a general statement that I have to disagree with it because I’ve seen it firsthand where, like, one of my best friends, she had, ten, where it was sister, cousin, four from college, four from high school, and then a couple, and then, like, another friend. I think I’m adding that up right. yeah, so you just don’t really know.

Okay, next one. Bridesmaids shouldn’t be expected to get full glam. Yeah, I 100 percent agree with that. I think,if you expect them to have you better be paying for it. If not, no. but me personally, have them do what is comfortable for them. Because if they’re not used to wearing makeup, why make them wear makeup on your wedding day?

Last one. The maid of honor role should come with a salary. Oh my god, it’s hilarious. No, I I mean, it’s funny because like. The first time I was ever in a wedding, I was a maid of honor, so I was 20, for my sister. And the last time I was in a wedding, I was a matron of honor, and I was 6 or 7 months pregnant. it was completely different, and I’m also like, early 30s compared to years old.

So my expectations were different, the role was different, how much money I spent was different, right? But, I don’t think either of those times were the times I spent the most or did the most for the wedding. Just because it was different times in our lives, right? So I think you can be as involved as you want to be, and it just depends on the, bride you’re working with. But I get it. I get it. I think there needs to be clear transparency of what you’re expected of, and then if you cannot perform what they want, then we gotta say no.

Okay. Segment number six, the final segment, which I think you guys are all waiting for. You guys love these stories, and I love them too because it’s so fun to react. live with you guys. okay. So this is a final confession crazy wedding story. This was a story submission. Someone sent to me It’s doozy here. Okay. I’ve not read it. So let’s react together. 

The Bridesmaid Who Didn’t Show: Dress Drama & No-Shows

I had a really good friend Lauren [names have been changed] who I asked to be my bridesmaid And I thought it’d be great since we got along so well. I struggled to pick a dress color for my bridesmaids because they all had different complexions and hair colors.

Two girls were pale with blonde hair, one was tan with blonde hair, one was pale with red hair, one was Hispanic with darker hair, and black hair. I finally settled on a pale mustard yellow dress with small floral details that I really liked. Since I knew not everyone would love my choice. I bought the dresses for my bridesmaids as a gift.

Yeah. Okay. I think that’s fine. However, as soon as Lauren saw a picture of this dress, she threw a fit. I can’t imagine throwing a fit when you are a bridesmaid in a wedding for someone else, and they buy you the dress. I’m just like, you know what, girl, it’s your style, whatever. Yeah, maybe later I’ll be like, okay, it wasn’t the best fit for me, but whatever.

She said I was trying to make her look hideous. I tried to ignore her complaints since I had already bought the dress and all she had to do was pick it up from my house before the wedding. So I’m wondering how this all worked. Did they send you their measurements or did they go somewhere and get measured and you’re like, surprise, here’s the dress.

I’m one, like I said earlier, I’m one for her individuality. Let’s let them pick their own, style for their body type. And hard like finding a color that everyone likes and is gonna look good in. Mustard yellow. that’s a different color. I’ve, can’t say I’ve ever seen it as a bridesmaid dress, like personally.

So I get it, but hey. Again, if one of my best friends were like, Hey, this is the dress I want you to wear, I’d be like, let’s do it. since I got married in 2020, there were all kinds of lockdowns and restrictions, and the number of people allowed to gather kept changing. The general consensus was that groups of fewer than 10 people were okay as long as no one felt sick. 

So my bridal shower was really just my bridesmaids and me prepping decorations and finishing last minute wedding projects. Side note, we had a very small, socially distanced ceremony followed by a drive thru reception. So it was completely safe, but I still had decorations to worry about. Okay, interesting. All my bridesmaids came over except Lauren. I assumed she was just running late, but as time passed, the rest of us got caught up in conversations and before I knew it, three hours had gone by and she still hadn’t shown up.

Okay, how do you, just completely forget about a bridesmaid? That’s crazy, but I mean, get like you’re just talking other people, but I feel like things were already rocky before if you weren’t noticing her there or kind of just slipped your mind.

She’s not very important. I don’t know. I hate to like throw that out there, but that’s the vibe I’m getting, she still hadn’t shown up. I called her freaking out because I thought she’d been in a car accident or something terrible had happened. She didn’t answer and I was genuinely worried. Then, 30 minutes later, she pulled up to my house in a brand new car. What? Apparently, she had decided on a whim to buy a car that afternoon and didn’t bother to let me know that she was running late. At that point, I was frustrated, but my wedding was the next day, so I just handed her the bridesmaid dress and told her I’d see her tomorrow.

Yikes, okay. so this is the shower, quote unquote, that happened the night before the wedding. This bridesmaid was already mad about the dress color, saying it’s, she wants her to look bad. It sounds like things weren’t really worked out beforehand. She’s not showing up to this, thing, but then the wedding is the next day. I don’t have hopes for her.

Okay, here we go. I was right. Well, she didn’t show up to the wedding at all. It turned out her parents were offended that I hadn’t invited them to the ceremony and didn’t want her to go without them. What?! Okay, I don’t know their relationship, but I can’t imagine any of my friend’s parents being so mad. Like, I invited my friend’s parents, yes. But I also didn’t get married in the height of 2020, right?

And I get, cutting back on your guest list, but I can’t imagine them being so mad. They’d be like, you know what? You can’t go without me. She’s a bridesmaid! She had a commitment. I know her parents and I would have loved to invite them, distancing rules still in place, we had to keep the guest list very small.

Only immediate family and the bridal party. So she did what she had to do. Between her parents being upset and her hatred of the bridesmaid dress, she decided not to come to the wedding or reception. Here’s my guess. The bridesmaid hated the dress. Complained to her parents and said, I don’t want to go to this wedding. This is going to be terrible. Found the least opportune time to buy this car. Made sure it took a little bit longer. Just in spite of the bride picking this, quote unquote, ugly mustard yellow dress. Then, when she, the parents had to have known a while back they weren’t invited. So she keeps bringing this up and then she’s probably like, wait.

You know, it’s really weird you guys weren’t invited to this wedding. I think she doesn’t like you guys or something. So then the parents are like, you know what? I don’t think you should go. This doesn’t sound like a good friend. Because you know what that’s what people do. They turn the story to make themselves sound like the hero of the story and the other person the villain, right?

So this bridesmaid is going to be telling her parents. This is a bridezilla over here. She got me this ugly dress. You weren’t invited. She hates you guys, you know? So yeah, that’s what I’m guessing. I’ve seen her a few times since then and we’re still friends. Okay, alright, I’m sure. I still had an amazing wedding day, but I really wish she would have been there when I got married. And I definitely wish I hadn’t spent money on a bridesmaid dress she probably donated to Goodwill without ever wearing, lol.

Yeah, so that’s the thing with bridesmaids, it’s like, you want to include them as much as possible to keep them kind of like a part of it and have their own personality. That’s my own personal take, but it’s a really kind gesture to buy all the dresses.

So. There’s like this happy medium of like you don’t want to give them so much Space where it’s like we’re just standing around trying to figure out the best dress because I’ve been there I’ve been bridesmaid dress shopping where you’re literally at the shop for like five hours everyone has a different opinion everyone’s different color different style no one’s happy by the end because it’s like you’re tired, you’re hungry, you’ve been trying on the same eight dresses, so the bride needs to have an idea of what she likes and then kind of throw it out there. But again, I’m that bridesmaid where if you give me a dress and I, unless it’s like completely revealing, I’ll wear it. You give me a dress, I’ll wear it. Like I’ll make it work.

Okay, that’s a crazy story. It’s funny because I when I was first kind of thinking about this episode and how I wanted to do these kind of patreon episodes I was talking about bridesmaids The first thing that came to mind is obviously the movie bridesmaids cuz that’s like an iconic movie, right?

Just think about all of those scenes. We’re talking about trying on bridesmaid dresses. I mean think of that scene everyone has different price ranges different body types different styles that appeal to them that’s a scene that keeps popping in my mind, like, it’s hard to please everybody.

Talking about all this makes me want to watch Bridesmaids because it’s like the most iconic movie I can think of when it comes to the challenges between different personalities and people competing for top place as a bridesmaid made of honor

was gonna do like a deep dive in the movie. I was like everybody’s seen that movie So I’ll just reference it as much as possible But yeah, I don’t know it’s crazy Alright guys, well, that was a crazy first episode, I hope you guys enjoyed me blabbing about these crazy confessions, crazy bridesmaid stories, and the reddit one that, like, is honestly insane.

The stories, I get sent are just over the top. so yeah, thank you guys for hanging out with me. If you made it to the end, consider yourself officially initiated into my wedding party inner circle, the VIP crew that gets all the juiciest drama before everybody else. But don’t go anywhere just yet because next month is going to be all about Groomsmen drama. Groomsmen confessions, behind the scenes, and more tea that you won’t wanna miss. So trust me, you’ll not want to miss this one. If you love this episode, do me a huge favor. Tell one friend about this Patreon, whether it’s in your group chat, your work bestie, or that one friend that’s been to way too many weddings, just spread the word.

It really helps. Word of mouth is the ultimate wedding party tradition, so let’s keep it going there. And hey, if you have a wild groomsman story. You want to send me for the next month’s episode, please send it my way. You can DM me on social media, drop it in our exclusive Patreon chat. There’s so many ways you can send me stories these days.

So I will find it if you try to send it to me, but until next time, keep the drama fun and the champagne flowing. All right. Bye guys.


Highlights, Hard Truths & an Unexpected Wedding Crasher with Bailey Lavender

My new book Here Comes the Drama: A Ferris and Sloan Story is live!

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What happens when wedding day expectations clash with reality?

From boundary-crossing vendors to guests who take things a little too far, this episode unpacks the chaos that unfolds when people forget who the day is really about.

Bailey Lavender joins me for a candid chat on green flags, red flags, and how to set boundaries without being labeled a “bridezilla.” We share laughs, lessons, and real talk about communication, kindness, and staying true to yourself, no matter what drama comes your way.

Because at the end of the day, the best weddings aren’t perfect, they’re honest, intentional, and unapologetically you.

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Join me on Patreon and get bonus content every month! 

Episode Chapter Markers

00:00 Introduction

01:03 The Evolution of Skit Content

02:13 Bailey’s Background and Journey

04:24 Mental Health and Social Media

07:45 Wedding Stories and Advice

14:47 Hair Trends and Client Relationships

25:00 Red Flags and Green Flags: Wedding Edition

32:06 Effective Wedding Communication Tips

33:05 Handling Embarrassing Toasts

35:13 The Uninvited Seamstress

36:39 Navigating Vendor Boundaries

43:15 The Importance of Professionalism

57:07 Cherishing Wedding Memories

Must-Hear Insights and Key Moments

  • The Seamstress Saga – A wedding vendor takes “involvement” way too far, crossing professional boundaries and ruining key moments.
  • When Vendors Forget Their Job – Christa and Bailey share why staying in your lane is crucial on someone else’s wedding day.
  • The Bridesmaid Balancing Act – How to set limits and choose roles you can actually handle with love, not guilt.
  • Boundaries ≠ Bridezilla – Why being firm about your expectations doesn’t make you difficult—it makes you wise.
  • Kindness vs. People-Pleasing – Bailey opens up about learning when to say no to protect her peace (and her friendships).
  • The Power of Professionalism – From photographers to coordinators, why doing your job well means knowing when to step back.
  • The Cost of “Yes” Culture – How saying yes to everything can actually hurt the people you’re trying to help.
  • Reclaiming the Moment – The bride’s plan to recreate her photos becomes a lesson in healing and taking back joy.

Words of Wisdom: Standout Quotes from This Episode

  • “Being firm with your boundaries doesn’t make you a bridezilla—it makes you smart.” – Christa Innis
  • “You can’t do it all, and saying yes to everything can actually hurt the people you’re trying to help.” – Christa Innis
  • “Knowing your friends, and your limits, is key to surviving wedding season with your sanity intact.” – Christa Innis
  • “It’s okay to decline being in a wedding if it’s not the right fit. Support can still look like showing up as a guest.” – Christa Innis
  • “There’s a reason rules exist, because someone somewhere broke them first.” – Christa Innis
  • “You have to show up wholeheartedly for what they’re asking of you, or you’re letting them down.” – Bailey Lavender
  • “I can’t enjoy your day if I’m on the clock—so pick one: stylist or bridesmaid.” – Bailey Lavender
  • “They forget it’s somebody’s important day and start thinking, ‘What can I get out of this?’” – Bailey Lavender
  • “Not all kindness means saying yes, sometimes it means standing firm and protecting your peace.” – Bailey Lavender
  • “Those Type A brides? They’ve got it right, they’re just making sure nothing ruins their day.” – Bailey Lavender

*This conversation is for entertainment and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional advice. Please seek a licensed professional for your specific situation.

About Bailey:

Bailey Lavender is a vibrant hairstylist and digital creator known for her bold aesthetic and engaging online presence. She shares hair transformations, fashion finds, and lifestyle content across platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube. With a passion for creative color work and community events like the San Antonio Hair Show, Bailey blends artistry with influence, inviting followers into her world of beauty, style, and self-expression.

Follow Bailey:

Join the Drama with Christa Innis:

Got Wedding Drama? We Want to Hear It!

Your stories make Here Comes the Drama what it is! Share your unforgettable wedding tales, hilarious mishaps, or unbelievable moments with us. Whether it’s a wild confession or a story worth a skit, we can’t wait to hear it.

Submit your story today: Story Submission Form

Follow us on social media for updates and sneak peeks at upcoming episodes. Your stories inspire the drama, the laughs, and the lessons we love to share!

Team Dklutr Production

Blog Transcript:

Note: We use AI transcription so there may be some inaccuracies

Christa Innis: Hi Bailey. Hi. Thank you so much for coming on. I’m so excited to talk to you.

Bailey Lavender: Thank you for inviting me. I really appreciate you being letting me on here.

Christa Innis: Yeah, I was just saying before we started, I was, it’s so fun to be able to do this podcast and connect with people. ’cause like I’ve watched your content for so long and I love like just seeing the different skit content out there and I just feel like it’s, it’s so entertaining and I feel like people actually like learn a lot and take away a lot from it.

Bailey Lavender: That was kind of my original plan was with the skits. It’s like unintentionally teaching my clients and new people. I need the, how I need them to act. And if they’re not my client, maybe someone else will learn from this as well. Um, and then it ended up being very relatable to a lot of people that weren’t even in the hair industry, like some restaurant workers or retail workers or whatever.

And I just, I’ve really enjoyed it. And so now I don’t have any horrible stories of my own anymore. ’cause I’ve already told all of them. So all of mine are sent in now from all like other people’s stories.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Yeah. I know, it’s kind of funny how it evolves, like when you first start creating content and then you’re like, Ooh, people are really liking this, or this just popped up.

So I wanna share this. ’cause like I, I started just sharing like some wedding tips and stuff and then I was sharing like. Things I’ve seen at weddings are experienced. And then I just did a skit one day about like a wild, like it was like something I don’t even remember if I like saw it somewhere. And then people just love seeing the skit content ’cause it’s, it’s relatable and it’s also like helps I think with, like you said, like with conversations and how to act in certain scenarios or what’s okay.

And maybe what’s not. Okay. Well,

Bailey Lavender: I agree. I agree.

From Skits to Self-Awareness and Protecting Your Peace Online

Christa Innis: Yeah. So before I get too far into that, can you just tell everyone a little bit about who you are, what you do, and then maybe a little bit more about your content as well.

Bailey Lavender: So, hi, if you don’t know me, I’m Bailey Lavender. I’ve been a hairstylist since I was 18.

I just turned 31. Um, I am based out of Shelby, North Carolina, but I was for a very long time in Greenville, South Carolina. I started doing hair skits right around COVID time. Like, I feel like a lot of people hit the ground running with TikTok then. Mm-hmm. Um, and it was at first just for entertainment purposes.

I was a theater kid, and so I was just like, you know what? Let’s have fun with this. I never expected anything to come of it. And then over time I started catching a following. I started really enjoying myself. It was kind of therapeutic, so I was telling stories of that I had gone through. Mm-hmm. And it was like the, the responses that I wish I had given.

Right. Um, instead of just being so me and mild at the time. And so then it evolved to the, where I was. Uh, considered a skit girl, right? Where I was only posting skits, but it started getting overwhelming, um, because people didn’t know me for who I was. And so I started sharing pieces of me and who I am and what my life looks like.

And now I’m kind of a combo of many different things on my page, you’ll see me doing hair transformations on new clients, me working on old clients and showing you their evolution of hair to being a mom now, or just my day-to-day life, relatable stuff. And then once a week t or once a month, typically I’ll throw in a skit, um, like a series just because I really enjoy doing skits, but I don’t want it to be my entire identity.

Christa Innis: Yes, I love that. So what was that shift like for you and how was the response? Because I mean. I feel like there’s times where I feel like when you start talking about like the skit identity, I can, I kind of get that sometimes. And I feel like sometimes people think I, I work for them and it’s kind of stressful ’cause like I, I’m a mom as well and so it’s like balancing that and balancing my job and I’m just like, okay, I gotta do a skit.

And my husband’s like, hi, I’m here too. So how was that like for you to kind of like switch a little bit to showing a little more you and personality? Like how was, how do people accept that or perceive that at first.

Bailey Lavender: some people didn’t like it and it was one of those moments where I had to reflect back and figure out what made me happy.

Right? And I was in the, in the process of always looking for something negative someone would do around me, right? Mm-hmm. Either so a client and really hone in on that and do a skit about it. And it, it was me focusing on too much negativity in my life. And I’m a firm believer if you look for a negative, you’re gonna find it.

Um, same with happiness, right? Or joy. And so I had to shift that for my own mental health because I was constantly looking for the negative. And so changing that, a lot of people were unhappy, but I was like, listen, for my own mental health, I have to change this up a little bit. Um, and some people, like I said, they were in my comment section, like, jump monkey jump.

You better hurry up and make me a skit, otherwise I’m not gonna follow your stuff. And it was like, you know, listen, I’m a human and I have a job. I have a kid, I have, well, at the time I didn’t have a kid, but I have other things going on in my life. I wanna share who I am and I want you to get to know who I am outside of being a character on a screen for you.

And some people didn’t like it and they left and have never come back. Um, some people say, I’ve not seen your stuff in forever. I’ve missed your face. I’m so glad that you’re doing so well. It just, the ebb and flow of social media, you never really know what people are gonna react like.

Christa Innis: Yeah, but that’s such a healthy boundary that you set too, where you’re like, this is me and I need to protect my mental health.

Because it is so easy, I think, to get caught up in like the comments or what people say, and it kind of can take the joy out of it. If you feel like you’re then working for, instead of like one boss at a, at a corporate job, you’re working for hundreds and millions that are following you and then you’re like, okay, wait, but they said they like this.

They said they don’t like this. So I feel like that was really like so awesome of you to be like, wait, who am I? What’s important to me? If, if I lose people along the way, that’s okay. And I feel like ultimately you’re gonna have more people that are gonna be interested in you because you’re more true to yourself then.

Bailey Lavender: I, so I was doing skits, like I said, hardcore for a while. Um, and then I had a friend that I lost due to mental health reasons. And in that timeframe, I really started hitting the ground heavy of pushing mental health videos. Um, and the views weren’t even that great on it, but I didn’t care. I wanted to make sure that if I, it was helping a single person that was, that mattered to me.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Bailey Lavender: And that kind of was my stepping stone into creating something that wasn’t just drama filled or, um, didn’t have any mal, or, what’s the word? It didn’t have any like substance behind it. There’s this. Mm-hmm. And I really enjoyed making that, where it was like, I’m more than just a character. And that was like the stepping stone for me to see what else was out there within social media.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I love that. I feel like that’s really powerful. And I think it’s, it’s, it’s a good reminder too for people listening because like, like what I try to focus on too is like I try to show like how to have good boundaries, like in skits and stuff. And you made a an interesting point too about you started off by saying like, this is what things I wanted to say in certain scenarios, but maybe more like people pleaser.

’cause that’s me. Like, I’m more like, I’m afraid to say things, you know, in person. I don’t like conflict. So I feel like when I was getting these stories sent to me, I was like, I wanna show brides, like how they can like, you know, have, have a safe and like kind boundary and that’s that it’s okay. Um, but I think it’s good for them, for people listening to this too, to be like in other areas of your life, like, okay, let’s listen to my mental health and, and, um, stay true to myself for sure.

Finding Confidence in Community and Self-Expression

Bailey Lavender: And I’m sure you get some crazy stories because I have a few friends that they only work in the wedding industry and the wedding world is even crazier, I feel like, than the salon world.

Christa Innis: Yeah. So yeah, it’s kind, I get, it’s, when I first started this, I had just been like, I’ve been a bridesmaid like 10 times.

My, my audience is probably sick of me saying that, but I’ve been a bridesmaid, I’ve been on on a lot of weddings and then I was a bride myself and then I’ve helped Dave coordinating, right? And so I’ve saw, I saw some kind of crazy things or heard things, you know, that happen. Nothing, nowhere near to the extent of the stories that people send me.

And I just feel for these difficult relationships and like with in-laws or with cousins or whoever it is, siblings. And, um, so that’s why I feel like I’m trying to like, empower them in a different way, but. It’s hard. You get, you get lost in the shuffle with all, I mean, there’s so many stories that people tell, so it’s, it’s kind of chaotic.

So what, what kind of, like, I know you got, you’ve gone viral for skits and hair transformations. What’s one like video that you put out that you’re just like really proud of or like something that people really resonated with, whether it’s behind the scenes, your personal life or hair? Um.

Bailey Lavender: I have an array of different things that I have been proud of.

When I posted on social media, one of them was me being able to finally share my adoption of my son. Um, that resonated with a lot of different people. Um, it was one of those problems ’cause a lot of people had watched our journey of dating to getting married, to wanting to grow our family, wanting to carry first and then adopt because I am getting older and, you know, you start getting into where it turns into a geriatric pregnancy.

So then when, um, fertility just didn’t seem like it was gonna go our way, that’s when we were like, all right now to what we were gonna do next, which was adoption. And it fell into our hands. And that was a beautiful experience. Being able to share that with my followers because. So many of them were so encouraging, so kind.

And of course you get hate online. And I had the horrific messages from people, um, as well. But the good at what outweighed the bad and they were so kind, so uplifting. But I also had like career achievements where I went from a girl who was working a salon who the owner hated me and she genuinely made me want to leave the career altogether to now where I am able to share where I’m going on to stages and teaching at these huge hair shows.

And because of social media, I am able to, where I was terrified to post my own work behind the chair because it didn’t look like some of my friends who are these vivid artists.

Christa Innis: Mm.

Bailey Lavender: And now they’ve encouraged me to post my work because I do do good work. It’s just not the same as theirs. It looks very different ’cause they’re doing rainbows where I’m doing, lived in blondes.

Mm-hmm. And so I was scared to post it. But because of my friends that I’ve surrounded myself because of social media. Mm-hmm. But also the followers that I have, that I, when I meet them out in public, they like run up to me and they’re so excited and proud of me for like something that I recently posted, how they, it resonated with them.

And it’s more than a number, it’s a community if you do it the right way. Yes.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Absolutely. I love that. I love that. There’s such beauty in social media and connection. Um, and like you said, growing that community because it’s so easy to feel alone in certain aspects of your life or like career parenthood, how you do things.

And there’s, I feel like there’s always someone that’s going through something similar or can relate or resonate in some way. And I think that’s truly the beauty of it. And like you said, you started all this during 2020 COVID, things were rough. We didn’t really know what the future was gonna look like.

Um, and so I feel like a lot of people found connection through that time, through social media. And it saved I think a lot of people being able to be like, okay. Here’s my new community, we’re gonna wake this work

Bailey Lavender: well because at the time we weren’t allowed to connect. And as a hairstylist, I’m used to seeing many different people in my chair in just a singular day and then going to feeling isolated and was training my dog.

And that was about it. Like I felt very alone in that time. And so social media, it was my therapy at the time.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm. Yeah. You gotta like lean into like what’s gonna make you feel better and allow you to connect. And I feel like connection is such a powerful thing. And I’m sure you can say with like, with motherhood too, that’s such a powerful thing.

Um, before I did this, I worked for a motherhood brand and that was like, one of the things I always helped was like, grow communities with moms because. It can be so isolating if you’re in like a rough spot and you’re like, oh my gosh, I’m the only one that’s dealing with, you know, potty training or whatever it is.

But it’s like the second you text a friend or like someone talk to someone in your community and you’re like, Hey, this is what’s going on. They’re like, that exact same thing happened to me. You’re okay mama. Like, you know,

Bailey Lavender: I have a friend Meg, me, Meg hair, and she had her baby almost nine months exactly after Kayden was born.

Christa Innis: Oh wow.

Bailey Lavender: And it’s very sweet and funny to me because she’ll hit these milestones and every so often she’ll call me and she’s like, is this normal? And I’m like, yeah baby, we did that. We’re good. You’re good. No worries. Or she’ll be teething or something new will happen and she’ll call and she’ll be worried that it’s abnormal or she’s not supposed to be hitting those milestones or whatever at the time.

And like you said, the camaraderie of like finding people, not just that have been through raising a child, but are going through it currently with you. Mm-hmm. It makes a huge difference. I have a friend. That she actually will be giving birth tomorrow. Um, she’s getting induced and through her pregnancy, she’s not done it.

But I really wanted her to post her her story. ’cause her story, I’m not gonna get into it ’cause her story to tell, but her story is very different. And I wanted her to share her story because she felt so alone. And I’m like, no, I want you to share it because there are so many people that will relate with you.

And I’ve never been through it, but I know that if you get it out there, you’re gonna help someone else and you’re gonna feel better about it.

Christa Innis: Yes, 100%. That’s someone I used to work with had, um, a very rare set of twins when she was pregnant. They were called mono, mono, mono twins. And which means, I think it means they’re, someone’s probably gonna correct me, listen, so I wanna say they’re both, they’re born in the same sac and they share the same umbilical.

I don’t, I can’t remember, but it’s very, it’s very rare. It’s like one out of like. A hundred thousand or something crazy. Right. And I remember her like telling me about it. She like came on and talked about it and when we posted it was like a community of like mono, mono twin moms commenting. And it was just like, I think all 10 in the last 10 years were like, found it somehow through search.

’cause they’re like, oh, I’m able to connect with someone. And it’s such a powerful tool I feel like in all aspects of just connection in the right way, like you said.

Bailey Lavender: Yeah. Well, twins in general are so interesting to me. If you’ve heard of like twin telepathy and all the things, like I, I genuinely think twins are so cool and then there is like tiny little, like, I don’t know the correct word for it, but like, different divisions of twins and their different connections and how they like relate with each other and how they can be in different spots and know the other one.

Something’s wrong with the other one. It’s just, it’s cool. Uh, that is a neat little story. Yeah.

Christa Innis: It’s, it’s so interesting to, um. To, yeah, to hear that and to connect in that way. Um, okay. Kind of going, going into your, your expertise in hair, what do you, okay, let’s talk about like current lifestyles. What’s one like hair transformation that you, I know you said you like the, um, what’d you call it?

The, the, the blo, what’d you call it? The relaxed, lived in

Bailey Lavender: blondes.

Christa Innis: Lived in blonde. That speaks to me ’cause I’m like, I’m so bad with getting my hair done. Mm-hmm. I just went for the first time last week after a year. Mm-hmm. So, um, I love the lived in blonde. Um, what’s like a current trend that you are loving with hair or what do you think is a piece of advice that all people should know when it comes to their hair?

Not to put you on the spot. I know it’s kind. Oh.

Bailey Lavender: So I actually, this one’s gonna speak to hair shells. I got one that I love about hair right now and one that I hate about hair right now. Okay. A lot of hair. I’m gonna start with the hate. Um, a lot of people within the hair industry are seeing where we’re going through a recession right now.

Right. And they are leaning into that and, and deeming a certain hair trend, which is like a low maintenance blonde, the recession blonde. And I don’t, I hate that terminology with a passion because it makes it feel like, it makes it feel negative to me. Mm. That is my personal opinion. It makes it feel negative to me.

I’d never want any of my clients to feel like I’m pushing a service onto them because they can’t afford it. That is not, they’re not, I’m not in their wallet. If they can afford it, absolutely, I can tell them the reasons of why I think a service will be best for them, but because our economy is not the best point right now is not one of those reasons, and I cannot stand that terminology love on the other side.

I love that a lot of people are starting to embrace what they want to do. For so long, I heard so many of my clients say the terminology of like, well, my husband prefers X, Y, Z and of course I get people want to like make their spouse, husband like happy. I, I fully understand that. But there’s starting to be more of this independency of, if I feel good, my spouse will love me.

End of story, period. They, they married me for me and this is gonna make me happy. And so many people, and kudos to the spouses that encourage. Their partners to do what makes them happy. I’m seeing more and more of that, and I genuinely feel like it’s making a change in relationships between hairstylist client and the client and their spouse.

Yes. And

Christa Innis: I think then they can probably leave feeling so much better too. Like, oh, I’m not just like checking a box of like what they like to see me in. Mm-hmm. Um, I feel like that applies to like wedding stories too. I’ve seen too, like, so, so many times that rides right in, they like do something that like, oh, what will so and so, like, what does so and so want to see?

And I think one thing we’re getting better at, and I don’t know if it’s like a millennial thing or what, but um, getting better at like, no, this makes me feel good. Like, I’m gonna do this for me. And it’s not selfish. It’s because like I deserve it. You know, or it’s like I deserve to feel just as good as that person does.

So I love that.

Bailey Lavender: So I’ve seen, which you probably see this as well, but since being a hairstylist, I talk to a lot of different people about they’re going to someone’s wedding or they’re planning a wedding. And I don’t do wedding here myself. Currently. I’m thinking about getting back into it because I have a friend who doesn’t and it, uh, she makes it look enjoyable.

Yeah. But, um, I see a lot of people that are going to weddings and for a super long time, a lot of brides required everyone to look identical.

Christa Innis: Hmm. And

Bailey Lavender: unfortunately trying to make everyone look identical, no one did. And it threw everything off. Bridesmaids were not feeling beautiful in their dressings.

’cause it did, it wasn’t made for them. Or their hairstyle. It doesn’t work for their face. Or you could just tell they felt off or icky in their own skin. You want that person to feel gorgeous on a day that you’re celebrating altogether. And I’m seeing more and more of these brides be like, no, this is my wedding day, but I still want you to feel beautiful.

And they’re like, just be like, Hey, find a dress that makes you feel pretty within this color palette or within this style. Wear your hair exactly how you want, but just don’t wear it exactly like mine. Like it there, there’s way more leniency in the bridal world equaling out with the hair world. Yeah. Um, and it’s, it’s creating this inclusivity that I’m loving.

Christa Innis: Yes, I know. I love it so much. ’cause some of the, yeah, some of the earlier weddings I was in, it was like a uniform. Yeah. Like you put on this dress and it’s like. It’s fine. We’re all, we all match. Exactly. Luckily, I don’t think I’ve ever been in one where we had to match the hair and dress, but it’s like dress in shoes.

Exactly. Um, but I’ve seen a lot of weddings where it’s like, hair has to all be an updo, hair has to be like this. And it’s like, what if that doesn’t look good on me? I don’t feel like myself. Um, but yeah, I, I’ve been seeing more and more like, pick, pick any dress in this color family or pick any dress from this website.

And I’m like, I love that too, because we’re all different. We all have different body types and I just feel like you want, you want your people up there to feel comfortable in their own skin too.

Knowing Your Role, Setting Boundaries, and Showing Up Right on the Big Day

Bailey Lavender: One of my friends, a few years ago, she had a wedding and she did the, the style where like she has the color and the style that she wants, but the, how it’s constructed, you get to choose as a bridesmaid.

She just wanted everybody in something a little different than one another. And I didn’t fully understand it at the time because when she was getting married it was kind of abnormal for that. And then looking at every single bridesmaid, there was me who is tall. There was another girl who was short.

There’s one who was ex had extreme chest, right? Like very big compared to mine. And I was in like a strapless dress. And she, looking at her, I was like, strapless dress would not have looked good on you. Or not even not look good. It would not felt good on her. Yeah. And it just, it was one of those moments that was eyeopening to me of like, you care about every single person in your wedding party, not just about your day.

Christa Innis: Yes, 100%. You want your people to feel just as good as you do. And I’ve seen the weddings where it’s like they’re put all in this like form fitting strapless dress and everyone’s

 just there and like you can tell when people don’t feel comfortable, but they’re just gonna like suck it up. And yeah, I did something similar at mine.

Like it was like, I think it was like. Any of the mo of col like shades they could pick. And some did strapless, some did, um, lower cuts. Some did sho like sleeves. And I knew everyone has their own insecurities and their own favorite parts of their body that they can just, you know, they, they wanna accentuate.

Um, same with like hair and makeup too. I was like, do what you want with your hair and makeup. Get it done or don’t, I don’t care. I want you to feel like you. Um, so I feel like that pressure too in some ways. I know there’s some very extreme wedding industry where it’s like, you still gotta do follow my uniform.

But I do see, I feel like overall you’re right about that.

Bailey Lavender: I think it truly is based upon who you’re friends with, right? Where you understand your friends, you understand if someone is extremely Type A and they want something a specific way, and they have to have that vision their entire life. Um, none of my friends are that way because I am not that kind of person and I struggle to be a Type A and a lot of times the weddings that I see, they’re all like the Type A bride.

They’re all kind of that way. So it works. Like I’ve seen brides that they have, I mean down to timeframe of when they’re eating breakfast and when they’re brushing their teeth, type of like schedule Uhhuh and all of their bridesmaids work that way. And so it works for their wedding. Yes. Where any, any wedding I’ve ever been in, it’s not formulated like that because I don’t have friends like that because I am a bad friend to a type A person.

Christa Innis: Yes. No, I totally get that. Yes. Knowing your friends is like. Is key. So I always say in like a lot of these bridesmaid stories I get where I’m like, if, if it’s not communicated ahead of time or you feel like you’re being asked of something that is like outta your comfort zone, you can decline. It’s okay to decline and just be like, this is not the right, I’d rather come as a guest or you know, vice versa.

Like if it’s just not a good match, it’s okay. I know there’s sometimes hurt feelings, but I feel like it’s better to just. Be like, you know what? I’d rather just support you and be there as a guest and I don’t wanna spend all, you know, thousands of dollars on a bachelorette with all new clothes or, you know, whatever that ask is.

And have those boundaries. For sure. Yeah.

Bailey Lavender: I was asked to be in a wedding a few years ago, and I had to have the very un uncomfy conversation with her that she took phenomenally, because like I said, I’m very pick picky about the people I have around me.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Bailey Lavender: And she wanted me to do hair for the wedding, but then she also wanted me a bridesmaid and I was like, listen, I would love to do one or the other.

Yeah. Whichever one you prefer me to be in, I will do, but I cannot do both, because she had like a ton of bridesmaids and I was like, I can’t enjoy your day if I’m on the clock so I can do your hair and mine and be a bridesmaid, or I can do everybody’s. So you’re gonna have to choose.

Christa Innis: I love that you said that because that relates to a lot of the stories that we’ve gotten to where it’s like.

People will ask someone that’s already a part of the wedding or a family member will come in and be like, I’ll be your photographer. And they also wanna be a guest. They also wanna be the aunt. And it’s like, just be either a friend that day, family member, or be a vendor. It’s hard to do all things and really, because you, you like, you hear about the photographer where it’s like, then they don’t get the photos or it’s like they’re distracted talking to somebody so they’re not taking the photos, you know?

So I think it’s a lot. Yeah, that was like such like a good way to communicate that.

Bailey Lavender: I think it’s important not only as someone who gets to be able to attend such a special day, that you pay attention to what your goal is in that moment, right? Mm-hmm. Is my goal to support her. ’cause I was there for the bride.

Is my goal to support her on the wedding day as a bridesmaid or. Right, because those are two vastly different things and I have to show up in the best way for her that day. So if you’re a photographer that day, you better be making sure you’re giving her the best photos of her entire life. ’cause this is an important day, or the bridesmaid or whatever it is, I believe on an important day, you have to show up wholeheartedly for what they’re asking of you.

And if you don’t, then you’re letting them down. And I refuse to let people down like that.

Christa Innis: Yes. Yeah. I love that. That’s great advice because I feel like a lot of times too, we wanna be able to do it all for our friends. We say, yes, yes, yes. But in the long run, that can actually hurt them or hurt who you are as like whatever job they’re asking you to do. Like you can’t do it all. It’s just not possible. And you can be a better friend by being like this or this. 

Red Flags, Green Flags, and Wedding Chaos

Okay. I wanna do, before we get to the main story that we’re gonna react to, and we’re gonna do a little this or that, it’s a red flag verse green flag. So I’m gonna read a statement and you’re gonna tell me if it’s a red flag or green flag.

Um, I think most of the time they’re pretty obvious, but some will, will toy back and forth with. Okay. Um, here we go. Your future mother-in-law gets her hair styled, almost identical to yours, and the guests keep complimenting her bridal look.

Bailey Lavender: I think it’s a great flag. I find it to be a compliment that you want my same hairstyle, but some people may, uh, defer.

I know. I,

Christa Innis: I think that’s a very good way to look at it too, because like me, like I, I get along with my mother-in-law so well, and so like, she has better style than I do. She like know she’s so good with that stuff, so I wouldn’t take it personally or take it offensively either. Yes, yes. I said the white dress thing.

I’m like, if my grandma, my mom, or my mother-in-law came in a white dress, I would not have been mad. I would not have cared.

Bailey Lavender: See, like you said, I have a phenomenal relationship with my mother-in-law, but I also know that just because we have, if we do the same hairstyle, it’s gonna look different on her than it does on me.

She found inspiration. I mean, that’s what the internet is. The Pinterest, if you get on Pinterest, you’re gonna probably copy something that someone else has done. Because you think it’s beautiful? I don’t think it’s bad.

Christa Innis: Yes. Yeah, absolutely. Um, okay. The photographer insists on group photos now, but one bridesmaid refuses because her hair is only halfway done.

Bailey Lavender: That’s complicated because of course I would want my mine to be done, so I feel like that’s a green flag. She doesn’t wanna ruin the bride’s pictures.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Yeah. I don’t think I would wanna start if my bridesmaid wasn’t done, because I feel

Bailey Lavender: like that’s the bridesmaid looking out for the bride. You can wait five more minutes to let this be finished so that she can get her pic, her perfect pictures.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I feel like that’s when a day of coordinator or wedding planner needs to come in and say, Hey photographer, we’re gonna wait five more minutes.

Bailey Lavender: You can go, let’s go do this instead. Yes,

Christa Innis: yes. Yeah. Because I feel like too, like a good day of coordinator or a good photographer will know how to quickly move around if like, oh, something’s gonna take a little bit longer, instead of forcing someone to be halfway done.

I would never want that for my bridesmaid. Um, the DJ plays the wrong song for your first dance, and instead of fixing it, he just keeps going.

Bailey Lavender: As a red flag because it happened to me. It did. It did. Oh, so I’ve been married twice. At my first wedding, we had like the whole shebang and the dj, it was a rarity that a single song that was played correctly happened.

And so I got mad and was like, why are we even paying this man? We should just played a Spotify playlist at this point. And so I say, red flag,

Christa Innis: oh my gosh, what did you guys do? Did you guys stop? And then like be like, Hey, can you,

Bailey Lavender: no. ’cause I didn’t want anybody else to know he was messing up. It was my day.

Christa Innis: Oh, like I’ve had it wrong. You’re so nice. I just saw a video where this happened. This girl posted about like their DJ experience, I can’t remember the account name now, but there was three different times. So during the ceremony, like they’re like literally doing their vows and he just starts blasting a song.

And then during their first dance, no cake cutting, he plays like a complete different song and they’re like, get about to like do the switch, whatever. And she just stopped. She’s like, this isn’t the song. And she’s like, I wasn’t afraid to say no because by this point it kept being like wrong place, wrong time music.

Like so good

Bailey Lavender: for her. I was not a confrontational person at the time. So like my walking down the aisle, wrong song, oh, uh, flower Girls, wrong song, first Dance, wrong song, daddy Daughter, wrong song. It was just like the, the, I’m telling you it was a rarity that the right song was played.

Christa Innis: Oh my gosh. And you just like went with it.

You’re just like, here we go.

Bailey Lavender: Uh, because I, my aunt at the time was a wedding coordinator and she and I had a very real conversation of it is a rarity that you will have. Everything go right on your wedding day. Yeah. It is not about the wedding day, it is about the marriage. Mm-hmm. And if you harp on this now, then everything will just be wrong because you’re gonna live in the negative.

So just let it go and keep going with your beautiful day.

Christa Innis: Yeah, no, that’s such a great point because I feel like, and, and I get mixed reviews in the comments when I say stuff like this, but I’m like, not like you’re causing more drama, but if you like stop everything or you stress about one thing not going exactly right, it is gonna weigh on you and then you’re gonna be thinking about it and then you’re gonna think about, how did I react to that?

Or did someone see that? Or you know, like that’s how my brain works anyways. Like if I do like put my foot down or say something, I’m like, did I come off rude? Oh my gosh, was there a picture? You know, was, was I doing something that I wouldn’t normally say? Um, so yeah, and even like these were like, I.

Relationship or drama, things that happen at weddings, I’m like, again, I got very lucky. I haven’t experienced that. I did not experience it at my own wedding. But some of these scenarios I’m like, for certain things I would just let it go On that day. Be in your wedding bliss. Ignore the little chatter that’s maybe happening, or someone that’s being negative because you don’t want it to take away, otherwise, you’re gonna just weigh on.

It’s gonna weigh on you and you’re just gonna be thinking about it. When you think about your wedding day.

Bailey Lavender: And also back to your friends surrounding you. I am big on, like at both of my weddings, I had the people that are most important to me, that know me the best, surrounded around me. And there was moments that something would go wrong and I could lean to one of them and say, dah, dah, dah, dah, something’s not right, blah, blah, blah.

And they would go handle it. They would go do it. And same for when I’ve been in weddings. Like there has been stepmothers sit in mother’s seats on the wedding day, and that was not okay. Like they were not close with the stepmother.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm. And

Bailey Lavender: one of the bridesmaids went up there and handled it, and then they went back and got into line and we went on.

But like, yes, the bride, it should just be the bride and groom or whoever’s getting married. Not just bride and groom, but whoever’s getting married, they should just have a day of bliss. And if something goes wrong, someone else handle it or just let it be.

Christa Innis: Yes. Yeah. I love that. All right, we’ve got a couple more and then we’ll get into the story.

Sorry if I’m going a little over on time. Do you have a, do you have a. We’re good. I’m good. All right, cool. All right, next one. The groom disappears with his friends for almost an hour during the reception. While guests are left waiting.

Bailey Lavender: Red flag,

Christa Innis: I like Yeah, I would say red flag. Red flag. Um, bride insists on a second.

Outfit change, but doesn’t tell anyone. Leaving the reception paused for 45 minutes.

Bailey Lavender: Girl. You need to practice this. Come on. I get things go wrong. It’s hard to get in and out of dresses, but like if you’re, if you guys are wanting a, a dress range of some sort, plan it properly. Don’t let people go hungry.

Don’t let people go be questioning what’s going on. Have something to distract them. If it’s gonna take you a while and get outta your dress, whatever it is, yeah. Plan accordingly. Because a lot of people are there to celebrate you and if you disappear, they’re like, what’s happening?

Christa Innis: Yes. There’s always gotta be something going on.

So if you disappear for a little bit, have music started or have appetizers out, whatever that is. Um, ’cause yeah, I, I just read a story where a girl set her and her groom or partner, they went for photos, but they didn’t tell anybody and the photographer didn’t tell anybody. So the parents thought they left and then they left.

And I’m like, how? How did they just go, oh, I guess the wedding’s over. Like, we’re just gonna go home. Like, I don’t know how that happens, but let’s

Bailey Lavender: communicate. Let’s not just leave. Mm-hmm. Just let somebody be the designator, communicate, communication person, whatever you wanna call it. Yes. Just communicate with everybody.

They’re there to celebrate you and your partner and your next life experience. Let, there are people around you. I’m very dramatic, so a lot of my people, if I came out was like, Hey, I want an outfit change so I can actually dance. Gimme a minute. Love y’all. Have a great time. Bye. Yeah. They’d be like, okay.

Christa Innis: Right. Yeah. And then they would just know, and like time goes fast at weddings, like they would know, but if they’re just like sitting there hungry, like waiting, they’re just gonna be like, okay, what’s, what is happening? Yes. Yeah. People don’t like not knowing. I feel like if people are fine waiting, if they just know what’s going on.

Bailey Lavender: Exactly. Some people have gotten babysitters and they are confused of what’s happening. They feel like you’re dragging your feet or something is happening and they’re like, listen. Crunch in here, I gotta get back to my kid, or I gotta do something else. And they’ve taken time outta their day to be there for you.

Respect them enough to also like inform them of what’s going on.

Christa Innis: Yes. Yeah. 100%. Okay. Um, I got one more and then we’ll get into the story. Okay. A parent gives a toast that includes embarrassing childhood stories. The couple begged them not to share.

Bailey Lavender: It’s a red flag because my family, we do that out of love unless it’s like something bad, right?

Um, and we’re like, no, please don’t do that. But we giggle at the fact that it is still told, right? We know the ones that are are gonna be told. And so I feel like that one’s a wishy-washy one for me because it depends on the family dynamic. It depends on the friend dynamic and it depends on what kind of story it was.

Christa Innis: Yes, totally. I feel like there’s so many. It’s a big spectrum of like Yeah. What’s, accept, what’s acceptable and what’s not. It’s like your relationship with the parent. Mm-hmm. And your, I feel like maybe your sense of humor because Yeah. I feel like, like we had, like our best man in our wedding, like is hilarious.

And he gave, he said so many jokes and I’m like, if anyone else would’ve said some of those like that maybe we weren’t close with, obviously they wouldn’t have been at the wedding, but you know what I’m saying? Like, if it was something we weren’t close with, that would’ve been kind of weird. But like, because like he’s funny and like, we’re like, say whatever you want.

Like everyone was cracking up. So it’s always knowing, like I feel like it’s knowing your audience and like the relationship too of what’s Okay. Exactly. Yeah. Just some people don’t have the those cues,

Bailey Lavender: so I

Christa Innis: don’t know.

Bailey Lavender: Yes. I’ve been at a wedding before with my dad where someone got on stage and they got a hold of a microphone and you could tell that they were not instructed to do so.

And my dad, he’s a very large man and he knew the man and so he got up there and took the mic from him and just was like, it is so good that we’ve heard from him tonight. Everybody clap. And it was just like one of those moments, I was like, go, dad, thank you for saving this wedding. That is, and I think it’s, again, I keep coming back to this, who you surround yourself with.

Christa Innis: Yes. Oh, 100%. Oh my gosh. People, he needs to be like, at weddings where like, things might happen because I, the number of stories I’ve heard, I’ve seen stories of like people just passing mic or I’ve seen them, people just pass the mic around and it’s like an hour later waiting on dinner and you’re like, where are we still doing speeches?

And it’s just random

Bailey Lavender: and they’re saying the same things over and over. We’re so excited for Please write it down on the card. We wanna have fun. Yeah, we got DJ for a little bit longer on a dance.

Christa Innis: Yes. We’ve we’ve got an end time. We wanna, we wanna get to, yeah. Um, awesome. Yeah, I think that’s, that’s a great, um, great way to handle that.

The Seamstress Who Stole the Spotlight

Okay, let’s get into this week’s blind story, rea or blind story reaction. These are wedding stories that are sent to me, so here we go. I’ve not read it either. Here we go. Okay. I initially contacted a seamstress for simple alterations to a gown I already owned, but she insisted on designing my dream dress from scratch.

Throughout the process, she was kind and seemed genuine, genuinely excited to help, which made me trust her. Little did I know that on my wedding day, she would transform from a helpful vendor into an uninvited wedding. Crasher. Whoa. Okay. Overstaying her welcome and turning what should have been into a A beautiful day.

Into a nightmare. Oh, wait. She was supposed to help me into the dress and leave once I was ready, but she completely ignored my clear instructions. I told her several times she was free to go, yet she lingered as if she were on the guest list. It felt like she had no concept of boundaries or any awareness.

That she was supposed to, wasn’t supposed to be there. My friends who were there to help me get ready kept complaining about her presence because she constantly inserted herself into everything in her mind. She may have thought she was helping, but all she did was interfere and raw. My friends of their roles in supporting me.

After the ceremony, things only got worse. She repeatedly pulled me aside to fix the dress. I dragging me away from guests in photos. Ooh, that I would ha, I don’t know how I would react to this. Like, what are your thoughts so far? So

Bailey Lavender: it’s a double-edged sword because I understand the being prideful of the dress that she created and wanting to be there to experience it.

But in reality, it’s not your day. Ask for photos, ask if you can take pictures or whatever. Um. Uh, that is tough because ultimately I think my family would’ve just been like, Hey, thank you for coming. You can leave. But like, also as a hairstylist, I have been invited to a wedding to do hair before and there was no clear instructions of if they wanted me to stay and fix their hair throughout the night or if it was from time for me to go.

And so I had to just blatantly ask, what do you want of me? Um, because some people want you to stay to do a hair change from ceremony to perception, but if they don’t know, that gets tricky. But a lot of people assume that the person does know, but also you never take a bride away from a conversation unless they’re giving you the look of healthy.

Christa Innis: Yes. Yeah. And it’s hard because it sounds like. She just assumed this girl would just know what to do. This woman would know what to do. And it’s hard ’cause you don’t wanna like, you don’t wanna be like, okay, your end time is this time. Once the dress is on you can go. Unless maybe she did say that and the woman still stayed.

Um, but yeah, it’s hard ’cause I know even as like a day of coordinator, like there’s been times where like pretty much once the dances start I’m like free to go. But there’s been times where I’m also invited as a guest. They’re like, oh, stay for dinner, stay for dancing after. And then depending on how close I am, I usually will just see myself out.

’cause I’m like, I’m not family member or close friend. I’ll just let them enjoy their day. But other times I’ll stay for dinner and I’ll like hang out. Um. But it’s knowing where you like fit in and where you like don’t fit in.

Bailey Lavender: And then also I’m, from how it sounds, it doesn’t sound like the bride was like, Hey, I would love for you to come to my wedding and spend the day there.

And that is one thing. It’s like, I would never assume that I was invited. And that is wild to me on top of the fact that like, I’ve never heard of a seamstress or wedding dress designer bringing the dress to the venue.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I was shocked by that too. I didn’t know if that was like a common thing. ’cause I’ve never heard of that.

Bailey Lavender: I’ve never heard of it. Maybe if you’ve ever come across this, anybody watching this, please let us know because that is wild to me.

Christa Innis: Yes.

Bailey Lavender: I’ve had so many brides, they, they go a week or two before, if it’s normally brides like it done before then, but at least a week or two before they get their dress and then they have it hanging in their closet where a bridesmaid or a mother, the bride or groom has it, and then they bring it to the, the venue.

I’ve never heard of a strength seamstress being there.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I’m wondering if there was like, some kind of connection with this seamstress, like a family friend or something, or like, there’s some connection Yeah. That would, that would make it complicated. Yeah. ’cause then she’s like, oh, I’m gonna carry this with pride because they’re all gonna see this dress that I made, and then I need to make sure it’s perfect in every photo and I need to help her, Dr.

Get dressed and make sure it’s everything. But like, like I, I was just saying before, I was like, I’ve been to and been a part of so many weddings and even when the bride has an outfit change, they like do it themselves. Or like a mom helps ’em or a bridesmaid. Never The seamstress. ‘

Bailey Lavender: cause it’s a, it’s an important moment.

Like so many women want that picture of their mom lacing them up, their sister or whoever, like is important in their life. Helping them get ready, putting their shoes on, like fixing their train. The, the hand placements, it sounds like silly, but so many women, you know, the important people in your family or friends or whoever, you know, what their hands look like.

And years down the road when you’re looking back at those photos and you see their hands, they may no longer be here. It matters to you.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Bailey Lavender: And she took that from her.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Yeah. That would really, I feel like, really bother me. Like that might be, I always say like, there’s always a moment and even people pleasers, like I, I always say I’m a recovering people pleaser, but there’s always that moment where it’s like, it’s gone too far.

And I feel like if it were something like that on my wedding day, I’d be like, I would really like my friends here to be able to do this. Like. The X, I don’t know. I don’t think I would do that, but I’m like, it’s so hard to like put yourself in that position. Yeah. How would I handle this?

Bailey Lavender: See, and again, back to the people you surround yourself with.

I keep harping on this, but like the peop my family and my friends would’ve pulled me aside and been like, did you ask for this? And if I gave them a face of no, then they’re like, don’t worry about it. I’ve got it. And they were just gone and handled the situation. But again, we don’t know all of it. We don’t know if she was a family friend where they didn’t feel comfortable doing that because they didn’t know the depths of their relationship.

Christa Innis: Yeah, yeah. Absolutely. Okay. So, um, okay. So she pulled her away from guests and photos. It was as if she was determined to be a part of every moment, completely oblivious to how disruptive and intrusive she was being. She had no self-awareness whatsoever. To make matters even more offensive, she made rude comments about my husband’s race.

So now she’s just a rude person.

Bailey Lavender: Absolutely not. Would not fly? No. Okay. That I can see a lot of things in a lot of different perspectives. I can see where you’re wanting to be there for the dress. You’re wanting to try to be helpful. Maybe you have overstepped and you don’t understand personal boundaries.

That is a hard stop. Yeah,

Christa Innis: that would

Bailey Lavender: be

Christa Innis: absolutely. No, you’re, you’re out here. No, you’re being escorted at this point, that part.

Bailey Lavender: Do you no longer get the first comment? You’re out.

Christa Innis: Yeah. That’s, this is your client. If you’re making that comment about your clients, I can only mention what you’re saying behind the scenes.

So, yeah. No, not, not gonna fly. When, when I expressed that I was stressed, she told me it was my own fault for DIYing my wedding, I was floored. The audacity and lack of empathy was shocking. Her behavior was not just unprofessional, it was downright inappropriate. Yeah. Oh my gosh. This is way worse than I thought.

When we got our wedding photos back, my heart sank. She had her phone in my face in countless pictures, ruining moments that should have been timeless. I would be so upset. I feel so bad for this bride.

Bailey Lavender: I have a friend who she only does wedding photography and the amount of hate that she gets sometimes from like other people that are in weddings because she’s like, Hey, I need you to move to the side.

Or, Hey, put down your phone. Or, Hey, it’s supposed to be a wire or a phoneless ceremony because I, she’s paying me for these photos because she likes the way I do things and she’s not wanting them. And the amount of times that she’s posted where you can see a phone completely disrupting a photo that would’ve been, like you said, timeless

Christa Innis: and

Bailey Lavender: would’ve hung it in their bedroom forever or in their living room forever and now because of a phone.

Yeah. Is there

Christa Innis: everyone? Yeah. I know that’s, that’s terrible. I know. It’s like the people that always think like their phone’s gonna get the better job of the photographer and it’s like, no. Like they are a trained professional with a camera. Let them do their job. Um, I know I’ve been to weddings where it’s like, put your phones away and there’s still people taking photos, holding up their iPads or whatever it is, and it’s like, just put it away.

Take a photo later, pull ’em aside if you need to, but

Bailey Lavender: get little like one-offs from like when you’re sitting at the table at dinner and the, the setting is stunning and beautiful. Get your own little, like point of view picture and send it to her or put it in an album for them to look at later if they’re wanting some like B roll type of content, but let the photographer or the videographer or have you heard of wedding Content Creators?

I have. I just heard about this this week and I was like, that is phenomenal. Good for these people. Like making a new like. Avenue for income, but because I’ve always thought about that. It’s like these brides, they, they don’t wanna play on their phones and bridesmaids are doing a thousand other things.

And now there’s wedding content creators that go to weddings to get B-roll content for these brides. Phenomenal. Yes. But do that, don’t take, don’t think that your iPhone’s gonna be better than the camera or the editing style that. The brighter groom or whoever is paying for this wedding wanted.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Yeah. It’s definitely knowing what you were hired for and what you’re there to do and be done with the job. Because like, even as a day of coordinator, like my, the last wedding I worked like in the morning before the photographer came, like, it was part of like our contract, our calls. Like I was like, I’ll take like behind the scene photos when you guys are doing makeup done.

’cause I knew the photographer wasn’t gonna get there until noon. So I was like, I’ll do that before they come. As soon as the photographer came, I was like, my phone’s away. You don’t need me. Surely you don’t need this iPhone. Um, and, and even when I was like taking pictures of like, just stuff around, I was like very cautious about like, I did it before anyone was like in a setting just to take pictures of behind the scenes.

And even then I’m like. Phone should be away, like as if a, as a vendor. That’s not your, it’s not your job unless you’re a photographer, but

Bailey Lavender: well also, if you think about it from the persons whose wedding you’re at, right? Bride, groom, whoever. If you see this, it looks rude. It looks like you’re not present for their most or not most important day, but extremely important day to them.

You could be looking through these pictures that you just took because you think that they’re phenomenal and you can’t wait to send them, but they are gonna remember how you were on your phone at their important day. Yeah, and that’ll stick with them.

Christa Innis: 100%. Yes. No, I totally agree. It’s, yeah, it’s the fact that she was, I feel like she was so into her phone and what she was gonna be able to bring home or post to her website that she was like, I don’t care about this bride.

I, I care, I selfish. Mm-hmm. 100%.

Bailey Lavender: I can’t believe I, the, I’ll never get over the selfishness that goes into so many people that weddings, I feel like. They forget that it’s somebody’s important day. Mm-hmm. Someone is dedicating their life to someone else, like it’s beautiful, and so many people see, what can I get out of this?

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm. Yep. I think that’s where a lot of these stories like stem from is people don’t, people either can’t celebrate, someone else, can’t allow the limelight to be on somebody else, or Yeah. They’re just thinking about their own like selfish gain. Especially because I don’t normally get vendor stories.

Every once in a while I get a story that’s from a vendor or about a vendor, but it’s very slim. Usually it’s like more family or friend bridesmaid stuff. So when I get something like this, it’s just. Oh, like you’re supposed to be the professional

Bailey Lavender: because so many vendors go into wedding vending in any right way, shape, or form because they love weddings.

They love the beauty of it and the stress that comes with it because it’s high intensity and they enjoy it and they love making it a stress free day as much as possible. And then family and friends sometimes come in with the great or with the right intentions, but unfortunately some of them are there just to ruin someone’s day.

Christa Innis: Yeah, yeah. Oh, it’s so unfortunate. Um, so it says even worse. Oh no. She positioned herself in front of the photographer as I walked down the aisle.

Bailey Lavender: Not that it’s just making me mad. Like everything, everything new. It is just, I’m getting more and more heated. I’m sorry. You’re like,

Christa Innis: in the beginning you’re like, I’m being more positive and I’m like, here’s some drama.

How do you feel?

Bailey Lavender: I’m angry.

Christa Innis: Like, we’re gonna go like do a meditation after this. Yes. I know because I’m like photographer. I’d be like, get out. Who are you? Get outta my way.

Bailey Lavender: So also what I’m hearing is that girlfriend did not have a seat. So you should have known get out, leave. Yeah. It’s time for you to go.

Christa Innis: Yeah, you, you gotta go. Because of that, I have no unobstructed photos of that. Once in a lifetime moment. Oh my gosh. That would make me so mad. Despite my explicit request for an unplugged ceremony and my clear instructions that she could only post photos of the dress without tagging me. She uploaded a video of my husband crying as I walked down the aisle.

Such a, seeing such a raw, personal moment shared online without my consent was devastating. So yeah, she’s doing it for her own personal gain for her own business.

Bailey Lavender: And are we gonna talk about the fact that she’s gonna upload a video of a man loving his now wife that you wanted to make racial comments about?

Mm-hmm. No ma’am.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Yeah, this woman has no, she’s there just to get photos for, to help her own business and does not care about anyone else at this point.

Bailey Lavender: Mm-hmm. That is disgusting behavior.

Christa Innis: Ugh. When I left her a negative review, I was gonna ask, or I was gonna see if she left this spiel, calling out her unprofessionalism.

She didn’t apologize. Instead, she harassed me, responding by trashing my friends. Not once did she take responsibility. I’m guessing now it’s not a family friend because there’s, there’s no connection here. I don’t think she takes, not once did she take responsibility or show an ounce of remorse for how she ruined my day.

I wanna know who this is. She should share her story on TikTok. Um. Now my husband and I are planning a separate photo shoot because of our wedding photos being ruined by her constant interference. What should have been the happiest day of my life is now clouded by frustration and disappointment, all because she couldn’t respect basic professional boundaries.

If I’ve learned anything from this, it’s that even the kindest seeming vendors can cross the line and derail your day. I trusted her with something precious, and she abused that trust leaving me with memories. I’ll never be able to fully get back.

Bailey Lavender: Oh, that makes me so

Christa Innis: sad.

Bailey Lavender: This is where them type a brides have it, right?

The ones that give you way too much information, you’re like, girl, of course I’m gonna leave whenever you need me to. Or of course you don’t have to worry about telling me that, duh.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Bailey Lavender: They’ve got it right because they’re, they know that there is a possibility that something goes awry like this, and they’re making sure they handle it beforehand.

Christa Innis: Yeah. That’s why I always think it’s like there’s always rules for things because someone has broken it or someone has done something that like this, you know? And it’s like it sucks because the reason there are so many, like strict brides or brides are like, this is because, and stuff like this. But then they get called a bridezilla and it’s like, no, like being firm with your boundaries does not make you a bridezilla.

Bailey Lavender: Well, it’s you understanding what could go awry. I mean, it’s similar to like, I put the light or the outlet covers over my outlets because there’s a possibility that my son puts his finger in it and they electrocute himself. You know, but they’re prepping themselves to make sure there is nothing that goes wrong and that they don’t have to stress on their wedding day because they’ve stressed before.

Christa Innis: Yes. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. And it’s, it’s, it’s, so I feel like it’s so easy to like read these stories and be like, this is what I would’ve done, but. It’s hard in those like moments of like, especially like, like we were talking about earlier, it’s like you wanted to be in your wedded bliss. You don’t want this drama to affect you, but she also didn’t let it affect her and then she saw the pictures.

Yeah. And so she’s, so it’s like at that point it’s like, should she have been? But she probably didn’t notice at that point. She was so, you know, in, in the moment and she probably didn’t notice, like this woman, her phone’s out in front of my photographer, like, you’re just expecting the photographer to do their job.

They’re fine. And that sucks that that happened. I feel so

Bailey Lavender: bad, I don’t know about anyone else, but on my wedding days it was such a blur because there was so much going on. I had a thousand things running through my brain, um, that the photos and the videos mattered the most to me be, or like outside of getting married.

But because I knew that I was going to forget important moments or miss important moments. Yes. And when you obstruct those or you ruin. A day that the bride remembers nothing but the negative things that you did on such an important day. Mm-hmm. That matters.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Bailey Lavender: Yeah. And honestly, you should take accountability and I’m so sorry.

Like that was never what I wanted for your wedding day. It was something

Christa Innis: Yeah. I think some of these vendors like that I’ve seen like in different tiktoks drama stores or something that don’t take accountability, they don’t realize that you’re ma, they’re making it so much worse for their business.

’cause there’s a current TikTok drama going on right now that I saw someone just tag me in it where she. Basically it’s a caterer situation. I don’t know the whole story, but the caterer kind of ruined her wedding day. Like certain things that she had set up and planned. They like, they like, uh, what did they do?

They put the cake topper through the cake instead of like putting it at the top. So it like, actually like broke the cake in half. They didn’t pull it out ahead of time to like, um, defrost. So it was like rock hard. So her husband and I and her couldn’t even like, take bites of the cake. So she’s trying to like, just act like it’s fine.

There was like a list of things and I guess she, like, like the person that she worked with all along didn’t even come to the wedding. It was another person. And then they kept saying, we won’t help you or talk to you until you remove your review. So I’m like, now she’s telling everyone on TikTok because you’re not helping her.

So now everyone knows who this person is ’cause they’re just unwilling to help. And I’m like, if you just fix it and apologize. Yes. Some things cannot be fixed. Like obviously the photographer. The photos can’t be fixed, but they’re gonna make it so much worse where no one’s gonna go to them because, no instance.

Bailey Lavender: Because if in reality, if one person has had that such horrible experience, they’re comfortable doing it. So someone else may have had at least a little bit of that same kind of person from them. Right. Because they are so comfortable with so much unprofessionalism because I mean, obviously she probably did a good job on her dress if she allowed her to make it from scratch.

Yeah. So this is not her first rodeo of making a wedding dress. So who else has also struggled with this?

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm. Yeah. It makes me wonder if other people had issues in the past, um, or if maybe the seamstress typically is not invited to an outfit change. So in her mind she heard that and was like, oh, I’m a part, they’re inviting me.

They’re part, they really like me. But either way. It just kept getting worse, worse, worse and worse. Not understanding boundaries, not understanding, being professional on a wedding day. There’s like, there’s no excuse for that behavior.

Bailey Lavender: Not in any way, shape or form. Anything that was done was not okay.

Christa Innis: Yeah.

Wow, that’s terrible. I feel so bad for the right. I’m glad they like are doing their own like photo shoot to hopefully like recreate some of the photos and stuff because

Bailey Lavender: it’s fun to do that anyways because your style may change or where you wanna put the photos may want a different style and you get to do something different and fun.

And I think so many people only get professional photos, or not even professional photos, they only get photos done or take photos at their wedding day or at kids’ birthday parties or something. And if you continue that, you get to see the progression of how you age and grow together and how your style changes.

And it’s all beautiful and you should like want to do that together forever.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Yeah, I love that the reminder to do more photo shoots because I do feel like after you, like it’s like you get engaged, you have your wedding and then you kinda like forget. Like I was just telling my husband, I’m like, since our daughter’s been born, I’m like, we’ve not done like professional family photos and she’s two and a half.

So I’m like, we gotta like do those things. You have to like actively remember like to have someone take photos and like

Bailey Lavender: I was, I was very luck. I was, God, I can’t word that. I was a very lucky child. My grandmother owned a photography studio when I was really l young and so I grew up with a camera in front of my face.

And so now like at big life events, of course I think of a photographer, but even like the small ones, right? So I think about like at my son’s first birthday I made sure we had family photos, individual photos and like it was a big deal. And from here on out I want every birthday him to we to get photos with him and individually together as well because your family only stays that age for a little bit.

And I wanna see the progression of our life.

Christa Innis: Yes. Yeah. And you blink and they’re just like, I know. It’s crazy how, how it all goes. I’m sure you feel the same way. It’s just like wild. I remember someone telling me when like she was a newborn and they’re like, don’t blink. It goes so fast. And then I’m like, how is she like a fully like walking kid, like I don’t understand and she can like talk and have conversations like what?

Bailey Lavender: I feel like it was yesterday that I was super excited that he was sitting up on his own and now he, I have to Caden proof the entire house because he is like Tarzan and climbing up walls and like trying to hang from the rafters. I’m like, dude, you need to chill a little bit. ’cause I’m trying not to. You don’t have nine lives.

I, I don’t know if you know that, but you don’t have nine lives.

Christa Innis: Yes. It’s like you wanna like encourage them to be like, grow and be adventurous, but also like, I wanna kind of keep you in a little bubble because like, don’t get hurt. Please. Like.

Bailey Lavender: Like, I think we cut his toenail short one time, like too short where it bled a little bit and I cried about it for two days.

Christa Innis: Oh yeah, yeah. Mm-hmm.

Bailey Lavender: Like I, I’m that mom. I’m going to allow him to do what he wants and be his own independent child, like you said. But please don’t hurt yourself. ’cause it hurts me worse.

Christa Innis: I know, I know. Oh my gosh. Yeah. Doctor’s visit like anything, like my, my husband and I are just, are weak. Like, I’ll get to the car and I just start like crying.

I’m like, oh my gosh. She was so brave at the doctor, but like, my God, it’s just like

Bailey Lavender: I do it every time.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I like that. She thinks I’m, but portraying her. But yeah. Uhhuh, um. Well, I loved having you on. I feel like we had such good conversations. You have like such like a light to you and I feel like you’re so positive and I, I felt like it was just great chatting with you and getting to know you.

Appreciate that.

Bailey Lavender: Thank you.

Christa Innis: For anyone listening again, can you just tell everyone where they can follow you? Um, anything fun and exciting you have coming up and what you’re kinda working on?

Bailey Lavender: Um, you can find me pretty much everywhere on TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, Snapchat I believe as well. Um, I’m the Bailey Lavender, but I’m not under the Bailey Lavender on Facebook.

Someone stole that identity from me and is faking multiple different accounts of that. So make sure, if you are looking for my Facebook account, you go through my TikTok or Instagram. Um, and it will have the link there because unfortunately people are awful. Um, but I’m currently working on. Adding transformations to my schedule, um, where I am trying to get to, where I take what is called like a, um, be like someone’s foster stylist, right?

Christa Innis: Okay. And so

Bailey Lavender: I take someone, I fix their hair at a reasonable price. ’cause unfortunately transformations sometimes are super expensive. Um, and, and fix their hair for a reasonable price. I have them for two to three appointments. I learn about them. I get to know their, who they are, what kind of appointments they prefer, like quiet or talkative or like what that person is to their core and what they enjoy.

And then I have a list of stylists around me in my area that I place them with. That’s their forever stylist, right? And I tell them what I use on them. Figure out like that. If that salon, if it’s upbeat, put them with someone that’s there. Or if they’re needing something more secluded, a little bit more relaxing, put them somewhere that has like a suite where they’re in there by themselves and they get to have a relaxing experience.

And make sure that like everybody that’s on my stylist list acts still also have the same kind of education as me. And so like any new education I’m going to, I’m making sure they know it’s so that they can also attend. And like making sure that I’m not just. Taking everything that comes my way and trying to profit from it, but also like spreading the love.

And I started doing this when I moved to Shelby and I am loving it.

Christa Innis: I love that. I’ve never heard of that, but it makes so much sense because I feel like the wide span of hair salons you can go to, they’re just also different and everyone’s different. So you’d be able to do that like guesswork for them and be like, yeah,

Bailey Lavender: you fit.

And it’s hard as a stylist you are that you have to be everything. You have to be marketing and pr, pr and you have to be booking and cleaning and like you have to do all of that on top of working your schedule as a stylist on your feet all day, like you’re tired. And so a lot of them don’t have the reach that I do, and some people struggle to find their perfect stylist and so I get to just kinda like bridge the gap

Christa Innis: and I,

Bailey Lavender: I think it’s so cool.

Christa Innis: Oh, that’s so fun. Yeah, that’s great that, that’s awesome. Like I said, I, I haven’t heard of that before and I feel like that’s such a helpful tool for people to have. Um, and it helps, I feel like helps them know themselves better too a little bit.

Bailey Lavender: Yeah. And also like they’re not spending their whole life savings on fixing their hair and then I get it to a maintainable color or cut or whatever it is, and then place them where they’re just maintaining that, which is a lot more inexpensive than trying to do a huge transformation.

Right.

Christa Innis: Yeah. No, that’s so cool. Well, awesome. Well thank you so much for coming on. Like I said, it was great chatting with you. I feel like we covered a lot of topics and um, it was really great to meet you after seeing all your awesome content. I

Bailey Lavender: appreciate that. It was wonderful talking to you today.


Venmo Requests, Demanding In-Laws & A Bride’s Outrageous Ask

What’s worse: your dad bailing on your wedding and then sending you a Venmo request for the deposit, or your mother-in-law going on vacation with his ex? 

Yeah… welcome to this week’s chaos. I’m kicking things off with a brand new game: red flag vs. green flag wedding edition. Spoiler alert, locking up guest phones? HARD no. Then I’m diving headfirst into one of the messiest three-wedding family sagas you’ve ever heard. We’re talking divorces, mistresses, and family photos that should’ve come with a seating chart and a referee.

And of course, I wrap it up with your confessions, the kind that remind us all that where there’s a wedding, there’s always, always drama.

Join me on Patreon and get bonus content every month! 

My new book Here Comes the Drama: A Ferris and Sloan Story is live!

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Episode Chapter Markers

00:00 Introduction

01:22 Wedding 911 Situations

03:22 Dress Drama and Advice

05:26 Red Flag vs Green Flag: Wedding Edition

10:49 Wild Wedding Stories

16:57 Dress Shopping Drama

19:11 Mother-in-Law’s Bridal Shower Antics

20:44 Wedding Day Chaos

23:53 Three Weddings, One Family Drama

30:11 Confessions from Instagram

Must-Hear Insights and Key Moments

  • Red Flag vs. Green Flag – We rapid-fire hot takes on wedding behaviors, from cash bars to late-night Taco Bell.
  • The Phone Lock-Up Debate – Why banning phones is fine, but locking them away is a serious overstep.
  • Dad’s Venmo Request – A father skips his daughter’s wedding… then asks for the venue money back. Seriously.
  • Three Weddings, Endless Chaos – One family, three ceremonies, and a whole lot of awkward divisions.
  • Mistress to Missus – The audacity of a dad marrying the woman he cheated with and expecting everyone to play along.
  • The Peacekeeper Sister – Navigating sibling loyalties when parents’ drama overshadows the big day.
  • Confessions Corner – Listeners spill about future in-laws inviting exes, surprise proposals, and engagement slip-ups.
  • Storytelling Skits – Why I am ready to turn messy dad drama into my next viral skit.

Words of Wisdom: Standout Quotes from This Episode

  • “Sometimes you don’t need a seating chart—you need a family tree just to keep up.” – Christa Innis
  • “It’s not my favorite flag, but it’s not red either. Maybe it’s beige?” – Christa Innis
  • “You skipped the wedding and then sent a Venmo request? Sir, be serious.” – Christa Innis
  • “Locking up phones at a wedding? No. I need to know if my kid is still alive.” – Christa Innis
  • “Whoever invented late-night wedding snacks deserves a Nobel Prize.” – Christa Innis

*This conversation is for entertainment and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional advice. Please seek a licensed professional for your specific situation.

Join the Drama with Christa Innis:

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Your stories make Here Comes the Drama what it is! Share your unforgettable wedding tales, hilarious mishaps, or unbelievable moments with us. Whether it’s a wild confession or a story worth a skit, we can’t wait to hear it.

Submit your story today: Story Submission Form

Follow us on social media for updates and sneak peeks at upcoming episodes. Your stories inspire the drama, the laughs, and the lessons we love to share!

Team Dklutr Production

Blog Transcript:

Note: We use AI transcription so there may be some inaccuracies

Christa Innis: Hi guys. Welcome back to another episode of, Here Comes The Drama. I’m your host Christa, or if you can see me right now, Jules, if you can’t see me, I am wearing the outfit from the I don’t crew. the character Jewels. So that’s the problem sometimes with, between these skits is then I associate these shirts with different characters and.

I like, every time I like pick it up, I’m like, oh, that’s that one character from that skit. That’s how I feel about the Ferris and Sloan shirt. Like I’ve barely worn it outside of that skit now, because I feel like if I wear it somewhere, it feels like I’m, I don’t know, secretly like promoting the book and I’m not trying to, it’s funny how I just connect it anyways.

What a way to start the episode. kind of just jump in right in like that. Welcome back for another episode of some crazy stories that we are gonna get into in just a minute. Try to switch things up because I like to keep things interesting. We’re gonna start off this week with we’re gonna call them wedding 9 1 1 Situations that people have sent me as a new segment.

And, from time to time people send me, on social media some things they’re going through. Maybe they’re in a wedding, maybe it’s a friend situation. And I’m no expert, but I’m just gonna give you my own personal advice, from the hot seat here, I guess. So if you wanna send me any of your own wedding 9 1 1, you can email me at hello@christainnis.com and use the subject line wedding 9 1 1.

So let’s dive into these.

Wedding 911: Honeymoon Bills & Bridesmaid Dress Drama

This first one says, “My bride friend just announced she wants the bridal party to chip in to cover her honeymoon. What? As a gift on top of dresses, travel, and the shower. This feels like too much. I just wanna be supportive, but I also don’t wanna go broke.” Yeah, that’s pretty, it’s pretty normal.

” How do I set a boundary without causing a fallout?” Okay. I feel like we’ve talked about this a lot of times before on the podcast. If a friend is asking you to do too much, like having you pay for the honeymoon is not a normal thing for a bridesmaid. You should not have to pay anything for the wedding.

Yes. You know, if you wanna go to a bachelorette party, sure. Depending on the person. Sometimes the dress you’ll pay for shoes. But those should be communicated ahead of time. The honeymoon you are not even a part of this is the new bride in groom. This is their trip to handle and take care of. If they can’t afford it, they shouldn’t go on one.

Now if they do one of those like honeymoon funds and you wanna chip in on that, sure. If you give ’em a gift of the wedding and they use part of that, sure. But it should not be a standard. It should not be like you have to as a bridesmaid, pay for this if she doesn’t understand and. She tells you like, this is what you have to do.

I’d say, okay, well I’m gonna set this one out and if she says, don’t come to my wedding, then you say, all right, well we had a good run. Again, it’s always easier from the outside, but that is a ridiculous request for someone to have.

Okay. Next. Dress drama. “The bride picked bridesmaid, a bridesmaid dress color that looks terrible on me. It completely washes me out. I asked if I could wear the same dress in a slightly different shade, but she said no, because she wants perfectly matching pictures. Do I just suck it up for one day or is it fair to push back?” Okay. It’s gonna ultimately depend on your relationship and how important this person is to you? Me, personally, I would just suck it up. I’ve worn so many dresses that wash me out. I’m a very pale person. I don’t do spray tan. I don’t do tanning anymore. So I’m pale. I’ve had to wear dresses that were like. Really, really light pink. I’ve had to wear dresses that were like a top and they end up looking, they look fine.

Like once you get your hair and makeup done, it works. It’s fine. I would never tell a bride to pick a different bridesmaid dress. That’s me personally. if you’re not super close, maybe just be like, this isn’t for me. But if you agreed to be in their wedding because you care about them and they care about you. I’d say just suck it up for a day. If you’re gonna match all the other girls, it’s gonna look fine. it’ll be great. I think dress color is one thing where like I’d be like, suck it up. If it’s a style, maybe that makes you uncomfortable, maybe it’s like a backless dress or really low cutting or form fitting, and you’re like, I don’t like that for my body, then that’s something I think I could push back a little more on and be like, “Hey, I’m not comfortable in that

dress.” A color? I don’t know. Tell me what you guys think, but for me, I wouldn’t push back.

Okay. Like I said, we’re gonna start doing these from time to time, so if you have a dilemma or something that you want addressed, email me. hello@kristaennis.com and use the subject line wedding 9 1 1. You can also use my same Google form and just select, there’s a different option there. You can, filter it through. \

I do get dms on social media. It’s just like, it’s so hard because they’re not filtered through. So if I read it and I’m like, it’s a busy day and I don’t forget to unmark it or mark it up, then I lose the story and then it’s gone. I’ll be like, oh my gosh. Someone sent me a really good story and I just completely forget. So if I see one in there, I’ll send you guys the link and I’ll be like, “Hey, this is a great story. Can you just send it to me in the Google form?”

Red Flag or Green Flag? The Wedding Edition

Okay. Next up, this next segment is going to be called. Red flag versus green flag wedding edition. So we’ve been doing the hot takes lately on the rapid fire. So this is like a new kind of style of that.

“Bride asked bridesmaids to dye their hair for the wedding.” That’s a red flag. No, we don’t need to do that. This is quick, quick, quick, quick.

“Mother-in-law insists on wearing white because it’s her son’s day too.” No red flag. “Couple charges? Yes. For drinks at a cash bar?” Well, a cash bar is charge. So are we just saying, is it cash bar, red flag? I wouldn’t say that’s a red flag. It’s not my favorite flag, but I wouldn’t say it’s red. It’s not a green flag though.

Okay. “A groom’s friend proposes during the reception.” Red flag.

“Couple doesn’t allow plus ones unless you’re engaged or married.” I get it, but I’m gonna lean more towards red flag because an engagement or marriage does not determine the relationship. I could hear, I could see maybe like if you’re like long-term relationships, you’ve been together over a year. But you could be together for a week and get engaged. So I just, I’m not someone that’s like, engagement means they’re like solid. I mean, marriage doesn’t always mean that either. So yeah, I would say that’s a red flag.

“Bridesmaid drops out a week before the wedding because of cost that’s a green flag I think. I don’t know if it’s be, should be a green or a red flag. It’s not a red flag because if she cannot afford something, like maybe just too many things are adding up. She felt empowered enough or strong enough to be able to drop out. I think that’s a green flag. Hopefully it doesn’t affect the bride and they’re just, they can move on past it and they’re okay. but. I wouldn’t say that’s a red flag at all. If someone came to me and they’re like, I can’t afford to be in your wedding, I would be like, what can I do to keep you in the wedding? Let’s like nix this. How can I help with this? I just want you to be a part of it. I don’t care about the cost.

“Couple has a phone free ceremony and locks up guest phones.” That’s a red flag. Phone free ceremony. Yes, absolutely. Put the phones away. They have professional photographers. Just don’t have it out. Please, listen. But locking up a guest phone is a red flag because here’s the thing, as a mom, and just in case of emergency, I feel like people should be able to have their phones on them. That just sounds to me like you don’t trust someone that’s coming to your wedding you are like, we’re locking up everybody’s phone. Like, no, let’s not do that.

” Parents of the bride invite extra guests without telling the couple.” Red flag.

” Best man roasts the bride in his speech.” Red flag, unless he’s equally roasting. Yeah, that’s a red flag. And you’re like, good friends.

“Couple serves fast food like Taco Bell or Chick-fil-A as a late night snack.” That’s a green flag. I love when I’m at a wedding and they have a late night snack and it’s like Wendy’s or Pizza or Taco Bell. I went to one one time and it was in this really cool, like old, I don’t even remember what it was, not a museum. I just remember the structure was so cool. Like there was up the stairs and then like the different like rooms or the different, I’m describing this so poorly. It was in Ohio. The different rooms were like had different things in it. So like one room would have a late night snack, one would have dancing, then there was dancing downstairs. It was just like a cool old building. And I remember them mentioning a late night snack and I kept trying to find where it was and I ended up missing it. And I was like, what was the late night snack? And they were like, it was curly fries and like Wendy’s frosties. And I was like, oh, that sounds amazing. Right now I’m all for late snack. Whoever came up with it and started doing that. Thank you. I remember the first wedding I was at that had one. I was like, what? What’s happening right now? What are, why are we getting late night food? Okay. I don’t always finish my dinner. Like, it depends on what’s going on, but like, there’s so much going on that day, so I just get hungry later on. So late night snacks good.

One more thing I forgot to mention earlier. If you guys didn’t know, I now post these all on YouTube and I know like I’m not one to sit and watch a full video on YouTube that’s like, over. 10 minutes. But it’s a great place to go for discussion. So if I ever like, bring something up in the conversation here, or you wanna give some feedback on something, or you have a question about something or you wanna like add more to the discussion, please go to YouTube and comment, because I feel like there’s so many times when I’m listening to podcasts that I’m like, where can I like say my thoughts on the matter? And like talk to other people about it. So please do that. I love seeing the discourse. I pop in the comments all the time to see what’s going on, and I love seeing what you guys have to say.

The Mother-in-Law Who Made the Wedding All About Herself

All right, guys, we’ve got two stories today, so let’s get into them before I able too much, because these are wild. Okay. Story #1.

“My fiance and I had been together for four years when he proposed. Since my dad passed away, he moved in with me less than a year into our relationship. So we were serious about building a life together from the start. My relationship with his mom was okay. At first, we’re just different people. Personality wise, she’s loud and extroverted, and I’m more introverted and struggle with loud environments. About a year before he proposed, she kept making more passive aggressive comments towards me. Ooh, okay. I brought this up to my fiance and when things got worse, he asked her about it. Her only explanation was that I was rude because I looked at my phone while playing a 1980s Trivial Pursuit game. She insisted we play. Wait, what? She got mad ’cause you looked at your phone. She forced me to join so the teams would be even I hadn’t wanted to play. So during the long turns, I scrolled social media and did some online shopping.”

Oh my gosh. So she considers that rude. That’s like a generational thing too, though. Like the judgment for being on the phone. I know it’s hard sometimes, like you pick up your phone, you wanna like scroll social media, different generations see that as rude. I personally don’t like when I’m somewhere with someone and they start picking up their phone. I’m like, excuse me, I’ll, I’ll keep talking when you’re done. Like, it’s kind of awkward, but if there’s a big group of people and you just pick up your phone here and there and look at it. Sure. Again, I’m not criticizing this person. I’m just saying personally, if I was playing and I kept noticing someone look at their phone, I’d be like, am I boring you?

“Most of her comments revolved around me making him do things that we already had mutually agreed on. At first, I just ignored it. When he proposed, we were so excited to start planning because of my dad’s passing, I had some inheritance money. We decided, I used part of it for the wedding, so it’d feel like my dad was helping pay and we cover the rest ourselves. We never asked anyone for money, nor did we share this detail with our families. We toured a local event center. With my mom and his parents. The venue handled tables, chairs, linens, food, and bartending, a perfect low stress package. We signed the contract and put down a deposit.” I love, lemme just say, I love when it like a venue is like, we’re gonna do this, this, this, and this. You don’t have to like go to a hundred different vendors. A few weeks later, my fiance came home after visiting his parents. His mom had told him, just so you know, we’re not putting any money down for the wedding, so don’t expect us to.

 Don’t you love that, like aggressive, like coming at you? Like I have seen this happen so many times in these stories, where people just like go after somebody. And it’s wild because it’s like. They’re thinking, they’re expecting them to give them money and it’s like they haven’t said one thing about that.

“He explained that we’re paying for everything ourselves and had never asked them for anything. His dad chimed in saying they just wanted him to be aware. Weird, but we shrugged it off. Okay. I later found a bridal expo and thought it would be a great chance to explore vendors. Since my maid of honor lived outta state, I invited my mom and my two other bridesmaids, my fiance and his mom to help her feel included.” See, this is where I’m always like. I feel bad for these brides ’cause I get it. That’s gotta be really uncomfortable. ’cause you’re like, I want her to feel included. This is a special time. But if she’s already making weird comments to you and about the wedding, I don’t have high hopes for her coming to your dress shopping, that’s all. Okay.

“We drove into cars, my bridesmaids road with my mom. I went with my fiance and his mom.” Wait. Oh, this is a bridal expo. Okay, got it. I was, I don’t know why I was thinking it was like a dress fitting. Okay. ” On the way she started grilling him about who he planned to invite from his side. When he mentioned a cousin he recently connected with, she snapped. You can’t invite him. Take him off the list. I told my fiance he should be able to fight who he wants. But to appease his mom, he agreed to leave the cousin out.” I, they already said straight up, they’re not helping with anything. They’re not paying for anything, so they cannot dictate who you’re inviting to the wedding. And if you are close to someone, you should be able to invite them. Like, that’s ridiculous. Oh my gosh.

“At the expo, she immediately grew, grew annoyed at how slow we were moving through the crowded rows. She kept rushing ahead, arms crossed, waiting against the walls. My fiance went to stand with her so she wouldn’t be alone, which forced my bridesmaid to drag him back whenever I was mid-conversation with vendors.” Yeah, because then she’s making it all about her, so now they’re not even focusing on their wedding and the vendors, she’s just being annoyed. “We found out. We found some promising vendors, silk flowers, rentals, and hair and makeup team. When I mentioned these, she loudly criticized them. ‘I don’t know why people wear makeup anyway, I didn’t at my wedding, and it was such a waste of money to hire someone.'”

This is someone that’s just gonna find something negative about everything. Either she doesn’t support their marriage or their relationship, she’s unhappy with her own wedding, or she’s just unhappy with her life in general. So she’s gonna critique every single thing that she does.

“For context, I have eczema and acne, so I rarely wear more than concealer and foundation for my wedding. I wanted to feel extra special.” As you should, girl. “She also dismissed the silk flowers as cheap. Even after my fiance reminded her, she hadn’t seen the particular booth we liked.” Just making judgements again. “On the way to lunch afterwards, she called his younger brother and bribed him with a free meal to join. The moment he arrived, she focused entirely on him ignoring my bridesmaids and any vendor talk.”

So she’s like just shutting them out. This is such common behavior in these stories. I see. Um, both with shutting out the wedding planning, critiquing anything that they don’t like. It is making the bride feel bad or awkward about ever bringing up the wedding. And then on the other side of things, the sibling picking favorites. I just read another story about this last week where it was sisters and they were picking favorites and then the famous me and Tina skit, and now it’s doing the same thing. Oh, own invite brother to our lunch. And I’m just gonna completely ignore you guys now.

“Months later, I scheduled wedding dress shopping for when my sister would be in town. I texted his mom and my mom the details. His mom replied that she added it to her calendar, so I didn’t send a reminder. The day arrived and after our family vacation.” I know this going and I’m trying not to laugh. “My bridesmaid’s mom and I headed to the boutique soon after my fiance called his dad, told him his mom had skipped it to take his brother’s graduation pictures. My fiance gently scolded me for not reminding her, even though she said she had it on her calendar.”

That hurt. Yeah, she’s an adult. Like it’s also the relationship thing. Like for example, like I told my mom and my mother-in-law like, Hey, this is the date. For dress shopping? Are you guys both free? They both were. They put it on their calendar, but I talked to them multiple times before then, so it would come up. My mother-in-law would call me like we would talk about it. Same with my mom. Like so like it would come up in conversation, but if it’s somebody I don’t talk to a lot, they are adults. If she, if she said, Hey, I put it in my calendar, trust, trust that. If she had a question about it, she can ask. For her to then be like, oh, I’m taking your brother’s graduation photos. Mm, I don’t know. I think it was on purpose. Um.

“We ended up finding the dress at, I dunno why I said it like that, the dress at the first shop, but kept a second appointment just in case. To our shock, his mom showed up at the second boutique, even though she previously said she wasn’t coming.” So she knew .She either knew or the fiance, because I’m wondering if he scolded the bride later or if he like called her and was like, uh, my mom’s not there. You needed to call her, blah, blah, blah, blah. So maybe he gave the address and was like, you need to go. But to me it sounds like the mom just didn’t wanna go to the first appointment. “To our shock… she immediately criticized the gowns as cheap and called my favorite one plain.” Ew. I don’t like that at all. Again, she’s being so rude during this whole like engagement, stop inviting her to things. “My bridal party was furious.” I wonder if anyone like stuck up for, stood up for her and said something. ’cause I feel like my friends would not be able to bite their tongue. Again, I’ve talked about before. I have an amazing mother-in-law. She would never, but I’m just trying to picture like if there was a scenario where one of my, or one of my friend’s mother-in-laws said something, I think we would say something. I don’t think we could just stand there and be like, watch it happen. That would be terrible.

“My bridal party was furious Afterwards, she declined our dinner invitation, telling my fiance later she wasn’t invited at all.” Of course, she’s gonna be the victim. “My sister planned my bridal shower and we invited his mom’s friends too. Only one RSVP.” Yes, which upset her. “A week before the shower, my fiance told, his mom told me his mom complained. I had excluded her from planning. I reminded him that my sister was handling everything. When he relayed that to his mom, she suddenly claimed she was too busy to help anyway.”

This is that victim mentality. They’re gonna find something wrong or find like a way to whine or cry about everything. It’s like, and she’s putting her, her son, the fiance in the middle of everything, saying like, oh, they didn’t include me when they actually did. And then when he says that, he’s like, oh, I’m way too busy for that. Come on.

“On the day she and her mother sat in their car until five minutes before the party. During the shower, she kept mostly to herself. Her gift to me was a Yelp printout for a quirky nail boutique specializing in anime designs. Interesting, sweet in theory, but not at all practical since we were leaving for our honeymoon the next day.” This is wild. “Later, she scheduled a nail appointment for just the two of us without asking me. Then backed out saying she’d bring a friend instead.” What? So she gets you a nail gift certificate for your bridal shower? Then she says, here, I booked a nail appointment for us, and now she can’t go. This woman is wild. How do you, I don’t know how people deal with this.

“His parents agreed to pay for the rehearsal dinner, but his mom still complained about the officiant not attending. He was never supposed to for a co per contract.” I don’t think they typically do. “At the restaurant, she boasted about the very expensive cookies she brought on the wedding day things escalated. She barged into the bridal suite demanding the photographer document a gift from the groom, which delayed our timeline.” I am shaking my head if you’re listening. “Later, she wandered around with her own DSLR camera.” No. Why? Why does she think she’s a photographer now? “Taking photos during our first dance and other moments, even though we had professionals hired.” And you don’t wanna do that either because your flash can throw out the other photographer’s flash. You could be in the background, you could be in the way, like leave it to the professionals. “Our photographer cropped her out whenever possible, but the videographer couldn’t avoid her.” Also, doesn’t she wanna like interact with people while she had a camera? “She also camped out at her reception table with plastic water bottles and spent much of the night at the photo booth with her friends rather than celebrating with us. The next day, I logged into Facebook to see that she’d already posted dozens of wedding photos. Most of them were herself. Out of nearly 50 pictures, I appeared in about seven.” I am laughing ’cause this is just so ridiculous. Like you’re telling me she makes this big stink about the whole wedding. Has to make the whole thing about her. Then on the wedding day, instead of actually just enjoying it and being present, she’s carrying around this huge DSLR camera, taking all these photos as if she’s a second hired photographer, and then posting it all to Facebook without the bride. It’s wild. Oh my gosh.

“Looking back, his mom’s need for attention overshadowed so many parts of the process. My fiance often excused it, wanting to keep her happy, but it left me feeling excluded and disrespected at multiple points.” I’ve said this before and I’ll say it again. If it comes to the point where your mom is making you choose between the two and you can’t choose your new wife. You’re more concerned about making her happy than you’ve already lost. You’re already not choosing your wife, so why are you marrying her? I, I just, I don’t get that, like she, the mom wants like this battle to happen. She wants to like see that her son is still loyal to her, but at the end of the day, like he chose to marry this new person. That’s terrible.

“The wedding itself was beautiful, but her behavior is something I will never forget.” I’m so sorry to this bride and it sucks when you like. Those are the memories then that you have of your wedding day, and I’m sure it hasn’t gotten better now that they’re married. I’m sure it has not gotten better. This mother-in-law is going to still be doing things to be passive aggressive, to be rude, to put her down. All because the girl was scrolling on her phone during game night. Like there, these needs to be researched in a lab somewhere. I don’t know, like I don’t know where this comes from that they get so up in arms or so offended when their son finds someone to marry. I don’t know where this comes from. We need another therapist to come on here and talk about it.

Three Weddings, One Messy Family Tree

Okay, next one. Oh gosh. Okay. Three weddings, one family drama. This story actually involves three weddings. “I grew up in the same neighborhood as this family and was close friends with the youngest daughter. She and her older sister split their time between their dad and stepmom’s house and their mom’s. The stepmom also had two kids from a previous relationship, so it was a blended household. About a year, about a year and a half ago, the older sister got engaged around the same time it came out that their dad was cheating on the stepmom, which led to a nasty divorce. Okay. The stepmom and her kids all cut him off, and so did the older sister.

“The younger sister was the only one still trying to keep some peace, and that’s the one that’s friends with the op.” A lot of characters here. And this is why, sorry, this is a side note, but this is why like when I do skits and people are like, I need the next part, I need the next part. I’m like, I don’t wanna complicate it too much by adding all these other characters. ‘Cause I did that before and people were like, who’s who? Who’s that? And it just gets it. It’s hard in these skits and this is why I need to read this one first. Okay. Um.

Originally, the dad was invited to the older sister’s wedding, but he threw a fit when he found out the stepmom might be there and demanded to bring his new partner instead.God, hopefully it wasn’t the one that he cheated with. I mean, it’s awkward either way ’cause it was a nasty divorce. But if he is like, Hey, this is the mistress.

Like what are we doing here? “When the bride told him his new partner wasn’t welcome, he refused to attend.” So you’re choosing this new partner over your daughter’s wedding or stepdaughter’s wedding. “She finally uninvited him altogether at the wedding. Their mom walked down the aisle at the wedding, their mom walked. The bride down the aisle, and both the younger sister and the former stepsister were bridesmaids. Afterward, the dad had the audacity to send the bride a venmo request asking for the, asking for reimbursement for the venue deposit. He contributed she ignored it.This dad is something else. We need a skit about that because I feel like too many times, like these skits are focused on moms and mothers in-law. I’m sorry guys. I am really sorry for that because I, I don’t mean it to be that way. I just get, most of the stories are about moms and I, I don’t mean for it. So I need a dad story. We need to skit about this because this is a really shitty thing to do. Really shitty thing to do. He ultimately chose his new girlfriend over his wife and kids. I get the divorce was nasty, but you need to put your kids first. He is like, pay me back for the venue. I’m like, not, it’s not her fault. You didn’t show up.

“A month later, the dad married the woman he cheated with. The divorce papers from the second marriage were finalized only 24 hours before his wedding.” So it was the woman he cheated with that he wanted to bring to the wedding. Can you imagine the audacity to not even see how badly you screwed up? You ripped apart your family by cheating on your, on your, your wife, um, of how many years and then wanting to bring her to your daughter’s wedding. Actually, stepdaughter’s wedding. What? This guy’s lost his mind.

The only guests were her. The only guests were two of her kids. The younger daughter wasn’t invited, which upset her, but her dad brushed it off by saying she lived too far away about four hours and he didn’t think she could make it. Okay. Wedding #3.

“Just this past weekend was the younger sister’s wedding. I was in the bridal party along with her fiance’s sister, her biological sister. Two new stepsisters from the dad’s third marriage and a cousin.” Okay. So we’re talking, oh wow. This is like a nice, okay, that like biological sister, the peacekeeper, we’ll call her. I don’t have names for her. So really nice to include her dad’s mistress kids. I mean, I guess this his new wife now, but that’s wild to include them. Okay. “The bride had invited her former stepmom and step siblings, but they weren’t a part of the bridal party.” So she included, and unless I’m understanding incorrectly, she included the new stepsisters from the dad’s third marriage, but not the former. Step siblings who she’s known a lot longer. Okay. I guess it’s all about relationship and you, you choose who you want in your wedding. It’s ultimately up to you, but that’s wild. Uh, okay. Okay. “Her mom and her mom’s partner were also there. Her biological sister serving as maid of honor, still wasn’t speaking to their dad. It was out of question, the most awkward wedding I’ve ever, ever attended. The dad walked the bride down the aisle, but the former stepmom and step-siblings weren’t included in photos and left after cocktail hour. I later heard this was prearranged. The bride wouldn’t be upset.” Oh, that sucks. That’s really sad. “During family photos, the division was almost comical. Bride and groom were in the center mom with her partner and their son, and the older sister with her husband on one side, dad and his new wife and her kids on the other. The older sister was treated as part of mom’s side, and there were no photos of both sisters with their dad. He and the older sister still don’t speak to this day and they didn’t speak the entire day. The dad’s new wife seemed to be scrambling to play catch up socially, meeting extended family for the first time, while also trying to coexist with his ex-wife’s families.”

I wanna hear our story, like I want her to send in what happened here, like if my head, it feels like scrambled eggs right now from all of this, I can only imagine. What actually happened and, and you guys listening like, are, am I too confused? Are you guys confused? There are so many people here. Okay. “She ends with the bride, looked happy at the end of it all, which is the most important thing. But from the outside, the balancing act of divorce, parents, ex stepparents, half siblings and new partners made it painfully awkward to witness.” Uh, I hate that. I hate when you hear about like these messy divorces and the parents then make it more about themselves. It sounds like the, um, ex like stepmother, um, sounded like she was willing to like, make it work, but the dad is just, sounds terrible. Um, I’ve been in multiple weddings where there’s children of divorce and they make it work. They’re still hugging, they’re friends. They get along, they, and it’s not like they’re hanging out outside of it. They just make it work for the sake of their kids in a beautiful day. It’s not that hard to brush it aside for one day. It’s not about you, it’s about the bride and groom. And that’s it. The couple getting married.

All right, guys. Well, those were two completely wild stories. Thanks for listening, and hopefully, I mean, we might need a family tree after this. I don’t know, but this was wild.

Mother-in-Law on Vacation With the Ex?

All right, let’s end this episode with some confessions that you guys sent me over on Instagram again. Every single Friday we ask you guys to send us your confessions. They have to do. All kinds of things. Engagements, dating, uh, relationships, weddings, proposals, honeymoons, you name it. So send them to us. Okay. This first one says.

“My mother-in-law would invite his ex over or go on vacation with her after we got engaged.” Oh, no. This is the one that needs to let go of the past. This, I would, I don’t think I would do well with that. Uh, I don’t think most people would. I need to know now. Where are you guys? Are you guys engaged still? Are you married? Does his ex still come around? What is his relationship with the ex? What is his relationship with his mom? Is, is he like setting up a boundary? Because that’s weird to me that the mother-in-law’s going on vacation with her. That’s, that’s very inappropriate to me. Okay.

Was that intentional or was that like an accident? Because there’s been times where like my husband’s included in a group chat or I am and the other isn’t included, and you talk to them later and they either are like, oh, I didn’t mean to do that.

Or, um, it was for a different reason. Or, I don’t know, like, maybe it’s not that deep, but maybe it is that deep. I don’t know. It is weird to not include the bride in a text about her wedding. That’s like the one where the mother-in-law posted photos. Um, I think it was from their engagement and then, um, purposely like, what was it? She, I think either cropped out the bride. No, she, yeah, she cropped out the bride and then only tagged the son in the photos, so that was intentional.

Okay. This last one says, “I knew he was going to propose, but he still doesn’t know that.” Wait. I knew he was going to propose, but he still doesn’t know that. Married for four years with two kids. Okay. Why was I, okay, tell me why I read that. Like he doesn’t know that I’ve been married for four years with two kids. I’ve been reading too many like crazy confessions that I was literally thought she was like confessing to us a deep, dark secret that she’s been married for four years with two kids. Okay. She knew that he was going to propose, like she, somehow the secret was out. She knew that he was gonna propose and she’s not telling him four years later with two kids, all right, I got you. I got you. That’s not that wild. I think that probably happens a lot. You want them to feel good about their surprise, so you’re not gonna say anything.

Um, like I’ve talked about before, I knew my, I knew like we were gonna get engaged soon. I didn’t know when it was gonna happen, so I was completely surprised when it did happen. Um. But I wasn’t like, whoa, we’ve never talked about marriage before. This is weird. So I knew it was kind of coming. Um, yeah.

Well, thanks guys. Those were some pretty wild stories today. As always, if you want more content or more crazy stories, join my email newsletter we send out. We send out emails every single Thursday and we like to call them stories from the Vault. So you’ll get some other stories that we don’t share anywhere else. ’cause I get so many stories, um, every single week. Like right now there’s probably 400 plus. I don’t even know, I haven’t looked at the full doc in a long time. Um, stories and situations and segments and questions that have been sent to me, um, we’re just working on their way out. So, uh, lots of different. Ways and places that I’m sharing them right now.

So thank you guys for listening. And um, you guys, I think I just had like a complete, like brain burst. I’ve been like, I feel like I’ve been pulled in so many directions. I think we all feel that. I don’t know what it, what’s going on, but there’s just so much going on right now that my brain sometimes is just like, I completely just had a brain pause. I don’t even know what you wanna call it, but thank you guys for hanging out with me.

Um. Okay. Thank you so much for hanging out with me this week. As a reminder, you can order my new book, here comes The Drama, a Ferris and Sloan story on. Amazon, Cobo, Barnes and Noble, Ingram Sparks, and many other places. You can find all the links in the show notes. Um, and don’t forget to tag me on social media. I’d love to hear your reviews, see where you’re reading it, um, and share it with a friend because the more people that read it or see about it, because the more people that read it or hear about it, um, just warms my heart, makes me happy.

All right guys. That’s all I have this week. Thanks for hanging out with me. Don’t forget, you now order my brand new book. I guess it’s not brand new anymore, but you could order my book. Here comes the Drama Affairs and Sloan story. Um, Amazon Cobo, Barnes and Noble, Ingram Spark and many other places. The details are in the show notes. I’m currently working on book number two, so that’s been a lot of fun to work on.

Um. I need to work on focusing a little bit more, but I’m excited because I’m taking the storyline that was on social media and like really deep diving it and adding a lot more that was not there before. So if you guys want first dibs or if you guys want some s some more sneak peeks into the book, make sure you’re on my email list.

All right guys. That’s all I got for you this week and I’ll see you next time. Bye now.


A Shocking Bridezilla, Wedding Rules Gone Wild & a Book #2 Sneak Peek

My new book Here Comes the Drama: A Ferris and Sloan Story is live!

Get the book!

What happens when a bride bans her bridesmaids from getting engaged or pregnant for two years? Welcome to today’s Bridezilla saga.

Christa reacts to a viral Reddit wedding horror story filled with outrageous demands: daily group chats, pricey dress fittings years in advance, and rules like “don’t look hotter than the bride.”

Then the chaos shifts to family feuds, shower invites without wedding invites, parents footing the bill, and a brother who plays the victim at every turn. Two weddings, endless drama, and a crash course in setting boundaries.

PLUS—Christa reads a juicy snippet from book two of her Here Comes the Drama series!

Join me on Patreon and get bonus content every month! 

Episode Chapter Markers

00:00 Introduction

01:34 Podcast Review and Listener Engagement

02:33 Book Two Teaser: Sneak Peek

11:25 Rapid Fire: Wedding Drama Debates

16:10 Reacting to Crazy Stories

21:05 Bridesmaid Dress Drama

22:40 Overwhelming Group Chats

24:24 Bride’s Unrealistic Demands

26:38 Toxic Friendship Unveiled

33:09 Family Wedding Drama

Must-Hear Insights and Key Moments

  • The No-Life Rule – Bride tells bridesmaids they can’t get engaged or pregnant for two years before her wedding.
  • The Price of Friendship – Bridesmaids expected to cover all her meals, drinks, Ubers, and bachelorette trip costs.
  • Dress Code Chaos – Costly bridesmaid dresses ordered a year early, plus mandatory “mock try-on” videos.
  • Group Chat Prison – Multiple platforms, constant tagging, and shaming if bridesmaids didn’t reply instantly.
  • Body Shaming Bombshell – Bride tells a postpartum bridesmaid to “lose the baby weight” for the wedding.
  • Copycat Behavior – Bride mimics her friend’s pets, car, hobbies, and even pregnancy timing.
  • Family Feud Fallout – Brother refuses to invite his own siblings to his daughter’s wedding, after demanding generous shower gifts.
  • Empty Pews, Full Drama – The wedding day ends with two-thirds of the bride’s side of the church empty.

Words of Wisdom: Standout Quotes from This Episode

  • “Imagine telling your friends: congrats, you’re engaged… oh wait, not for two years, because I said so.” – Christa Innis
  • “Nothing says ‘friendship’ like a daily group chat you can’t escape from.” – Christa Innis
  • “The only rule at my wedding would be: don’t be a jerk. Apparently, that one didn’t make her list.”Christa Innis
  • “You don’t need a crystal ball to see this marriage starting off with control issues.” – Christa Innis
  • “Your bridesmaids are not your unpaid employees, babe.” – Christa Innis
  • “If the dress costs more than the friendship, we have a problem.” – Christa Innis
  • “Why are parents always expected to pay, but never allowed to have an opinion?” – Christa Innis
  • “A shower without a wedding invite is basically a gift grab with cupcakes.” – Christa Innis
  • “Some people want a wedding, others want a stage. Guess which one this is.” – Christa Innis
  • “Boundaries aren’t mean. They’re survival.” – Christa Innis

Join the Drama with Christa Innis:

Got Wedding Drama? We Want to Hear It!

Your stories make Here Comes the Drama what it is! Share your unforgettable wedding tales, hilarious mishaps, or unbelievable moments with us. Whether it’s a wild confession or a story worth a skit, we can’t wait to hear it.

Submit your story today: Story Submission Form

Follow us on social media for updates and sneak peeks at upcoming episodes. Your stories inspire the drama, the laughs, and the lessons we love to share!

Team Dklutr Production

Blog Transcript:

Note: We use AI transcription so there may be some inaccuracies

Christa Innis: Hi guys. Welcome back to another episode of Here Comes The Drama. I’m your host, Christa Innis, and I am so excited to dive into another episode with some crazy stories that were sent to me. stories from the vault as we’ll call them. As always, if I have not said it on here in a while, if you want more stories from the vault, you can always join my email newsletter and every single week I send out emails on a Thursday.

We share more stories that people send to me. I give you links of all the latest, Stories and skits that I’ve sent out, and then also our latest YouTube video just to make sure it’s all in one place. And you never miss a crazy story because we’ve got lots of them. I’m gonna do things a little bit different today.

I always like to mix it up so it seems a little unique and fun. Although the stories are always unique and fun, so. More can you ask for, so today I’m gonna do a little book two teaser or sneak peek. we’re gonna have a little this or that, a rapid fire. And then I’ve got not one, but two wild stories that, someone has sent over to me.So we’re gonna react to those together. 

Sneak Peeks, Reviews, and Wild Wedding Drama

Starting off, I just wanna read a review of the podcast. so this one says, Christa has always made her guests seem like friends of hers. It’s nice to listen to such fun topics, even if sometimes crazy, most of the time crazy. I hope she’ll have on Suzanne Lambert soon.

I had Suzanne Lambert on and I adore her. I think she’s fantastic. She was cracking me up before and after recording and of course during recording, but she was, I wanna say episode seven. I don’t even know. I’ll find out and we’ll, we’ll link in the show notes, but, she was wonderful. thank you for that kind review.

Of course, as always, if you guys love the podcast, please leave me a review. it just helps more people find it and, I will of course share them as well. It just really helps. Like I said, people really understand the podcast and be able to find it when they’re looking for something fun to listen to. So that’s always a fun to read.

Book Two Sneak Peek: Romance, Secrets, and Wedding Fallout 

Okay. Like I said. We’re gonna jump into book two Teaser. if this is your first time hearing that I’m gonna work on, or I am working on book number two of the, here comes the drama series. Well, surprise. I’m working on book number two. The title is TBD, I’m working on a few different options right now, and, if you are on my newsletter, email, newsletter list, very soon you’ll be able to vote on which one you like the best.

So make sure you get on that so you can be on the insider, scoop there and see what we’re working with. But book two has been challenging, fun, but also exciting. I would like to say I’m getting a little more creative with, Character development and what can happen. I’m not sticking as closely to the storyline and the skits that you guys saw previously.

Of course it does loosely follow it. but there was a lot, like, I was trying to explain this to someone. It’s like, think of the skit as the rough, rough draft, right? Like I put those together, but sometimes things just come out on a whim and later I’m like, oh, I wish it happened like this instead. So when I sit down to write, I’m able to actually like analyze like, oh, this makes sense, or should I take this scene out?

Should I add this scene in? So we’re getting a little, little, I dunno if raunchy is the right word, but we’re getting a little more in depth in some relationships. We’re adding a little more detail, and I’m changing the course of some things that happen. So it’s been a lot of fun. I do wanna say though, if you’ve not read the first book, and you plan to, you might not wanna listen to this, it’s not gonna reveal too much, but if you watch the skits, it might have some, some revealed in it.

so I’m gonna leave that up to you. It could spoil some small things, but nothing crazy. So here’s a little, teaser from the first part. Again, this is before anything’s been edited, sent to my editor. This is super, super rough, but I wanted to share it with you guys as a little insider bonus. So here we go.

Chapter one, the late afternoon sun spills across the private deck, casting a golden haze over the edge of the infinity pool. Slowly leaves back in her lounge chair, her legs stretched out, sunglasses slipping slightly down her nose. Suddenly Ferris emerges from the villa with sunglasses perched on his head, wearing black swim trunks and holding two glasses of champagne.

My beautiful wife. The champagne you ordered, Ferris says, with a wink leaning forward to hand, one to Sloan. She laughs and sits up reaching for the glass. I could get used to this. The sun, the fresh air, no drama. She gestures up to the sky as if to thank the sun directly. Ferris gently settles into the lounge chair besides her and takes a deep breath, soaking it all in.

She turns to face him and lifts her glass to clink his to married life. I’m so ready for this next chapter. She leans in to give him an a quick peck on the cheek to married life. Ferris echoes smirking at her before taking a long sip. He lets out an audible satisfied. Ah, before adding, tell you what, if I could just sit at a resort like this with you by my side and a drink in my hand for the rest of my life.

I think I could die. Happy slow now reclining again, mumbles you Sure? We didn’t actually die from the wedding stress and this is heaven. She laughs. Ferris chuckles. Come to think of it, the end was kind of a blur, an out of body experience. He thinks back to the moment he could. He made a clear divide between his new wife and his mother.

Proud of the way he stood his ground. Hoping Sloan never second guesses where she stands again. He glances over at her admiring how she glows so naturally in the sunlight. He can hardly keep his hands off of her. Setting down his champagne glass. He moves to sit on her chair, gently cups her face and leans in for a soft kiss.

She lifts her head to meet him, kissing him back. Her hands, exploring his warm body. He slides fully onto the lounge chair silently praying it’s strong enough to hold them both. His fingers trail from her collarbone down to the curbs of her body. Then there’s a knock at the door. They pause looking at each other, then toward the villa without saying a word.

They silently agree to ignore it and return to where they left off. Ferris reaches for the string on Sloan Swim top. Another knock louder this time, he sits up annoyed. Next time I’m putting the do not disturb sign on her door. He walks to the door and pierce through the peephole. A bellhop stands there holding something.

Ferris opens the door, the bellhop smiles holding out a card for the newlyweds. A little spa treatment. Ferris hesitates before taking the card. Oh, thank you. Who’s it from? The call was anonymous, the bellhop says his smile a little too practiced. they just wanted to send you a little treat before you head home.

Ferris furrows, his brows. Thanks. He repeats watching. As the bellhop walks away, he stands there for a beat, peering around the front of the village, nothing. Eventually he shakes it off and heads back inside, shutting the door behind him. Who is that Sloan ass when he returns to the deck? Ferris opens the envelope and scans the card.

Here’s to making sure you relax on your honeymoon. Something tells me you’re going to need it. His stomach tightens. The words could be innocent or something else entirely. He slides the card into his pocket and forces a smile, just a little spa surprise. He says, let’s not waste it. She snatches the card from his hands, her fingers brushing

His in a lingering touch. She opens it reading the message quickly before setting it down on the table. Her gaze meets his and something unspoken passes between them without a word. She wraps her arms around his waist, pulling him closer as she leans down to kiss. The kiss deepens slow in searching and he lifts her effortlessly feeling her legs wrap around him as she clings to him guiding him towards the bedroom.

Their bodies move together. The space between them vanishing as they cross into the next room where the world outside seems miles and miles away. Chapter two, I’m only gonna do a few more paragraphs of this one, cause I don’t wanna give too much. Okay. Back in Milwaukee, tensions are running high after the humiliation of having wine spilled on her at the wedding.

Kate had stormed out of the venue hoping Ted, her husband would follow her in support, but instead he remained inside happily celebrating the couple, mingling with his friends and family as if nothing had happened. She waited a whole hour sitting alone in her car before realizing that no one was coming after her this time.

How could her family be so cruel, so unforgiving after everything she had done for them. She couldn’t believe that they were all inside the venue dancing and enjoying themselves while she sat outside alone. Finally, she decided to go back inside. Maybe that way someone would feel guilty and see how horribly her family had treated her.

She slowly walked back into the venue head slumped down, dragged her feet. She walked in and it was like no one even noticed she was missing. She spotted Ferris and Sloan across the room lost in the moment as they sh start shared a slow dance. He dipped her gracefully and the crowd formed a wide circle around them offering silent shears.

As Sloane made her way up to Ferris, he grazed her jaw and leaned in for a kiss. Off to the side. Kate noticed Jenny standing proudly with her drink in her hand, but it was the right, it was the sight of Cal. His arm draped more than friendly around her shoulder that caught her off guard. Kate stood frozen, staring in disgust, uncertain of what to do next.

She began to walk forward. Her steps slow and deliberate. Just then a tap on her shoulder. Kate quickly turned around to see the wedding planner, Yvette, and a man she didn’t recognize dressed in a suit. Kate, I’m sorry, but we’re gonna have to ask you to leave Yvette politely said, trying not to cause a scene.

Okay. I’m gonna stop there because as you guys can hear, I am not a trained speaker. I am not. A voice actor. So many people like still are like, oh, I wish you would read the next book. I like the audio book, but I wish it was your voice ’cause they’re just used to me in the skit. But that should show you guys like, it is so hard.

I don’t know, like, I dunno if I just overthink, but it’s hard to like enunciate things the right way or pronounce things the right way, especially when you’re just reading it for someone, knowing it’s being recorded. So I know I messed up a little bit while reading that, but, It was also good for me because like I said, I’m a little behind on this one and, I need to send it to an editor soon. I’m on currently on chapter 36 or seven. This one’s gonna be a lot longer. There’s a lot more detail, like I said. so I’m looking at maybe closer to a 300 page book. We’ll see. I don’t know how many chapters yet. Anyways, I hope you guys enjoyed that little sneak peek.

I do tend to send little sneak peeks, in the newsletter here and there just of random paragraphs. Sometimes I’ll post ’em on social media as well. But, I’m just, really excited to get it out to you guys. I know some, many of you guys read through the first one so quickly, so hopefully I can get this out to you guy pretty soon. 

Wedding Drama Showdowns: This or That?

Okay, next up we are gonna do the this or that. Pick aside wedding drama debates. As I read these off, I want you guys to also like say out loud what you would rather do. I think it’s always interesting to hear differences of opinion. Okay. Rapid fire. Your DJ cancels last minute, or your photographer ghost you the day of.

 yeah, we’re gonna go with DJ canceling last minute. I know I’ve done similar ones before, so hopefully I’m not repeating them. some of these, I know that one sounds kind of familiar, but you know what I feel like with DJs, again, DJs are great, but we all have Spotify on our phone. Most of us do. So photographer.

Nothing can replace a professional photographer. iPhones are great. Photos are getting better on phones, but I would rather have someone be able to focus on taking photos and not think about it. mother-in-law wears white, or Best Man gives an inappropriate speech. At my own wedding, I would say.mean, how inappropriate are we talking?

I don’t know. Like I’d probably say mother-in-law wears white. I mean for me, that doesn’t really bother me If I would look at some of these other stories. They already have some issues then. Yeah. That’s, a problem. Venue runs out of food or open bar closes two hours early. If I have to pick, it’s gonna be open bar closes two hours early because you do not want the venue to run out of food if you’re not feeding all your guests that is a problem. And I’ve heard horror stories of venues running out of food. I dunno how that happens. that’s bad to leave a wedding hungry. Dealing with a crying baby during your vows or a drunk uncle during your first dance. I think a drunk uncle during your first dance. I think that’s probably way more common.

And at that point, hopefully the music is loud enough and there’s a big enough circle where you don’t really notice it unless he is like so drunk. He’s like walking onto the dance floor and like bothering you guys. But either way, I think, the vows are definitely a more intimate moment where you probably don’t want the distractions.

Okay. a bridesmaid, drops out the night before, or a groomsman shows up late and tipsy, eh, I’d say groomsman shows up late and tipsy. A bridesmaid dropping out the night before we. Unless there was like an emergency that would be kind of crappy, that wouldn’t feel too good if the groomsmen’s a little tipsy when he shows up, whatever.

I mean, we had some drunk grooms men, they handled it fine. Okay. Rain on your outdoor ceremony or blistering heat with no ac. Rain on your outdoor ceremony. I think it could actually be really pretty. there’s something about when there’s overcast, like if we’re talking a little rain, it’s overcast.

The photos actually look really pretty and you’ve got your girls there. You’ve got, maybe your hairstylist has already left, but if you’ve got your girls, just a little hairspray, whatever. I think it’s fine. Okay. Discover a guest live streamed your ceremony without permission or see your wedding. Hashtag hijacked by strangers.

I did not have a wedding hashtag. I don’t even know if that’s a thing anymore. I’m sorry. If people are still doing that, they might be, I think that’s one of those trends that are kind of dying out, so. If someone wants to use it, that’s fine. I remember when we first got engaged, I don’t even know.

I remember kind of thinking about hashtags ’cause my last name’s in it. So I feel like you can do a lot with that. But then I was like, I don’t know if people do this anymore. caterer forgets the cake or florist delivers the wrong color scheme.

I am not, I know I said rapid fire and I’m explaining all my answers. If there’s no other dessert, you can’t forget the cake. If there’s no other dessert, Floris delivers the wrong color scheme. I’m gonna go with that because I mean, if they’re still pretty. I’m not someone that is a big, like flower person.

I had fake flowers at my wedding. I was not about to spend $5,000 on flowers. that’s just me. so yeah, if they came and they were like slightly the wrong color, I don’t know. I don’t think there’s a color I would hate or anything. Seating chart disaster exes were seated together or your boss was seated at the kids’ table.

That’s pretty funny.

I would say. Ex is seated together because in my, like in my writing era right now, and I’m like, Ooh, that sounds like a good story. Like I’m like, Ooh, two exes are seated at a table together and then maybe they hit it off. yeah, that’s just where my mind’s going. Kids table is kind of just humorous for me, honestly.

Okay, last one. Have to wear the world’s itst wedding shoes or smile through an off key karaoke performance dedicated to you. Oh, I don’t want a dedicated karaoke performance. I just don’t want that at all. But itchy wedding shoes, I don’t think I’ve ever had itchy shoes. those both sound really terrible.Okay, you guys need to tell me. What would you guys pick? I think I would go with, if we’re talking like a one minute karaoke performance, let’s just go with that. I’m not wearing itchy shoes. 

The Ultimate Bridezilla: Rules, Group Chats, and Friendship Fallout

Okay, let’s get to the moment you guys are all waiting for. Let’s react to these crazy stories. like I said, we’ve got two, so let’s see what we got.

Okay.This story actually went viral a few years ago on Reddit when another bridesmaid posted it on an, am I the asshole Red? She told her side, which I’ll share with her permission, but I never got to share mine.

It’s definitely a brides list story. Okay. So when I first glanced at this, I thought she was saying this was a popular Reddit, story, which it kind of is, but she was also a bridesmaid at this wedding, so she’s kind of telling her own perspective of it, of a Bridezilla story. Okay. This is wild, and I bet you guys are gonna love this because.

We don’t get a ton of Bridezilla stories. Most of the stories that are sent to me are from brides themselves. So we get every other perspective. And people are all the time, like, well, brides aren’t perfect either. There’s Bridezillas. Yes. We all know there’s tons of Bridezillas. Hence why the name started.

Right. so I’m excited for this I’m wearing my white today. Okay, here we go. The bride started off by telling us that if we got engaged or pregnant before her wedding, we were out. Ah. I would just jump ship right then. No, that’s not a friend. You can’t get engaged or pregnant when she’s enga.

When she’s And the wedding. Wait, the wedding was more than two years away. So she expects in that two years for you to pause your own life, bow down to her and do whatever she wants in those two years, no, I’m out. Like we’re not even talking like a quick engagement. We’re talking two years away. You can’t get engaged and you can’t get pregnant.

No, I’m not pausing. I’ve always said this. I would not pause my own life or relationship for somebody else. Like I had a lot of friends that, like when other friends were getting married and stuff, they’re like, oh, okay, well I’m gonna wait to try to have kids till after because I don’t wanna be pregnant at their wedding.

And for me, I was like, your timing is your timing. Like if that’s, if you would rather like be able to party at a wedding, that’s fine. But for me, I was like, I wanna do it when I’m ready. And sure enough, like. I was a pregnant maid of honor at one of my friend’s weddings, and it was really fun.

It was fine, like my feet hurt a lot more. My body was a lot more sore by the end of the night, but I was not about to pause because another friend was getting married. Okay. She told us that we were expected to pay for everything except the wedding itself. I understand when someone doesn’t have a lot of money, but I’m talking about her meals on the bachelorette trip.

We also pay for the trip itself. All of her drinks were in clubs with entry fees. She also expected us to cover, and even her Ubers, I get helping with the party, but every single meal, drink and ride, she didn’t even want to split it. She just didn’t want to pay.

Okay. So here’s the thing with bachelorette parties, and I think communication is really important. Most every bachelorette party I’ve been on and I’ve been on a lot, I’ve never took the time to sit down and count them, but I would say I’ve been to at least nine or 10. Yeah, because I’ve been to Bachelorettes for every wedding I’ve been in and then my own, and I’m sure I’ve been to some. I wasn’t in, we’ve always just split the bride’s cost amongst everybody. And, but that’s always been kind of communicated. Like I said, with all our friend group, we kind of just know that’s what is expected. but when you kind of come in with that entitled behavior, that’s where there’s a problem. cause many of the brides still would buy like rounds of drinks or they would just like. Bring gift bags for everybody. You know, there’s different ways of like giving back to your bridesmaids. this doesn’t sit well with me because she’s coming in very rude and entitled. this is does not sound like a wedding I would be a part of. okay.

She had a long list of rules for how we were supposed to look at both the bachelorette party and the wedding. For the wedding. She picked out our dresses, which were pricey, and we had to get her approval on our hair, nails, and shoes. Oh, wow. when the dresses came in. More than a year in advance.

Why are we getting dresses a year in advance? Like most people like get engaged a year before their wedding. Right. You don’t need your dress that much in advance. Plus your body can change so much through different things, right? Unless this bride’s like you can’t gain weight, you can’t lose weight, you need to stay the way you are. Like, this would not surprise me from this kind of bride. some of mine didn’t get theirs until like maybe two months before the wedding. ‘Cause you have to think about it. Like you get sized for it, you buy it, it gets to you. ‘ cause we did all ours online. Then you have to get it like altered, right? So if you’re, shorten it, you fix up anyway. And I mean, most of the weddings I was in, like, we were just if you wanna get your hair done, I’m thinking. I’ve had some that were more specific, they’d be like, oh, I want updo for everybody. I’m personally not a fan of an updo. Everyone’s different. And then for nails, everyone was just like, do what you want with your nails. Some had like preferences for shoes, they’d be like, oh, we want gold shoes. We want just wear tan shoes. Just wear black shoes. But I don’t think I’ve had any that were like, you have to wear these shoes. One wedding, I was in one of the first weddings I was in I think the problem is, I don’t if problem’s the right word. We were just so young. So we all went to get bridesmaid dresses together and we were literally just walking around the store and like, how, when do you think about this? What do you think about this? And then we all picked the same like silver shoes and they were the most painful shoes. so we all just matched, but I think that’s kind of, we’re kind of veering away from that outlook now.

Okay. so when the dresses came in more than a year in advance, she demanded that we all do a mock try on video on our own time and send it to her right away.

This is when people are more. Care more about the overall look and like how everything’s like perfect than the actual like marriage or like wedding.

At one point I temporarily withdrew because she was too much. I wasn’t the only one, but I was one of the few who ended up going back. Ooh. I wonder why. Within days of her engagement, she started creating group chats, multiple ones, some with just bridesmaids, some with bridesmaids and groomsmen, and on different platforms like Facebook and Snapchat.

Yeah, I’m already overwhelmed. That’s too much for me.

She expected us to check them constantly.

Okay. Full disclosure, when I’m in a bridesmaid group chat, I silence it. you need, boundaries. I love a group chat as much as the next person, and I’ll be in there when I can be. But if I’m in a group chat with, let’s say, 10 other girls, you’ll never have time for anything else. If all you’re doing is reading this thing, I turn off alerts and I check it when I can. And that’s how it should be for everybody. Or if it’s too much for you, just get out of it and find out the most important things. the wedding was years away. When she wasn’t sending us long essays of rules, she was asking our opinions on wedding details. Then getting mad when we didn’t answer, why are we in this wedding? Why are these people in this wedding? This girl sounds terrible to be around. It was like she expected us to plan it out for her. She was making demands daily, but while she worked from home, most of us didn’t. I didn’t have the time to constantly check chats for her new rules. She thrived on attention. So getting married was basically her dream come true, though not for the usual reasons.

The. I’m not surprised someone like this caring more about control and having all eyes on her is not gonna be as excited about the marriage or what’s coming next. They’re more excited about the overall appeal, having a reason to post photos on social media, having people come at, oh, you look so beautiful. Oh your the most beautiful bride. They are not thinking about like, oh, I’m getting married. Oh, I’m signing a contract essentially to live and be married with this person for my life. Hopefully. this is wild. Okay. Eventually she demanded that we all meet for a dress fitting fine, but the wedding was still over a year away. She told us we had to order the dresses by August, 2020, even though the wedding wasn’t until September, 2022. What, what kind of dress are you ordering? even like custom made bride, like bride dresses. Why can I not think of a word? a bridal gown. I ordered mine 10 months before. My wedding was not custom.

It was not custom. We’re talking like a $1,200 dress. Not custom, but I’m thinking like a year is probably fine for that kind of stuff. Like, I don’t know. Correct me if I’m wrong, but this sounds wild to me. Like I said, bridesmaids I think ordered their dresses like six months before the wedding. if we did not order by then or we couldn’t attend the fitting, which she gave us a little notice for, we were out.

I need to know how many other bridesmaids there were and who all dropped out because there’s like at least three points already that I would’ve been out of this wedding. By this point, I had started ignoring the chats. I figured she’d text if it was important. She never did. She only used Snapchat. Who uses Snapchat?

if you’re only listening, I just made a face. I don’t use Snapchat. And to me, the last time I used it was like college maybe. Right? Post college to me. it was only for like instant things you want people to see. Not like, for a constant, like things disappeared, don’t they? Oh gosh.

she could see if we read the messages. If someone didn’t reply, she would literally tag the person until they replied almost as if to shame them. Oh my God, this is wild. Like also as someone like now, like it’s probably more since I’ve become a mom, but like I’ll read text messages sometimes and I’m like, oh, okay, I can’t reply right now.

And I try to remember later. Half the time. I remember later, half the time, I’ll remember like three days later I’ll be like, oh crap, I need to reply to that person. But like sometimes people just read it and they forget. Or if they don’t have anything to say, and that’s okay. Our phones like in social media and like the technology now makes it feel like if someone texts us or calls us or emails us, we have to reply right away.

And so we just always feel like go, go, go, go, go. I have to reply. And it’s like no boundaries, like people do not deserve access to us 24 7. We deserve to shut off from the world as much as we want to. that’s just too much. I get it.

It was her wedding and she was excited, but the demands were reasonable. When I skipped the fitting, she shamed me in the group chat and got others to do the same. Got others to do the same. Who is shaming her then? What the heck? This is so weird. Who? Who would stay friends with someone like this?

That moment caused my many bridesmaids to drop out. She got replacements, but most of ’em eventually dropped out too. Replacements. Gosh, the viral Reddit story came from another bridesmaid’s perspective. In short, the bride who was a photographer made backhanded comments about her body after she had a baby, basically telling her to lose the weight.

I knew it. I knew this kind of person with shame, someone for a weight gain. Telling her to lose the weight for the wedding, which your body, anyone knows anyone that’s had had a child or just as you get older, it’s so much harder to lose weight. And it’s not even that, it’s your body just changes, your body handles food, exercise, um.

Sitting down, you know, just your body changes. So even if you don’t gain weight, sometimes you go up in sizes or sometimes you gain weight and you go down and like you’re, it’s just everybody is different. Like how in the year of 2025 do we still have to explain that everybody’s different, but metabolism’s different, how we absorb food is different.

Like I’m no health expert. I can just see like we can, we need to accept people. Like that’s wild. I would never make comments about a friend’s weight and say, you need to lose your baby weight. What the heck? This wasn’t out of character. The bride often made comments like that and later tried to act innocent.

She thrived on putting others down to make herself feel better. Even before the wedding, I had my own horror stories. She copied everything I did. At first, I thought it was cute, like a best friend thing, until I realized it wasn’t I got a pet. Then she got one only take of it up later. She later copied my car, my purchases, my style, and even my hobbies, worst of all.

But when I became pregnant at 20 unexpectedly and in a difficult situation, she spent my entire pregnancy reminding me how glad she was that she wasn’t pregnant. Why? Why are you still friends with this girl? She does not like you. She does not like anybody. She sounds like someone that’s very unhappy, so she has to constantly put people down around her and someone that’s gonna make fun of you or put you down when you’re pregnant or your body changes, or when you’re going through a sad moment in your life, she’s not gonna be there for you.

Oh my gosh, this is wild. Um, she spent my entire pregnancy. Oh yeah. Okay. So later, after visiting me at 37 weeks, she suddenly started saying she wished she was pregnant too. And within a month she was trying. Soon after she ended up pregnant as well. So these girls are really young. I’m trying to wait. Is this all before the wedding?

I’m so confused. Okay. It says, before the wedding, this all happened. So she was pregnant at 20 before the wedding, so I don’t know how many years later this was it. And so the bride and herself have children. Okay. Fast forward, she eventually apologized and I was back in the wedding. Things went smoothly though she still micromanaged for the bachelorette party.

She wanted us to buy three new approved outfits for going out. No, like I’ve talked about before, I’ve been to many bachelorette parties where there’s like themes and I love it. I love a good theme. Sometimes they’re hard to find, but we go to thrift store. Sometimes we buy stuff on Amazon. You know, whatever.

You can find like. No one would be like, you have to buy a new outfit, or we switched outfits. Like no one would be like, you have to go buy a new outfit, and I, I need to approve it. Like, no. Um, and she kept reminding us to not look hotter than the bride. I work out regularly and was the slimmest in the group.

So she often made outfit suggestions that she knew wouldn’t flatter me. She wanted all the attention. During nights out, if men came up to talk to me or the other bridesmaids, she would immediately jump in, announce that she was the bride, and start bragging. Oh my gosh. The wedding itself. I’m just, you know what the most shocking thing about all this is, is that she still has bridesmaids and friends at the end of this, because this is just so wild to me.

Like I’ve never personally been in a situation like this where a bride was like terrible. So. You can never say how you would truly, truly, you would never know how you would truly, truly act unless you were in that position. But on the outside, there’s like eight different moments now where I’d be like, yeah, I’m gone.

Yeah, I’m gone. Yeah. I’m not in this like that is wild. To me, that is the most shocking part of this whole thing, is that she still had friends stick by her side and stand up by her side during the ceremony. Um, it says afterwards she was angry that we didn’t talk to her enough or try harder to see her.

Later she announced another pregnancy, even though doctors had warned her, she was high risk. Thankfully, she and the baby were fine, but the due date was the same as my birthday. She repeated the date to me without even realizing it, and when I said I was honored, she was triggered and actually. Arranged to be induced early.

This girl will never be happy. Our friendship officially ended when she shamed us all for forgetting her wedding anniversary. Okay? Like you can know your friend’s wedding anniversaries, but like there are so many, like, as we get older, there’s so many things to remember, right? It’s like birthdays, anniversaries, kids’ birthdays, uh, you know, whatever.

Your own personal life things, right? Your own, your own family, husbands birthday, your own anniversary, your own kids work, work stuff. I mean, there’s so many things I would never expect any of my friends to wish me a happy anniversary. Like I’m more shocked when people say happy anniversary. I’m like, oh, I guess it is my anniversary.

What do you know? That is wild. Our, uh, she says, I know this is long and all over the place, but there’s just so much to unpack. I. Girl, I feel for you and I, and I can’t, I’m not, I hope this doesn’t come off that I’m like shaming her for staying friends with so long, her, so long. Because it’s hard when you are really invested in a friendship or you’ve known someone a really long time and maybe she flipped or maybe you’re just used to being that.

Yes, yes girl, that friend that’s always there, right? I know I have before where you’re just like, yeah, I’m there for you. I got this for you. I got this. And then finally, years later, or as you get older, you can look in the mirror and be like, why did I do that? This girl never did anything for me. Or all she did was talk bad about me.

Why was I still willing to do all these things? So I’m just responding to this as who I am right now. But if this happened, you know, when they were in their early twenties, if this happened when I was in my early twenties. Maybe some of the stuff I’d be like, okay, it’s fine. She’s my friend. It’s okay. But this girl is a straight up bully.

And I’m glad as the years went on, more and more brides were like, or bridesmaids in her wedding, were like, okay, this is not normal behavior. I am not gonna be friends with this person. Wow. Well thank you for sharing that. I, I think we need to find the actual like Reddit story now and read the other bridesmaids perspective and, um.

Family Feud at the Altar: When Weddings Expose True Colors

If there’s more as you’re unpacking this, feel free, feel free to send more. All right, guys, I got one more story. Um, as I first, when I first started reading the beginning of story number one, um, I thought it was a Reddit story, so I was like, okay, well we need to have a submission too. So we’re gonna have two submissions today.

All right, here we go.

Okay. We had a pretty dramatic situation at a family wedding that might make for an interesting story. My youngest brother is very narcissistic and controlling. He always thinks he’s the center of attention at every family gathering. He makes everyone miserable and demands that we constantly consider how things are impacting him.

When my oldest niece got married, she did not include either my daughter or her other cousin, my brother’s daughter, as attendance. Both girls were pretty disappointed. Later, when his youngest daughter was chosen as a flower girl, my brother and his wife insisted they couldn’t possibly pay for a dress or anything related to it.

My parents ended up footing the bill for her entire outfit. Okay. I’m trying to get like the family tree in my head. So her, her youngest brother’s narcissistic, her oldest niece got married. Did not include her daughter or her brother’s daughter. Then his youngest daughter was chosen as a flower girl. Got it.

It’s hard when just one kid is invited to a wedding. That’s what’s kind of weird. Um. That’s, and it’s hard for kids to understand like, oh, we want you as a flower girl. You’re invited, but no one else’s. It happens though, fortunately. Okay, fast forward to my daughter’s wedding three years later. She felt terrible for her cousin who had been left out before, so she made her one of the bridesmaids.

Once again, my brother complained that he couldn’t pay for anything, so my husband and I covered the cost of her bridesmaid dress a tie for him. Outfits for both his wife and other daughter since they were guest book at attendants. Wow. You paid for the whole wedding to get dressed for your wedding. Okay.

The whole family, I feel like I said, the whole wedding, whole family, they took it full advantage of the food, enjoyed the entertainment, but didn’t lift a finger to help with set up our cleanup. Yeah. A couple years later, his oldest daughter, the one who had been a bridesmaid, was now getting married. Okay.

Okay. I’m getting this now. Okay? Mm-hmm. A couple of years later, his oldest daughter, the one who was a bridesmaid, was now getting married. There was a lot of talk about what kind of wedding they were planning. Keep in mind. This brother has never hosted us, never paid for a meal, and always brings the cheapest things possible to family gatherings.

But now he was going to host a full buffet dinner and margarita bar for this wedding, and naturally we were all excited. The invitations went out and only my parents were invited. None of the other immediate family received an invitation, including my daughter who had been a bridesmaid for her cousin.

Wait, so that’s weird. So he didn’t invite his own siblings to the, to the wedding, and she didn’t invite her cousins to the wedding. Okay. I asked when we could. Expect our invitations and was told we had to make selections because there were just too many friends we wanted to invite. There’s not room for you guys at the church, so you’re not a priority.

I added that. This of course, was after I had been invited repeatedly to multiple wedding showers. Multiple. How many wedding showers are there? Hosted by different family members and reminded about the importance of being generous with my gift giving. Okay. There’s a lot to unpack there. First of all, if you are getting invited to a shower, you should also be getting an invite to the wedding.

I personally think it’s very rude to invite someone to the shower that you do not plan inviting to the wedding. A couple of exceptions would be. If, um, let’s say it’s a really, really small wedding, like destination or you’re, you eloped, or, um, a micro wedding. So pretty much no one’s getting invited. Then you do like a work shower, like your work team, you know, throws, throws a surprise then sure, that’s fine.

But other than that, for the most part, if you are having a shower, everyone should be invited. I. If you’re not inviting everybody, don’t have a shower. That simple. Um, second part of that is who is this family member that’s reminding you about the importance of generous gift giving? That is wild. That is wild.

Needless to say, we were very hurt. The one time my brother was going to pay for dinner, we weren’t even invited, but oh well, we decided to make other plans for that weekend. When the wedding weekend arrived, it became clear that most of her so-called work friends weren’t even going to show up on her side of the church.

There were only about six family members in attendance. The night before the wedding, my brother called me demanding to know why I wasn’t coming. What as though he hadn’t told me I wasn’t invited, I calmly explained that we knew we weren’t invited and had made other plans. He became irate, accusing me of being mean to his daughter, saying I didn’t care that she wouldn’t have enough people on our side and insisting it would look bad that her own family wasn’t there.

So this is someone that wants you there. When they need you and when they don’t, they don’t want to even think of you or see you. And because he realized that friends weren’t coming, friends that he thought he could count on weren’t coming, they’re like, oh look, that’s when we rely on family, our generous gift givers.

That is wild. She says, we still didn’t go. And sure enough, her side of the church was two thirds empty. That’s when people lean more into the looks of it all again. Again, you know, they’re like, oh, we have to say no to family ’cause they have to forgive us. Right? That’s the thing you hear too, is like, blood is thicker than water.

That all those phrases, they’re like, oh, the family has to forgive us, so we’re gonna put them on the bottom of the totem pole. But it’s very clear here that they probably should have just invited family, but. That is wild. Family dynamics are crazy around these kind of events. So true colors came out and now you know not to bend over backwards for someone like that or help out someone like that because it sounds like he was just trying to use you.

All right guys. Well, that is all I have for this week. That is a pretty wild couple of stories there. Hope you guys enjoyed the Bridezilla story. I know many of you guys have asked for one. as always, you can submit. Stories to me, big or small, I get full on novel sent to me. I get tiny little,

Stories about things that happen, and then people also send me questions about advice. So if you guys ever have any of those, you can DM me on social media. You can submit it at the link, in the show notes as well. All right, guys, well, thank you so much for joining me. don’t forget that my brand new book, I don’t know how long I can call it brand new for, but I’m excited.

 here comes the drama of Ferris and Stone Story is out now. We also have the audio book out now, which I’m so excited about. I know I’m not the voice actor, but she is amazing. Her name’s Shiloh James, and she just did a, such a great job. and don’t forget to tag me on social media at Party Planning by Christa for a chance to be featured on my page.

I love seeing your guys’ dms, reposts and videos, all about the book. It’s been so much fun to read. and of course, leave a review. It just helps more people see it, and I love seeing them. all right guys. Thanks for hanging out with me and I’ll see you next time. Bye now.


Queer Fashion, Wedding Etiquette and a SIL Showdown with Kati Kons

My new book Here Comes the Drama: A Ferris and Sloan Story is live!

Get the book!

What happens when a bride’s sister demands the wedding photos be moved — because she’s pregnant? This episode dives into a real-life story filled with family tension, wedding day stress, and boundary crossing. Christa and Kati unpack the drama behind the scenes: from feelings of entitlement to unspoken rivalries and the pressure of making a wedding day perfect for everyone.

If you’ve ever wondered how far you should bend for family or what’s really acceptable at weddings, this episode is for you. Plus, they share honest reflections on friendship, jealousy, and the tricky art of RSVP etiquette.

Join me on Patreon and get bonus content every month! 

Episode Chapter Markers

00:00 Introduction

01:18 Bridesmaid Experiences and Challenges

02:46 Bridesmaid Dress Shopping Stories

05:23 Financial Expectations for Bridesmaids

08:34 Non-Traditional Wedding Choices

10:48 Fashion and Color Theory

14:01 Growing Up in Chicago Suburbs

15:14 Privacy and Online Safety

16:37 Meet Kati: The Queer Fashion Stylist

19:48 Non-Traditional Wedding Attire

28:31 Kati’s Wedding Planning

34:25 Rapid Fire Questions

38:36 Diving into Wedding Stories

39:48 Rant on Formal Attire Norms

40:55 Queer Fashion at Weddings

44:13 Navigating Wedding Dress Codes

51:56 Wedding Story: Sibling Rivalry

55:31 Reacting to Wedding Drama

58:32 The Importance of Communication

01:04:48 Reflecting on Wedding Etiquette

Must-Hear Insights and Key Moments

  • The Photo Location Drama — Should a bride accommodate a pregnant sister’s request to move photo shoots on the wedding day?
  • Family Tension and Silent Rivalry — Exploring possible jealousy and competition between siblings at weddings.
  • When Love Isn’t Transactional — Discussing the expectation of reciprocity in wedding roles and attendance.
  • The Importance of RSVP Etiquette — How a simple “yes” or “no” can save the bride and groom headaches.
  • Photographer vs. Planner Roles — Why having a dedicated wedding planner is crucial to avoid chaos.
  • Pregnancy and Wedding Participation — Respecting health and energy limits without guilt-tripping.
  • Friendship Boundaries Post-Wedding — Navigating hurt feelings when friends can’t attend your big day.
  • Legal Marriage vs. Long-Term Partnerships — When wedding guest lists exclude “non-married” partners, and why that’s problematic.

Words of Wisdom: Standout Quotes from This Episode

  • “Love is not transactional. If it feels that way, then maybe you shouldn’t go.” – Christa Innis
  • “It’s wild to ask a bride to change the logistics of her entire wedding day for someone else.”  – Kati Kons
  • “Sometimes people feel like they’re owed something just for showing up.” – Kati Kons
  • “Weddings aren’t about competition — they’re about celebration.”  – Kati Kons
  • “Marriage doesn’t change your life overnight; it’s more like a party you throw for yourself.”  – Kati Kons
  • “The wedding day is about the couple, not anyone else’s agenda.” – Christa Innis
  • “RSVPs are important — they’re not just polite, they’re necessary.” – Christa Innis

About Kati:

Kati Kons is a queer wedding fashion stylist based in Washington, D.C. They specialize in helping queer individuals find affirming and non-traditional attire for weddings and other formal events. Kati works with nearlyweds, guests, and vendors, guiding them through the process of finding attire that reflects their personal style and identity. They are known for their inclusive and affirming approach to wedding fashion, particularly for those who may not find themselves represented in traditional wedding attire.

Follow Kati Kons:

Join the Drama with Christa Innis:

Got Wedding Drama? We Want to Hear It!

Your stories make Here Comes the Drama what it is! Share your unforgettable wedding tales, hilarious mishaps, or unbelievable moments with us. Whether it’s a wild confession or a story worth a skit, we can’t wait to hear it.

Submit your story today: Story Submission Form

Follow us on social media for updates and sneak peeks at upcoming episodes. Your stories inspire the drama, the laughs, and the lessons we love to share!

Team Dklutr Production

Blog Transcript:

Note: We use AI transcription so there may be some inaccuracies

Christa Innis: Okay, so we were just talking like while before recording and so we’re like, you know, let’s just start. And of course here I am the planner. I have to start like introducing it even though we said like, let’s just start talking. Um, anyways, we were talking about bridesmaids being a bridesmaid because I said last week my person had a hot take that said, if you like your friends, don’t ask them to be a bridesmaid.

And I’ve been a bridesmaid like nine times. You said you’ve been one once and that was enough for you.

Kati Kons: Yeah, that was totally enough. Like I’m done. Yeah. Well, and it was for my sister. It was not even like a friend. So funny.

Christa Innis: All your friends listening are like, okay.

Bridesmaids, Budgets & Boundaries: Rethinking the Wedding Party

Kati Kons: I also got married two weeks ago and didn’t have a wedding party.

So,

Christa Innis: see, and I, it’s funny because like the older I get now, I’m like, there are certain things that like, I’m like, I would do so differently. Mm-hmm. I loved having my wedding party, but, but like, I feel like if I were to get married today, I’d be like, you know what? If you wanna be like, wear a certain color, but I’m not gonna have you guys do all that extra stuff.

I don’t know, I kind of just, it does complicate things a little bit.

Kati Kons: And like what, like what complicate, what does it complicate?

Christa Innis: I feel like not my own wedding. ’cause I feel like I, again, like I was one of the last, one of last of my friends to get married. So like, I had been in so many weddings over the years and I saw kind of like drama that happened with bridesmaids stress, with bridesmaid dress shopping.

Oh, I’ve, I got stories about that. Um, just crazy stuff where I was just like, I don’t wanna deal with this. So, for example, like the bridesmaid dress shopping, it was like. You’d go in with a bride that had no clue what she wanted. Right. And so like, everyone ha shares their opinion. Everyone picks their favorite dress.

It’s like bridesmaids the movie. Right? So it’s like everyone’s picking their own dress and like, this fits me the best. This color’s best for me. Too many opinions. As a bride, you need to know if we’re gonna have bridesmaid dresses. No. Kind of the vibe you want. So I was like, we’re going online. You have to set

Kati Kons: some boundaries.

Christa Innis: Yeah. So for me, I was like, we’re going online. I literally sent them a link to Birdie Gray and I was like, pick something in this color. Pick whatever style you like for your body. Do you?

Kati Kons: Yeah, no, that is, that is good. Um, I, um, one of my clients is a bridesmaid in someone else’s wedding and didn’t know what to wear and came to me asking me to style them and was like, oh, uh, the bride doesn’t have any parameters whatsoever.

And I said, not even color. And she goes, oh yeah, I guess she gave us green and blue. I said green or blue. Not even like, not even like a shade, either one. There was, there was absolutely no parameter and no dress type. It doesn’t have to be a dress even. It can be pants, it can be anything. Um, which is great.

I like, I love flexibility, but at the same time, it’s like, you know, she has an idea of what she wants to wear and she has an idea of what standing out means. But I feel like. Everyone’s interpretation of like standing out and like being interesting at the same time, which is what bridesmaids want to do is be interesting, but not stand out too much.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm. Is like

Kati Kons: different in everyone else’s heads. And I feel like that’s really challenging balance to, like, it’s a balancing act and it’s really hard to strike that balance when you don’t communicate that with the bride.

Christa Innis: Yeah. And the

Kati Kons: bride doesn’t communicate exactly what she wants. So I’m like trying really hard to help her with this task, especially when I’m not in communication with the bride myself.

Christa Innis: So, yeah, that’s hard when there’s a middle person. Yeah. I feel like a lot of the stories I hear or see it all comes down to communication too. ’cause it’s like if a bride, you know, maybe is like, maybe there’s a weird tension with one of the bridesmaids or something, and then the one bridesmaid like picks a dress that’s like a loud color or something, but they never really communicate what the expectations were of being a bridesmaid or vice versa.

It’s hard to like. Get on the same page if they don’t communicate, I don’t know. Or if it’s like a husband’s cousin or something, so they’re not close.

Kati Kons: I just also feel like it’s really hard when you’re like a bridesmaid and there’s like some people that are like, oh, I can afford to pay $400 for a dress, and other people can’t.

And it’s like, how do you shove the expectation on people to like pay for some things and not other people? I don’t know. It’s so challenging. So I had another client subsidize her bridesmaids where she was like, oh, I want them in like $600 dresses, so I’m gonna give them $500 each and they’re gonna have to pay the rest of the way, or whatever.

Okay. And I was like, that’s a really good idea. But then she was like. But I want them in $800 shoes. And I was like, girl, oh my gosh, that’s like a crime. You can’t do that. Um, and so we had to have a conversation about expectations. But anyways, um, that was, uh, it was, it was really nice on her end to be like, oh, I wanna subsidize part of the way because she wanted a certain look to like her, she wanted her bridesmaids to look a certain way and like have a certain aesthetic that she knew couldn’t be done with a smaller budget.

And so Right. That was definitely a great way to like ensure that at least it was there in some respect. Right,

Christa Innis: right. And

Kati Kons: I think not a lot of brides prioritize that. And I think they should.

Christa Innis: Well, yeah, and I feel like I’ve heard that a lot. It’s like they have all these expectations, but don’t kinda look at the budget of each individual person.

Mm-hmm. Um, I feel like, I look back at weddings I was in in my early twenties, and I think the first couple, they were pretty good. Like where it was like, okay, we were all just like right outta college. We were all pretty broke, you know? Mm-hmm. Exactly. And then as you kind of get a little bit older, like maybe you’re a little more in your career, but definitely mid twenties when I was in my wedding in weddings, I was still was spending way outta my budget because it was like bachelorette party, you’re, you’re paying for bridal shower, you’re buying gifts for each thing.

It all just adds up. And I was in weddings where brides wanted very specific. Most were, I would say most were laid back, but it was like very specific colors. Mm-hmm. And styles of shoes or something. Luckily not $800, so I couldn’t complain too much. But that’s why when it got time for mine, again, it was like a $99 dress.

I know on the website, I think my maid of honor, her dress was like 40 because they had like a sale. And I was like, buy yours now. Buy yours now. And so I was like, I want everyone to feel comfortable, like, yeah, wear shoes you already have, don’t spend extra money. I

Kati Kons: mean, like, we’re me and my friends, what’s so funny is like I’m, I’m 25, like we’re not, we’re not 22, 25 is like young, but like, I mean, we’re being the first being married out of our, all of the friends, you know, I feel like this responsibility to make everything cheap.

And we didn’t do bachelorette parties. We didn’t do any of, we didn’t do wedding parties. We didn’t make anyone pay for things. The only thing is we wanted people to be here. Yep. And, and, and, yeah. And we, they were here, you know? Yep. And that was awesome for us. We didn’t do a registry even, we didn’t ask people, we didn’t do bridal showers.

We didn’t do any of that. Um, which we didn’t. We’re non-traditional people, so that didn’t feel like we needed to do that at all. Um, but like, I don’t know, paying for things seems like such a big thing right now because of the economy, you know? But like, if I were, if I were like, I don’t know, I’m, I’m, I don’t feel like I’m millennial, but like if I were a millennial and I was like getting married in the time when all the millennials were getting married, like if I were my sister and like, I don’t know, everyone was doing those things.

And like I had the choice between like a $4,000 wedding dress and a $6,000 wedding dress and that $2,000 delta. Or I could take the $2,000 and subsidize my bridesmaid’s wedding or their dresses Yeah. To like get them to wear something much cooler. I would do that. I. Yeah. Yeah. But I feel like people don’t do that and they should.

As a fashion stylist, I feel like if you’re gonna dictate what your wedding party is wearing, it better be something much higher fashion, you know? Mm-hmm. 

Styling Weddings with Color Theory & Confidence

I had to wear, when I was a bridesmaid, a very boring dress. It was like just a plain sage green. How long

Christa Innis: ago? A plain sage green, you said?

Kati Kons: Yeah.

Christa Innis: How long ago was the

Kati Kons: wedding?

Uh, it was April, 2020. Uh, f*ck. 2022.

Christa Innis: Okay. So like three years ago. So I was thinking like when my, the first wedding I was in, which was, oh my God, I feel so old saying this. 14 years ago, like 13 years ago, I was a junior in college. Anyways, it was that everyone had the same bridesmaid dress style. Yeah. We all

Kati Kons: had the same one too, and that was three years ago.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I can you imagine? Yeah.

Kati Kons: Sorry.

Christa Innis: I love the individual going on. I love the individuality now. I love, I’ve been in a lot of weddings where we all wore the same dress and then it started moving to like wear the same color but different styles. Mm-hmm. Mine was like, pretty much wear the same color or same color, but there was like three color options in the same family.

It was like mauves, whatever. Yeah,

Kati Kons: yeah, yeah. That’s cool. But,

Christa Innis: but yeah, I was, but I see, the thing is, if I had a stylist, I feel like I would be one I love now where they have like different colors, but it just goes together. Mm-hmm. I’m not like, I don’t have the eye for that, so I’m just like, you know what, pick one off.

There’s,

Kati Kons: there’s a very easy way to do that. It’s so easy and all you have to do is play with the color wheel a little bit. Because like, you don’t wanna do something. Well, first of all, you have to do a bunch of different colors. Right. But you can’t use all of the colors. You have to take like two of them out.

So if you’re gonna do like a rainbow, like take out your reds and like any your reds and anything close to a red, uh, pinks are cute oranges if only if they’re bright. Right. Don’t do like a burnt orange. Right. Okay. Like what I’m wearing right now. Like, take out your red. Yeah, but it’s like, it’s like something super warm, like a red.

Don’t do that. Right. Okay.

Christa Innis: Okay. Okay.

Kati Kons: And then you have to maintain, it’s like kind of, it’s kind of like using color theory, but like I’ve never been trained in color theory. The only, so my experience using this color theory is what I’ve been taught as an 8-year-old in art class. So, love it. Literally just like keep that in the back of your mind as I tell you this.

Is that the way that I do it? Is like complimentary colors are like opposite colors on the color wheel.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Kati Kons: Um, and you would use like bright, you know how you would use bright colors with darker colors, right. And opposite colors.

Christa Innis: Yeah.

Kati Kons: Um, you would just basically play with that and take away one color of all of ’em, like red I said, or whichever color you don’t like, red, blue, whatever.

Okay. Um, and then play with the rest of the, and make one of ’em, not neon, but really bright, um, as your accent color.

Christa Innis: Okay.

Kati Kons: I feel like we should, I feel like I should show you this as in real time, but um, here

Christa Innis: I’ll just show you my purse. You are like, let me just like whip something together.

Kati Kons: Yeah. Oh, this is a, is this a good example?

This doesn’t have any blues on it.

Christa Innis: Okay. So yeah, because it all goes together because you’re not take, you’re taking out one of the main Yeah. I wanna start like, noticing this and like looking around because so many fashion is all

Kati Kons: just observing if you Yeah, I was just having this conversation with someone today.

Oops. Fashion is just observing. Um, but yeah, color theory is interesting. It’s just like, um, like, you know how, you know, the, when I was young, they always taught in color class and art class. I used to talk about all the time, uh, the sports teams, uh, football team jerseys. Mm. Like if you think about marketing in, uh, sports, uh, like the Seattle Seahawks, the like neon green and the navy blue.

Mm-hmm. That’s like a very intentional marketing thing. Um. What else? I always thought that like the Vikings, the, the gold and the purple a very bad choice. And the Packers is now, it’s iconic, being gold and green, but I feel like is also a bad choice.

Christa Innis: That was my high school colors. Oh God. We were the Gators.

Where are you from? Uh, Chicago suburb.

Bridesmaid Drama & Digital Boundaries

Kati Kons: Oh really? Me too. Oh yeah. Well, let’s talk about that. I now I’m scared. Where, where are we from? Are we from the same suburb? Are are we neighbors? No. My God. Wait, who’s the Gators? Do I know? The Gators? Let me think. Me and also my partner. I might

Christa Innis: even pull this out ’cause I’m like so secretive about where

Kati Kons: I live.

I don’t, I don’t know if I know the Gators. So let me think about this for a minute.

Christa Innis: There’s the Florida Gators, you know,

Kati Kons: Stevenson?

Christa Innis: Stevenson.

Kati Kons: Oh, nevermind. I feel like Stevenson was green. That’s why I, oh, Stevenson

Christa Innis: High School. I’ve heard of that.

Kati Kons: Yeah.

Christa Innis: Who did I just meet? I just met someone that said they went to Stevenson.

Someone messaged me on. TikTok. So if you’re listening, Hey, uh, she messaged me, I think she said she went to Stevenson and she was like, you talk about being from Chicago on your podcast. And I was like, oh, I didn’t realize I did that, but yeah.

Kati Kons: What suburb is it?

Christa Innis: Huh?

Kati Kons: What suburb is it?

Christa Innis: I’ll tell you when we don’t record, or I guess I can take it out.

Oh, that’s

Kati Kons: fine. That’s so fair. I mean, I guess like, I don’t think, I’m never gonna live there again. I am in Washington DC right now, and yeah, I feel like, I don’t know. I got docs on the internet a couple months ago in which people found my old Instagram account and I deleted it by now. But like they found my old Instagram account, they found a bunch of old sh*t on the internet from me and like put my address on the internet.

Christa Innis: Oh my God. That’s like my nightmare.

Kati Kons: It was like kind of bad. Um, long story short, don’t, um. Do a lot of things that I did, which is actually, actually don’t, don’t be a right wing troll on the internet. How about that? Um, anyways, yeah. Um, I literally was about to do something anyways, don’t don docx people on the internet.

Thank you. Yes. And then, uh, so I feel like that’s fine. But I grew up in a suburb of Chicago, not yours though, because I think I would’ve known by now. Because I don’t know a gator in that area. But anyways,

Christa Innis: people are gonna be like searching like gators. I don’t live there now, so it doesn’t really matter.

But I’m like, I’m like very private online, and I’m like, if people seek No, you should be, no, I

Kati Kons: think

Christa Innis: that’s a really

Kati Kons: good thing

Christa Innis: because there’s just like, like what you just said. Um, I had a girl on here that said,

Kati Kons: I was like, the f*ck. But it, uh, it’s a good thing because I, uh, and you should know this for the future, if you ever get docs, you can request to scrub things from Google.

And so I did and it was gone. Oh,

Christa Innis: well, there you go. All right. Well that’s a, that’s a good lesson. Yeah.

Kati Kons: Yeah. And I’m so sorry for derailing the conversation like four times, but, um,

ADHD, Creativity & Queer Wedding Fashion

Christa Innis: oh my gosh. You’re, uh, let’s, let’s go back, well, since we kind of just jumped in, can we just like introduce who you are and what you do?

I know we kind of went backwards, but I, um, I feel like it would give more context to why we’re talking about styling so much. So tell us about your brand, who you are and all that good stuff.

Kati Kons: I am Kati. I am a queer fashion stylist, and I mostly do weddings and non-traditional weddings, um, because there’s no process for finding non-traditional wedding attire, um, or wedding attire that isn’t like a suit or a dress.

Um, to clarify. Um, and what were your other questions? I have a DHD. I just already lost it. Oh, good. I

Christa Innis: think that’s why we’re vibing so well. I haven’t, okay. I haven’t been officially diagnosed, but my whole life I’m like, I’m pretty sure I have a DD or a DHD. No. Then you probably do. It’s, I get like, either very focused or I’m just like, woo, where are we?

What are

Kati Kons: we talking about? Yes. That’s a DHD. It’s, it’s not the lack of focus, it’s the reregulation of it. Right? Yeah. If

Christa Innis: I don’t plan out my day. I’m all over it. That’s why I’m a planner. That’s why I love planning sh*t, because if I don’t, I am.

Kati Kons: That’s really good. I, I don’t, I really should plan out my day because when I do it, I’m so on, you know?

Yes, yes. That’s the thing.

Christa Innis: I think people don’t think we have the capabil, I say we now. I’m like, now I’m a part of the a d We don’t, people don’t get us. No. Um, yeah.

Kati Kons: It’s okay.

Christa Innis: No, it’s just like, I think like the

Kati Kons: diagnosis is just a label.

Christa Innis: Okay. It’s just a label. Yeah. No, I just feel like once I was really able to like get organized, that’s when I was like, okay, that’s my magic power.

I can get organized and I can get stuff done if I don’t, you able

Kati Kons: to like control your brain is just an unmatched thing. Yeah. It’s crazy. Once you be able to, once you’re able to like literally control, wield your power, it’s. I just feel like it’s your brain is actually able to do more than other people.

I can’t explain it, but yes, sometimes my

Christa Innis: husband’s like, like, I’ll like bring up something else I’m working on. And he’s like, aren’t you already doing this? And I’m like, I don’t even know what just happened. Like, I just get outta the, I full disclosure. Right. Right now we have a, we have a two bedroom, so I work from, I’m in my closet.

Fun fact. So we gotta make spaces work. Um, and so I will come out of our room and I’m like, I just, I just got so much done and like I’ll like show him. He’s like, how did you do that? And I’m like, I focus mode, but if I don’t have a plan and I waste like a couple hours, I’m like so hard on myself. I’m like, what?

Kati Kons: Yeah. I feel like it’s like, I don’t know if, if I’m on, I can like do more than most people and if I am just like, uh, so not focused. I like waste so much time. It’s so terrible. But yeah, I feel something. Um, what was your,

Reshaping Non-Traditional Wedding Fashion

 what I, did I have to introduce?

Christa Innis: Yeah. So. So talk about portrait of a bride on Fire. How you got started, how you got into it.

Yeah, how I got started.

Kati Kons: Okay. Um, well, I got started because I got engaged and I identify as like somewhere in between, like female and non-binary. It just kind of depends on the moment. Um, and not like I wake up one day and I’m non-binary and I wake up one day and I’m a woman. It’s just like I don’t care to do the soul searching is the moment, I guess.

Uh, like, yeah. And so, but I, but in my day to day, I love wearing dresses and skirts, so when I got engaged I was like really, really into like wedding dresses and I got really into like the whole wedding fashion scene. But what became super apparent to me was like, there is. Nothing outside of wedding dresses for anyone outside of white wedding dresses for anyone that was non-traditional at all.

Right?

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Kati Kons: And there were just no options. None. And the thing is, all the wedding dresses were the same too. There were like 10 different styles and there were like 10 variations of those 10 styles and that’s it. And there were not even non-traditional white wedding dresses. It was so crazy to me.

’cause like to find the non-traditional white wedding dresses, they were like, I don’t know, like on Etsy that you had to order mm-hmm. From across the earth, like you couldn’t try them on. It’s just so weird. It was such a weird thing to me. Anyways, I got really frustrated because there were no like even pants or jumpsuits at the wedding shops in town, and.

Suit shops were obviously only for people who were like strictly traditional men. And there was like nothing in between and there was no color anywhere mostly. And it was just like nothing. And so I started like kind of, I wanted to get into like what I loved the wedding dress situation. And I just started learning about wedding dresses a lot.

But I wanted, I started posting on TikTok because I started to get into like content creation at the time. Um, and so I kind of started, um, wanting to help people find their non-traditional wedding attire. And so that’s kind of how I got into it, is like I got into it myself and then I got into wanting to help people ’cause I realized that they didn’t have it.

Um, you know, they didn’t have a means of finding it. And also there wasn’t a lot of it, so that made it. Twice as hard. Um mm-hmm. And so that’s how I started is I started in like wedding fashion and now I do like wedding fashion styling. So I help you throughout the journey of finding your wedding attire and also styling the accessories and all the little details of your wedding outfit.

And then I also do personal styling on the side, and I do some like. Like red carpet styling, event styling as well, just like to a much smaller scale than um, the other two things. Mm-hmm. Um, and yeah, I do kind of a lot of things because I just kind of take on things that I wanna do and I don’t, and I only, I don’t really say no unless I really don’t wanna do it.

So,

Christa Innis: yeah. When you say non-traditional wedding dress, and you’re talking about like jumpsuits, I, I remember. When I was engaged and I was like starting to plan into my wedding, I, um, I’m a, my friends all know me. Like when I was a bridesmaid, I was like, the jump, I love a good jumpsuit. Like, so for like three weddings I was in, I wore a jumpsuit.

Good. Because they like looked like kind of dresses. So it like, looked like uniform, especially like a palazzo pant or something where the wide leg was like flowy. Yes. I loved it. It was so, and then you’re on the dance floor and you’re like, I can do my thing. Like, you know, you can do the splits, you can do whatever you want.

Yeah. If I wanted to learn how to do the splits that night, I would be okay. But yeah, it was just like, so I loved, but I remember seeing a lot of the bridal jumpsuits starting to come out more and more. I wore one to my rehearsal dinner, but not the actual wedding.

Queer Wedding Fashion Beyond the Binary

 So when you say untraditional wedding dress, what kind of, like, are you looking for personally or like, do you look for like for brides or couples getting married, um, that, that come to you for that kind of unique look?

Kati Kons: Yeah. So I feel like, um. I, the reason I say I’m like a queer wedding fashion stylist is because there’s like no one that tailors their services to the queer community. And I don’t want to be exclusive of other non-traditional people that want these kinds of services, but I know that there’s no one else that, that actually tailors their services to the queer community.

And I think that’s important, especially in pride month and like this time, day and age, when like queer people are like just being targeted left and right, right? Mm-hmm. So, but uh, to take a step back, I think like the attire that is non-traditional is more like the drama of a dress, but like the comfort of pants, right?

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Kati Kons: Mm-hmm. And like. Like you just described, a jumpsuit is like gonna give you the mobility and the freedom to do what you want when, but you get the, like, the prettiness of make a dress, you know, Uhhuh. Um, and I think a lot of people when they come to me is they’re like, I want the drama moment of a dress, meaning I want a train, meaning I want the details and I want the, like, I want the like princess or prince or something where it’s like, I want the grandeur of like that.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm. But

Kati Kons: I don’t, but I don’t want to be in that level of femininity of a dress.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Because

Kati Kons: they feel secure in pants.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I love, and I think

Kati Kons: a lot more people do feel secure in pants than dresses.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Kati Kons: Yeah. But like suits are just like out of the f*cking question for a lot of people, so, you know.

Yes, yes. Especially ’cause like the there the options for like suits or like. Traditional man suits, which are like, you know, f*cking boxy as sh*t. And then there’s like women’s suits, which are like business suits that you wear to like corporate events. You know, there’s not like a, what does it feel like?

And then there’s like the other accessible suits you find out like fast fashion places, you know, there’s no like good accessible suits for women that are like quality sh*t that you can just find. Yeah. I don’t know, like where would you even look for that? I’m like, off the top of my head, I don’t even have an answer.

And I’m a fashion stylist that makes me so angry.

Redefining the Wedding Experience

Christa Innis: Do you ever like want to like work with a designer and like design like your own? I don’t know. I feel like you have such an eye for that stuff where you could like design. I do that for some

Kati Kons: clients.

Christa Innis: Yeah.

Kati Kons: Some clients look for custom options. And I do work with designers to design custom attire when they have the budget for it.

It’s just way more expensive. Of course. So I

Christa Innis: bet. Yeah. Yeah.

Kati Kons: I love, I love that because it’s like really, really fun to go through the whole beginning to end process of being like, let’s formulate your vision. And like what’s so fun is being like being able to see where someone has a vision and being able to be like, okay, but we can make it so much cooler than that.

Like, yeah, so much cooler than what you have seen on these random Pinterest boards that are just like probably so limited. Mm-hmm. And like, let me show you some even cooler stuff. You know what I mean? Like Yeah, like let’s show you some stuff and then like, let’s draw and like, let’s do all this stuff with the designer.

Like it is so cool to watch everything develop and I’m not a designer so I can’t, like, I can’t sketch and I can’t, you know, make garments. But like seeing that chick from beginning to end is the coolest thing in the world. And then me being able to like. Pick out their shoes and like walk them through their hair and makeup and accessory.

Oh my God. It’s such a fun, it’s such a fun moment. Like putting together. Yeah. Okay. So

Christa Innis: you mentioned you just got married two weeks ago. Mm-hmm. Congratulations. So Thank you. When it came to planning or putting together your own wedding mm-hmm. Like what were things that were the bat you were like, this is what we want, and what were some things that you were like, we no, we’re definitely not doing that.

And you said no wedding party. Yeah, yeah. Sorry.

Kati Kons: Um, so we, uh, as young queer people, we were non-traditional in nature and we said, no florals. We did not spend any money on florals. And my, we did spend a lot of money on a photographer. Um, and my photographer is Lindsay Michelle in Boston, and she is amazing. Um, but I knew her way before because of what I do.

I knew her way before our wedding and she knows me well. So she was like, I need you to get a personal floral because I need you to have something in your hand. I need you to have a hand accessory. You’re gonna thank me later because she knows me. She knows I’m gonna want the whole look, right. Mm-hmm. I’m gonna want my whole look to be done.

And I was like, you’re right. I’m gonna want not a flo, a personal floral, I’m gonna want a purse. And so I got a purse with flowers in it. Oh, cute. Yeah. But we didn’t get any florals. And the other things that we did differently is. We did it in our apartment.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Kati Kons: We walked in together, no bridal party, uh, ceremony.

And then

we didn’t do like a, a dance situation. We just went to dinner afterwards. I love that. Yeah. It was pretty like chill and laid back. It was really nice.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Yeah. I love when you go in like on the same page, knowing what you want. ’cause I think so many times couples get caught up with like, unsolicited advice coming in of like, you need this, do this.

And then you end up having this day where you don’t even enjoy it ’cause you’re like, I’m doing this for everybody else. Not yes. For us.

Kati Kons: And I think that’s tremendously challenging, but also I am, I said this to my partner, I don’t know if you can, uh uh. Like, if you relate to this, but I’m so lucky that I didn’t have a childhood dream of a wedding because I didn’t have to deal with any expectation around what I thought my wedding would look like.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Kati Kons: Uh, and I just feel as if a lot of people, especially a lot of young women, grow up with a dream of what their wedding would look like and like when you get to be in adulthood in terms of like finances and in terms of just like where you are in life and execution and, and so many different things.

Mm-hmm. It just like can turn out so different and I just, like, sometimes it’s a good thing and sometimes it’s not. And like, I’m just so glad I didn’t have any expectation because I had the best f*cking day in the world, you know? I love that. Yeah. And so

Christa Innis: I just,

Kati Kons: I’m so glad I

Christa Innis: had no expectations. That’s such like good advice too.

And I’m so glad you said that because a lot of people probably don’t know this. ’cause I don’t even know if I’ve said it before, but, and then I find it surprising ’cause I have a wedding podcast or mostly like wedding content. But I was never the girl that was like, I can’t wait to get, be a bride. I can’t wait to have my wedding.

I never visualized it either. And I don’t think it was until like, being in a bunch of weddings and then like, I met my husband and like, you know, at that time we, like, we were engaged for like a hundred years. So like, we were like, kind of like knew what things we wanted and didn’t want. And so I feel like, yeah, it was just like a way different, I didn’t want the big ballroom.

Mm-hmm. I didn’t want the big Cinderella dress. I, that just wasn’t my thing. Yeah. And my parents were also ones to, they never like pressured and were like, oh, when you get married, when you do this, like, they were just never like that. And I, I’m glad because I wasn’t like, oh, I’m gonna be a princess on my day.

And I was just, I just. Never had that vision. And I remember even my makeup artist being like, you’re like the most relaxed bride I’ve ever done makeup for. And I was like, well, I figure at this point everything’s done. If something goes wrong, like we’re all here, like, yeah, have a good time. Like what am I to worry about?

Kati Kons: We always wanted, we always wanted was like we, we didn’t want the like, big event situation, but we did want is like a smaller micro wedding, like around 50 people or less. Um, but we wanted to have everyone there for like a weekend, like wherever we did, just so like we had people there for longer. So it was like a longer experience, but like a smaller amount of people so that I wasn’t like super.

Overwhelming, but that we had more time to spend so that we could like, you know, um, have a lot more experience, which I feel like is now becoming more of a thing with like, welcome parties and brunch afterwards and like, which I totally get because I think it’s so fun to spend a whole weekend with your people.

Especially, it’s like the one time everyone’s in town for you, it’s like mm-hmm. You might as well make it worth it, you know?

Christa Innis: Yeah.

Kati Kons: People are

Christa Innis: flying in or driving in, like have like different things set up or like plan to like hang out. I think

Kati Kons: it’s so worth it. I, and I think like a week long might be a little extra, but I’m like, at least making it a weekend I feel like would be so fun.

Christa Innis: Yeah,

Kati Kons: it works fun, at least for us, so

Christa Innis: yeah. I love that. Okay, let’s get into, because I know we’re kind of, we’re running on our A DH ADHD time in a longer time. No. Um, okay. Let’s get, if you don’t, I hope you

Kati Kons: don’t have a, I hope you don’t have a 6:00 PM Um, no, I don’t. Okay, good. Okay. I’m good. We’re, we’re good?

We’re good. Let’s go.

Christa Innis: Just have my family where they’re fine. Okay. Rapid fire. This is just pick one or the other, whether it’s your own, I don’t know, as a, I don’t know why I’m like introducing it. Just rapid fire. Let’s just pick one. Okay. Okay. Classic ballroom wedding or outdoor garden party.

Kati Kons: Outdoor garden party.

Christa Innis: Minimalist. Chic or bold and colorful.

Kati Kons: Bold and colorful.

Christa Innis: Veil or no veil?

Kati Kons: No veil.

Christa Innis: Custom gown or off the rack.

Kati Kons: Oh sh*t.

Is this for me or a client? Either, I mean,

Christa Innis: just in general, I guess, custom gown, uh, one photographer or photography and video package, one photographer first look photos or traditional aisle reveal. First look match your wedding style or your to your home aesthetic. Yes or no? Yes. Bridesmaids. Same dress.

Different dress or totally mismatched. Mismatched statement. Shoes or statement earrings.

Kati Kons: Statement, shoes.

Christa Innis: And then what’s one style trend that you wish couples would leave behind? Like, or just, or just any trend. You’re just like sick of seeing. Oh. Um, not to put you

Kati Kons: on the spot,

I know this one’s supposed to be rapid fire and I feel like I’m blanking now. It’s okay if you don’t have one too. I feel like I don’t, which is pretty wild, but I definitely do. I’m just blanking.

Christa Innis: No, no, it’s all good. If I think

Kati Kons: about it later, we’ll bring it up.

Christa Innis: Yeah, yeah. Okay. Awesome. Um, I think, well, I feel like we talked a lot of that about the wedding hot takes as we were kind of just talking.

What does Steven earrings at weddings?

Kati Kons: I’m still, I think that’s why I am blocked is because I am literally no one wears statement earrings at weddings.

Christa Innis: Okay. This might be a dumb question. What is a statement earring? Just like a big, bold earring. Mm-hmm. Like as, like,

Kati Kons: I’m just thinking of like a statement necklace where they’re just like, chunky.

What’s a statement? Yeah. But like statement earing is like, is like Yeah. Really wild and big and people don’t really do that at weddings. Yeah. I,

I don’t know. It’s true. People don’t really wear necklaces at all at weddings anymore, though.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I wear like the mo I wore like the most simple, I I wore my mom’s. They do.

Kati Kons: It’s like a, it’s a very simple thing. Yeah.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Because it’s like you’re wearing this like beautiful gown or whatever you’re wearing that you want most, most of the attention on.

Kati Kons: What’s the style thing that people should be, should leave it home. I feel like the answer is so many things, honestly.

Christa Innis: You said no veil quickly. Do you think veils are outdated?

Kati Kons: Well, like j in like the theory of it? Yeah, but like, oh yeah. Like, yeah, just like a garter, like in theory. Yeah. You know what I mean?

Like it’s disgusting in theory, but it’s like, I mean, it’s like cute. I mean, like, you should not have, if you, even if you have a garter, you shouldn’t do a garter toss. Like that’s disgusting. You know what I mean? But like a garter’s kind of cutie if you have the right dress.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I just did one for a photo.

I don’t even know if they took a photo of it now. They might have just done it with like everything. Yeah. And veil was one thing. I was like, I’m not doing a veil. I don’t wanna a veil. But then I ended up up finding one for like down the aisle. I did not cover my face or anything. Yeah.

Kati Kons: But I was just like, it’s a very, very religious thing.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Kati Kons: And like, that’s, that’s fine. I just feel like if you’re gonna honor that tradition, honor that tradition. But if you’re like just wearing one to wear one, I just feel like we need to separate, I feel like we need to honor the tradition if we’re gonna wear a veil. I feel like we need to not be so nonchalant about wearing veils,

Christa Innis: in my opinion.

Kati Kons: Okay. Um, but I feel like there, I feel like I do have a very hot take about. Styles for weddings. Leave the white at home maybe. Um, I literally wore white to my wedding. Um, I don’t know.

Christa Innis: You Oh, like, you think like No. What? No. White at weddings.

Kati Kons: I just feel like it’s kind of, I would love to step away from it.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Kati Kons: Um, I don’t hate it. I just would love to step away from it. Do you ever

Christa Innis: consider wearing another color at your wedding?

Kati Kons: Yeah. Yeah. I just didn’t because, um, I didn’t wanna be too different from my partner and she wanted to, so I was like, I’m not gonna like, fight too much about it. Yeah. And I know that she, like, I wanted her to be super comfortable so I wasn’t gonna like, make it a thing, you know?

Right. I get that.

Christa Innis: Yeah. No, I’ve seen gorgeous black wedding dresses, never in person. I’ve just seen them on weddings and I was like, I love the look of that.

Kati Kons: Oh yeah. Well, we were both open to wearing either black or white, but. We found her dress that was in white first, and so we were like, okay, we’ll do that.

Christa Innis: Go along with the theme. I love it. Yeah. All right. Let’s get into this week’s wedding submission. So people send me these stories. I have not read it yet, so I don’t know what’s gonna happen and We’ll, please, I just

Why Dress Codes Need a Makeover

Kati Kons: thought of my thing. Can I tell you everything?

Christa Innis: Oh, yeah, please do.

Kati Kons: This is actually a long more of a long answer.

Um, this is not a rapid fire answer, and that’s probably why I didn’t think of it right away. Um, I have a hot take though in terms of a style thing that, okay. I leave at home. Um, and it’s just that I think formal attire, my definition of formal attire differs from the average person. Mm-hmm. But specifically at weddings.

Christa Innis: Okay.

Kati Kons: Uh, in that, like our wedding, our like dress codes at wedding, be it the guest dress code or just like what we were to, weddings in general needs to stay at home in general. Like we need to, those need to go die, um, because like they need to go to jail, like whatever, because they are so obnoxious and limiting for queer people specifically, or like any type of non-traditional person trying to feel themselves because like, how are you trying, how are you going to express yourself in a way that is outside of the social norm?

If you’re like not fitting into traditional standards of formal attire, if it’s not like a suit or a dress, right? Because if you think about it this way, people who don’t fit into the standard norms of traditional attire, suit or dress, if you’re a celebrity, all you do is wear something super chic, high-end fashion.

Maybe it’s a t-shirt and shorts, but it’s Balenciaga, and you still walk the runway and you still look chic as f*ck, and you’re still slaying. And that’s great because your name is Billie Eilish and it’s branded and it’s really cool, you know? Mm-hmm. And like, that’s awesome. But why do, why can you do that on the red carpet and not at a wedding?

Christa Innis: Hmm. Why

Kati Kons: are our, like, why is the decorum for a red carpet moment so different than the decorum at someone’s wedding? And I understand that the marketing moment is a little bit different than someone else’s wedding, but why is the formality of a red carpet event, which should be the most formal event. So different than the decorum of someone’s wedding, which should be your average Joe’s most formal event in your lifetime.

Right? So why does a celebrity’s red carpet like event have a different definition for formal than our, our average person’s definition Of formal? Because for queer people being something other than suit and dress is not acceptable. In our definitions of formal attire, there is no like, I’m gonna wear something outside of those norms that fits into formal, semi-formal black tie.

There’s nothing that fits into that. Experimenting into, into different things doesn’t fit into those categories because it’s not socially acceptable. Socially acceptable is what fits into those categories. Mm-hmm. And like there’s no way to like experiment with new things with those dress codes. It just doesn’t work.

Yeah. And so I’m like, my whole like goal, my purpose is to like try to change the definition to like align more with like the red carpet definition where like if you’re mo most comfortable in a t-shirt and shorts, like great, let’s f*cking elevate that. So it’s a red carpet t-shirt and shorts, you know what I mean?

Mm-hmm. Like, let’s get you a t-shirt. I know a lot of high-end t-shirt and shorts and it’ll look high-end as well. It’s not like it’s gonna look like Adam Sandler, like it’ll look high-end, you know what I mean? Like, uh. It’s like there are existing really, really nice and really, really cool embellishments on t-shirts and shorts.

So it’s like, we’ll get you there. But like, why isn’t that acceptable for a wedding? It wouldn’t be today, you know?

Christa Innis: Yeah, yeah, yeah. I’ve never, so I’ve never been to a wedding where it’s like very specific, like, wear this. But I’ve seen more and more people do it where they’re like, only wear these three colors, or only wear this style of clothing.

And yeah, that’s, I feel like that’s, it’s a bit much sometimes like as the, like we’re talking to the planner, as the planner in me, sometimes I’m like, okay, here’s the vibe we’re going for. ’cause have you ever gone like invited to something and you’re like. What’s the, like, where are we getting married at?

What’s the style? Mm-hmm. Like, and you’re like, do I wear a formal dress? Do I wear a cocktail style dress? Am I wearing my jumpsuit? You know, that kind of thing. So I like some guidelines, but yeah, you’re, you make a really good point. No, direction is totally helpful.

Kati Kons: Mm-hmm. Like we talked about that with the wedding party.

It’s definitely true for the guests as well because like, I dunno, you don’t wanna, you don’t wanna be like the one that’s sticking out Yeah. At someone else’s wedding. Um, but like, you also, as a queer person, especially going to like a hetero wedding as a queer person, you don’t wanna stick out too much and like, you wanna also be yourself at the same time.

Christa Innis: Hmm. It’s

Kati Kons: like a really hard balance. Um, and like, I don’t know, I just feel like a lot of queer people have a hard time with formal attire and like weddings are just like one of the hardest places to be, I think. Um. Mm-hmm. Yeah, because like a lot of the options for like androgynous attire, I think are too adventurous for like a cape or like a, a scarf around your neck I feel like would be too flamboyant.

Um, because like if I said gender neutral, you, like, most people would think masculine, right? Yeah, that’s true. Um, ’cause like gender neutral in my head means like gender fluid or androgynous or something that’s like a mix of both. Um, but like that would mean it has to be somewhat feminine. Right? And most people would think it, it means like a suit, like masculine, something that’s like at least neutral and masculine.

So it’s acceptable to everyone, you know?

Christa Innis: I never thought about that. You’re right. Yeah. Yeah. Gender neutral. And so it’s like more masculine.

Kati Kons: Yeah. Mm-hmm.

Christa Innis: And

Kati Kons: so it’s like. It’s really challenging to find something that is actually androgynous or like gender neutral or something that’s like acceptable for people to feel comfortable in, because that is oftentimes not the expectation of everyone else.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm. Yeah.

Kati Kons: Yeah. It’s really hard. Um, but the only reason I say that is because I feel like there’s a lot of, like people whose expectations about formal attire are very different from like, um, queer people whose expectations for formal attire are like very different. Yeah. I just feel like we need to all dress ourselves in a way that makes us happy and walk away and that’s it.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm.

Kati Kons: I feel like, like we, somebody said to me once on TikTok, somebody said to me once on TikTok, I posted a video, I. They said what looks like non-traditional formula attire to you for someone’s wedding. And I posted a bunch of pictures that were of the wedding, the designer that designed my wedding attire and I love her.

Her name is Ophelia. She’s great. One of the pictures was of like a sheer silk organ organza hoodie, and it was a mini dress, a hoodie, mini dress. It was gorgeous. And it was like, like again, like silk organ organza, oversized hoodie. Like really cool. And they were like draw or uh, I’m sorry, draw strings.

Draw strings. Like on a hoodie.

Christa Innis: Yeah.

Kati Kons: Are not, have no place in formal at tire. Why is that there? And I was like. Like you’re really telling me something like silk organza has no like place in formal attire. Like you have no idea what you’re talking about. You know what I mean? Right. This person like literally has no idea what they’re talking about, but like we are so twisted in what we think formal attire means and our like understanding of like suit and dress is all rooted in like white supremacy and patriarchy.

It’s so terrible. So it’s like something we really need to shift our understanding into.

Christa Innis: Mm,

Kati Kons: sorry. That was a, that was a rant, but it felt like that needed to be said.

Christa Innis: No, I loved it. I love, I love the hot takes. I love, ’cause I feel like it opens up good discussion for, you know, people listening too to be like, wait, I never thought about it that way.

Or, you know, I think you’re, I think you’re right about, you know, the weddings in general or events in general put a lot of pressure on people to fit a certain mold and, and there’s like expectations of like how to look, how to dress. And, um, and I feel like as a, you know, as a queer stylist, you’re sharing so much more from your perspective and what you see personally, and I think that brings a whole new, uh, whole new take on it.

No, I, I’m, I appreciate, I see.

Kati Kons: I’ll say one more thing about queer weddings versus hetero weddings. You see, you know, when people try to, uh, theme their weddings sometimes mm-hmm. Or themes or, oh, theme Yes. Dress codes

Christa Innis: mm-hmm. Or

Kati Kons: stuff like that. Um, the theme upstage the bride, um, more often you see that at queer weddings.

I don’t know why.

Christa Innis: Mm. That’s interesting. Yeah. I actually saw like a viral post about upstage the bride, and I loved it. And that was the first time I had seen it.

Kati Kons: I like, love that so much.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Do you think it like. I think about that. Yeah. I wonder if it’s like, it runs in because it’s like the traditional, like, you know, like hetero wedding, it’s like the traditional, like bride is the queen star of the

Kati Kons: show.

I don’t know. We talked about our dress code being like Met Gala themed for a long time. Uh, just so that everyone popped the f*ck off. Um, ’cause we wanted something like that. Uh, and then we realized we didn’t want people spending a ton of money, uh, just on the retirement. Yeah. Um, so we did do that. But, um, I don’t know.

I don’t know. I don’t know what it is, but I don’t know what it is about like the traditional culture that like does that, but it’s interesting.

Christa Innis: Yeah, because I’ve even heard people say like, don’t wear, oh, like. Bright red dress to my wedding dress. Yes. Where is this and where does that come from? I don’t know.

And see, I’m someone where I’m like, I don’t care What? I didn’t care what people wore in my wedding. One of my closest friends wore a bright, like a hot pink dress and looked amazing on her. I had five people wear hot pink to my wedding. Yes. It was like, good,

Kati Kons: thank

Christa Innis: you. You look great. Yeah. Someone could have showed up at White.

White in my wedding too, and I would not have cared. I’m not that. My

Kati Kons: sister had like a white cardigan and she was like, I didn’t wanna outshine you. And I said, honey, no one’s outshining me today. I was like, are you kidding? Not worried. Are you kidding? And she was like, she was like, did you really just say that?

And I was like, do you really think you’re outshining me today?

Whose Day Is It Anyway?

Christa Innis: I feel like I’m not, I’m not worried in the slightest. Yeah. Yeah. I just feel like it’s like let people be themselves. I mean. I don’t know. I was not the least of my concerns of what people were wearing to my wedding. Yeah. I didn’t really care.

Okay. Let’s get into this story thing. Yeah. We’ll just react as it as we read it. Um, or I’ll just, we’ll just kind of stop and share our thoughts. Okay. Here we go. My older brother got engaged six months after I did, which annoyed my mother a bit. She would have preferred my wedding to happen first, but it didn’t bother me.

I was close to my brother and happy for him. He’d only been dating his girlfriend for a short time compared to me and my now husband who’d been together for years. My brother said, wait,

Kati Kons: wait, stop.

Christa Innis: Yeah.

Kati Kons: He got engaged six months after she got engaged, or six months after she got married, I’m

Christa Innis: guessing, after she got engaged.

Kati Kons: Okay. So what’s the problem? Because the mom got upset.

Christa Innis: I think it’s like the mom thing of like, yeah. I get so many stories sent to me where parents or siblings get mad if like they’re not engaged or married first.

Kati Kons: That’s weird.

Christa Innis: It’s weird. And it’s like this rivalry or like sister-in-laws if like the younger one gets engaged first or married.

Yeah. There’s like so many stories like that. So like she doesn’t care, but it’s like the mom seems like annoyed by it.

Kati Kons: Okay. Okay.

Christa Innis: Weird. Okay. Sorry. Continue. Yeah. No, you’re good. Um, my brother set his wedding date for exactly one year after mine. I was pregnant at at his wedding due just a few weeks after the big day.

It was very warm day, which isn’t ideal when you’re heavily pregnant. My sister-in-law had booked their wedding in a local church right after a large parish event. The car park parking lot was packed when we arrived. And we are, we were nearly reversed into, oh my gosh, my reading skills. Here we go. Let’s try this again.

The car parking lot was packed when we arrived and we were nearly reversing into, oh my gosh, why is this? Just pretend like that didn’t happen. Okay. The car parking lot was packed when we arrived and we were nearly reversed into, on my side of the car. Not a great start. Then the bridal car broke down, so everything started late, which would obviously stress out even the calmest bride.

Before the wedding, my brother asked if we could make it to family photos, which were scheduled in a location that was out of our way, not because the church and the not between the church and the reception. I asked if they could take family photos at the church and do bridal party photos at the other location, but they said no.

So after the ceremony, which was only 10 minutes from my house, we went home so I could briefly rest and eat by that stage. I was very warm and very tired having been up early. Then my sister calls in a panic asking where we were saying that the photos were starting and we needed to hurry. We were 25 minutes away from the photo location.

Everything was running late due to the ceremony’s delay. We rushed there wondering why they couldn’t take photos. In the meantime, they were waiting on the bride’s, two brothers who were notoriously late. When we finally got to the wedding, uh, to take photos, my husband wasn’t the main, wasn’t in the main sibling shot, as in it was just my brother and his siblings.

After that, the bride approached my husband and complained that we were late saying it wouldn’t have happened at our wedding. I could see the anger in my husband’s face, but I didn’t know what was wrong until I, he told me later I was livid. It sounds like a lot of like, again, like the communication and just like people.

Wanting it their own way. Uh, for the rest of the day. I kept my distance from them and honestly, it ruined the day for the side of the family. For comparison, my own ceremony had been just five minutes from where we took family photos and the reception was only 20 minutes away. All minimal travel and on the same route.

Also, no one at my family was heavily pregnant. Her own sister was,

you can’t help that girl. I’m sorry. Uh, sorry. Can’t I, people get, um, or have gotten on me before when I like critique the story a little bit, but it sounds like she’s wanting to be catered to.

Kati Kons: A little bit, uh, a little bit. If,

Christa Innis: if they found a setting they really like for photos on their wedding day, they should be able to have it.

Kati Kons: Uh, and yes, her comparing the, um, the route being only five minutes away, like, I don’t know, we literally walked a mile from our apartment to the national Mall to go like, get food. And that’s like a 20 minute walk. Like, and we just did that for Fonzie.

Christa Innis: Yeah.

Kati Kons: Like it’s, I dunno. And it was, it was cool and it was fine.

If it was 30 minute walk, we probably still would’ve done it. Right? Yeah. Yeah. Like, here’s the thing, like I, it sounds like a lot of people like were late and maybe, maybe they also got yelled at, you don’t know, right. Maybe you shouldn’t have gotten yelled at, but.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I mean, yeah, I’m sure. I mean, I’ve, I wasn’t maid of honor pregnant at a wedding.

I don’t, I wasn’t, I wouldn’t say heavily. I was like, well, I was, I was seven months, so I was pretty big. But like, I wouldn’t never have expected them to cater things to me, and I, I

Kati Kons: didn’t, yeah, that part of the story was kind of wild when she was like, I called to see if they could do photos at a different location.

Yeah. I was like, changed. I, I literally, I was like, was I supposed to react to that? ’cause I was like,

Christa Innis: I know. I was like waiting for the punchline. And I’m like, I’m not trying to come out hard on this ride, but like. Like we, the wedding I was in was like in December, we’re talking Chica, like this was downtown Chicago.

Cold. Yeah, cold. We’re outside. I’m not gonna be like, you know what? I’m pregnant. I’d rather not be outside right now. ’cause No, you just skip the photos. You’re not in ’em If you just skip it, just skip it. Yeah. It’s not, not, you’re just not

Kati Kons: in ’em. And like you say, sorry, I just can’t do it today. I’m pregnant as f*ck.

And like you walk away and like they do their thing and you do yours and that kind of sucks. But it is what it is. But you know.

Christa Innis: Yeah. We can’t, we can’t have our own expectations for other people’s weddings.

Kati Kons: No, no, no, no. That’s where you

Christa Innis: start getting irritated because it’s like. Let them have their day.

If you don’t agree with it, you don’t have to be a part of certain

Kati Kons: No. And I think that conversation probably should have happened before even she asked, can you move the pictures? Because if the bride was like, I’m so heartbroken that you couldn’t be here, let’s move the photos for you. That should have been a ball in her court decision rather than a I’m gonna ask you to move them,

Christa Innis: you know?

Yeah, a hundred percent. Yeah. Oh my

Kati Kons: God.

Christa Innis: Oh my gosh. Okay, so this says her own sister was heavily pregnant at her wedding too, so she should have understood, but it doesn’t seem like there’s a problem with the sister.

Kati Kons: I thought she said no one was heavily pregnant at her wedding,

Christa Innis: um, at her own wedding. So this is at her brother’s wedding.

Kati Kons: Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, yeah. Yeah.

Christa Innis: And she said, so no one was pregnant at her wedding.

Kati Kons: Okay.

Christa Innis: But at this wedding, she’s pregnant as well as the bride sister. She couldn’t stand.

Um, a few days later when my brother and his now wife stopped by my mother’s house, she said to me when my brother was out of earshot that she should have had a word with me about everything. My mom shut that down and said she absolutely would not say anything to upset me, especially just weeks before I was due to give birth.

I mean, saying you’re gonna have a word with someone sounds very like, like, I don’t know, like older, like I’m gonna have a word with you. I don’t know. That sounds like someone trying to like, put you down. Like I feel like they maybe should communicate, but to say you’re gonna have a word with someone, I don’t know.

Um, I’d gone outta my way. Oh see, I’m already reading like, okay, this bride just want, or not bride. The sister wants to complain and I hate that it’s coming from the person that sent the story. ’cause it’s normally not. This way, but I feel like she feels like she was owed something. It says I’d gone out of my way to attend her bachelorette party, even though her own sister who was pregnant didn’t feel up to it.

So like she feel like, feels like she deserves a pat on the back, but I’m like, you didn’t have to go if you feel like she owed you. Um, and I was further along than she was the whole situation. Yeah. That

Kati Kons: doesn’t, yeah, girl, she could have been having like health issues with her pregnancy, right? Like you don’t know.

Christa Innis: Yeah. And it’s not like, well I did this for you, so you should move your photo shoot. That’s the thing

Kati Kons: is love is not transactional. Yes, yes.

Christa Innis: Yeah.

Kati Kons: And if it feels transactional, then don’t go

Christa Innis: right. I feel like we see that so many times, like especially with weddings. Yeah. People think if I do this for you, then you owe me.

It’s like the parents paying for the wedding, you know, you hear so many, they’re like, well, I’m paying for it so I can invite my college friend who I, you’ve never met. It’s like,

Kati Kons: yeah, it’s how it works. I will actually, I’ll say a hot take on here. One of my best friends from high school, um, didn’t come to my wedding.

Um, she moved to Italy, uh, like five or six months ago. Okay. Um, to be with her fiance who like lives there. Um, and so he’s like from there and she just like couldn’t, she started a new job recently and she just like couldn’t make it back for the wedding. Like, I mean, very reasonable. Yeah. Um, and is also planning her wedding for September and like she liked to, didn’t confront me or tell me that she couldn’t make it.

She just like, a couple days before the wedding was like, I’m so sorry, I can’t come. And I was like, I wish you would’ve told me sooner.

Christa Innis: Oh yeah. And

Kati Kons: I was like, that sucks. ’cause I just like didn’t know. And I asked her a few times and she just like wouldn’t respond. And I was like, I wish she wouldn’t have ghosted me about it.

Yes. But like, that’s the problem is, and now I’m like, expected to go to her wedding in Spain in the fall. Um, but I’m gonna go, and I thought about this for so long because I was like, oh, I’m kind of upset that she did that. But I’m also like, she probably just like, feels bad and didn’t know how to handle it.

And like, like I just said, it’s not about transactional. Like, I’m not just not gonna go because she just like couldn’t come to mind.

Christa Innis: Yeah.

Kati Kons: And she would’ve, but she could’ve, you know?

Christa Innis: Right. You’re such a good friend. No, I feel like, no, that’s. That’s really hard to pull yourself out of and be like, okay, would I not go because she did this?

Or, you know, because this happened, or it feels

Kati Kons: so sh*tty of me, right. To just not go to her wedding, you know? Yeah. That feels like so dumb. And I feel like, I don’t know, I feel so

Christa Innis: good. I, I catch that so many times with people and I think we do it like, and I’ve done it too, being like, oh, they didn’t come to this.

And it’s like, well wait, it’s not, they didn’t come to this, so I go to that or don’t go to that. It’s kind. I go to it and do I want to go to it? Like, yeah. And I

Kati Kons: do wanna go. Yeah. I’m like, even if she couldn’t be here, even if she could have handled it better, I’m like, she still like my friend, I still love her.

I like flew to Italy and I picked out her f*cking wedding dress. I wanna be there. I wanna see it on her. You know?

Christa Innis: Oh, that’s amazing.

Kati Kons: Yeah. So I’m like, that was kind of weird. And I forgive her and I haven’t talked to her. She actually sent me a gift. I should open it. But anyways.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Um, anyways, yeah. But RSVPs are important.

Like I, I. Hate

Kati Kons: response. I hate, yeah. Rss. VP people. Yes.

Christa Innis: I hate when like, you have to reach out to people and be like, Hey, I haven’t heard from you. Or when people give you a maybe or like, they’re just like, we, we had, we had that, we didn’t have to deal with it too much. But I’ve heard of that. That happens all the time where people just, it slips their mind or they’re like, oh, maybe like, I’ll get off work.

Or, you know, little things like that where they just kinda like keep you on on a tentative, I guess.

Kati Kons: Yeah.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Um, it says the whole thing caused friction between me and my brother. And we had always gotten along well, honestly, I think she was just, oh, just jealous that we got married first and that I was pregnant at her wedding as if I was stealing her limelight.

I don’t, I hate that. I just, girl, I don’t

Kati Kons: know if that’s the case.

Christa Innis: I

Kati Kons: know. That makes me so

Christa Innis: sad. I know. ’cause I normally. I wouldn’t say side. I don’t wanna, I don’t pick sides, it’s just when I read it, I just respond, right? Mm-hmm. I’d say most of the time when whoever sends it to me, like they witness whatever happens, and I’m like, oh my gosh, that’s terrible.

This is the first time. I’m like, no, I think you’re reading. And is

Kati Kons: this really the first time that this has happened to you?

Christa Innis: Like this bad? I would say yeah. There’s been a few times, I shouldn’t say bad, but there’s been a few times, like I’ve done like YouTube readings of stories. Yeah. I like say like, I come hard on the bride a little bit, and I’m like, Ooh, but this didn’t happen.

Or you assumed that she was doing this. And the people in the comments are like, you’re coming up on this, coming hard on this bride. I’m like, well, I’m just trying to be levelheaded

Kati Kons: if I can. No, it, it felt, I don’t know. Changing the, changing the location of the pictures was wild to me because like, can you imagine if you were the planner?

Yeah. I’m expecting that they didn’t have a planner. The fact that she called to ask to move, I, they probably didn’t have a planner. Right. Right. ’cause can you imagine the planner’s f*cking face when she says your sister wants to move the location?

Christa Innis: Yeah. Oh my God, she’s pregnant. Like, what? What? Um, that’s bonkers to me.

That is wild. I would never ask a bride to change a location no matter who I want. Change the logistics of your day, of your whole wedding day. And we’re talking 20 minutes. It’s not like an hour away. No, no, no. And even so, you don’t have to go. I know, like for one of my friend’s weddings, we, downtown Chicago, we took buses all around the city and we just took Yeah.

Pictures in different places. And that was like a, and I think, I wanna say she had a couple pregnant bridesmaids and mm-hmm. There was food and drink on the bus. Like, we were fine. She took care of us. I would never be like, Hey, you know what, can you, that’s wild because remember everyone listening, like you can say no to bachelorette party.

You can say no to being in a wedding. They don’t have to cater to you.

Kati Kons: I hate,

Christa Innis: I

Kati Kons: hate to, the whole bachelorette thing also gets me because I’m like, you could have said no. Yeah. I went and she didn’t. Is wild to me.

Christa Innis: Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Oh my gosh.

Kati Kons: I feel bad for this girly though. I know. I feel bad because it, I just, uh, I want, I want her to just be like.

Christa Innis: I feel like there must have been some kind of animosity before, because if this all happened and then she’s getting the vibe that like, oh, she’s doing these things and purposely,

Kati Kons: I feel like maybe she’s bad at telling stories and we missed some key detail about this in that there’s like some childhood trauma or something that we’re missing because I feel like there, I don’t know.

I feel like this story is like way too transparently against her for Yeah,

Christa Innis: like what I like, gotta go back and make, make sure I didn’t miss like a first paragraph or something. I, I don’t know. I think it all started when here’s my, okay, here’s my take. And again, I might be reading into it, but it’s, it’s my job here, right?

So when she said, my mom seemed to be bothered by it, but I wasn’t, I think she was bothered by it. So I think like in her mind, this whole thing, she’s like thinking about the whole time like, oh, they’ve only been dating this long. Oh, they’re getting married right after me. And so I think then everything just kind of becomes a, like a silent competition.

Yeah. Oh, that’s how I’m reading it, because like

Kati Kons: Oh, and so yourself. Because, because it’s a competition. She’s like, I went to the bachelor party

Christa Innis: and I did this,

Kati Kons: and I I went to your wedding pregnant, and so you have to change the thing because of me. Yeah.

Christa Innis: And I planned out my schedule like this. But you did it like this and you weren’t thinking about me the pregnant one.

Oh. So that’s how I’m reading

Kati Kons: it. You’re right. Uhhuh. But

Christa Innis: I’m

Kati Kons: sorry. You’re right.

Christa Innis: You’re listening. And, sorry, I’m not trying to come hard on you. Um, so she said, okay, so she said that honestly, I think she was just jealous that we got married first and I was pregnant at her wedding as if I was stealing her limelight.

But how did. How would she make you feel that way? ’cause she wanted you in the wedding, in a part of the photos. So I don’t know. We’d been together much longer and I feel like she took out her frustrations on me because her wedding didn’t go as planned.

Kati Kons: I feel like maybe it’s just the other way around. I feel like sometimes people, um, I don’t know.

I feel like I’ve seen that sometimes where people who have been together for a long time and then people get married who have not known each other, who have not known each other for very long, get married and there’s like a weird competition between those two types of relationships because they’re like, oh, well you haven’t been together for very long.

Mm-hmm. You know what I mean? And they’re like, well, you don’t have to have known each other for very long. You know what

Christa Innis: I mean? Yes. They try to like belittle it. Yes. Yeah. I remember. Okay. So like I was saying earlier, like my husband and I have, we were engaged for. No, not engaged for, we were together for six years before we got engaged.

Just ’cause like, I never wanted to be like a super young married, we were, I was 23 when we got together. So anyways, that’s besides the point. But like couples that like met after us or started dating after us, but got married before us would make comments like, oh, like, like married comments. Like, they’d be like, oh, when you’re married you’ll get it.

And I’m like, we already live together. I’ve like, what do you mean? Like, oh, just something’s magically gonna happen when we get married. And I’m like, oh, now I understand. Like there was just so many comments of like almost belittling our relationship because we weren’t legally married. That’s so weird.

That’s so weird. Yeah, it happened more times I could count, I would just learn to just like shut my mouth because I was just like, that’s so

Kati Kons: weird.

Christa Innis: Because

Kati Kons: people are always like, oh, like do you feel different now that you got married? And I was like, no. I mean, we’ve lived together for how many years? Like, we literally, our life goes on and nothing changes the f*ck.

Christa Innis: You’re just like solidifying for yourself. Like Yeah, like

Kati Kons: we, we just decided to have a party for fun. I don’t know.

Christa Innis: Exactly. Yeah. I feel like once you like already like live together and like have your stuff all in a place together, it doesn’t really change much. No. But legally we get to save money on taxes, so that is,

Kati Kons: that is a plus.

Honestly, that’s so rude of the legal system. Like why sh*t on singles like that? It’s crazy. This, but they literally have to support themselves with one person’s income. That is so hard nowadays. And not only that, you’re gonna deprive them of tax benefits.

Christa Innis: I, yeah, it blows my mind. Speaking of crazy wedding stories that someone sent me about like.

Married versus like long-term partner. This girl sent me a story and she’s like, she’s a young adult, so she’s probably in her twenties, right. She said an aunt of hers got married and said, only married couples. She goes, my parents never got married, never got legally married, so they’ve been together 30, 40 years.

Right. My math might be off, but she’s like, my mom wasn’t invited because they’re not legally married. I thought, wait, they’re inviting the dad, they’re inviting his kids, but not the wife, or not the long-term partner because they’re not legally married. I thought, what a weird wedding rule.

Kati Kons: Am I lost?

What do you mean they’re not inviting the wi, they’re not inviting the wife. She’s, well, she’s not technically a wife.

Christa Innis: Right, right, right. But the Like the wife figure. The wife figure, yeah.

Kati Kons: Sot a wedding. It was like a wedding. It was like a fake wedding per se. Without the wife figure.

Christa Innis: Yeah. It was her dad’s sister.

So her aunt, and she was like, yeah, my mom wasn’t invited. ’cause they’re, it was married, couple couples only. Oh my God. When everyone’s document what? Oh, that’s great. I’m like, that blows my mind. Anyways, there’s one last paragraph here. Okay.

Kati Kons: Oh, here we go.

Christa Innis: I didn’t say much about it afterwards, but when my brother asked what she had said to my husband, it really stuck with me.

For years, the photographer didn’t want to deviate from the list of planned shots, but surely a professional. Okay, wait. So he said the photographer didn’t wanna deviate from his list of planned shots, which I agree with, but surely a professional could have worked around people being late. Plenty of other photos could have been taken while they waited.

I had to drive 30 extra minutes outta my way to the reception just to be in three photos, photos that could have been easily taken at the ceremony.

Kati Kons: I really tried to give her the benefit of the doubt.

Christa Innis: I’m trying, I really tried. This is, this isn’t, I hate to say this, but this is entitled, this is really entitled, Uhhuh. Oh, that sucks. But maybe this is a wake up call. I mean, I’m no therapist. I, I’m just literally just reading a story, reading a story. So maybe I’m understanding wrong.

If you’re listening and you’ve got more context, send it my way.

Kati Kons: Yeah. Please, please send a response. Yes, chime in. But yeah,

Christa Innis: that’s the lesson is, uh, if you are a part of a wedding, I mean, you can say no.

Kati Kons: Also, let’s, let’s also, another thing to take from that is get a planner. Because your photographer shouldn’t be your planner.

Christa Innis: Yeah. 100%.

Kati Kons: We hate that for planners or for photographers. That’s really rude. But, um, it like happens to a lot of photographers that they have to like, take over as planners when you don’t have one or a day of coordinator or something. But yeah.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I got that vibe from my, my photographer literally was the best ever.

She had a full on timeline. Mm-hmm. And I talked to other brides, they’re like. They’re like, I don’t have one from my photographer. I was like, maybe mine’s like used to like people not having planners or something. Mm-hmm. Little does she know I’m very anal. I think

Kati Kons: that’s what the photographer for my sister’s wedding was like.

’cause she had everything planned out. Yeah. And I was like, afraid of that. I was like, wow. I was like, my photographer was like just much more type B creative. Okay. And I was like, I don’t, I don’t want her to be like worried about things. And she was still really, and I was like, I just don’t want to be like, I don’t know, worried about things.

I wanted the most laid back wedding you could imagine. And we did have that, so that was good. But

Christa Innis: yeah, when it’s down to the minute, that’s a lot. But I, I’m someone I like to know what’s gonna happen and like, even like something about like, Krista eat was on there. ’cause like if I get distracted by other things, I’ll forget.

So it was like that. Yeah. Ours was

Kati Kons: not down to the minute. We had like a lot of like, time in between things, so for us it was like really, really relaxed. That’s good. Yeah. So it was like, not like most weddings, which is awesome.

Christa Innis: Yeah, I like that.

Kati Kons: Okay. Um, did you get these people’s names or do I that was crazy or No, for this story?

Christa Innis: Um, yeah, they usually send like their,

Kati Kons: yeah, I don’t know if I get their name, but to this anonymous person, I’m so sorry, but please reflect. Yeah. Um, that’s all I have to say. Um, I, and you know what? The best is yet to come for you. Okay. It gets better.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Yeah, I think, I think we’re either missing a lot of the story or I think there needs to like, need to figure out some, uh, there might be some like animosity that’s happening.

And so like every little thing is, it’s not against you, you’re not a victim, is what I am kind of getting from.

Kati Kons: I would just remind yourself that when you’re at someone else’s wedding, the wedding is about them for sure. Mm-hmm. For f*cking sure.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Every time. A hundred

Kati Kons: percent.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I think so many times we hear these stories and we’re like, that’s crazy.

And then like, we don’t see ourselves in them. And so my guess is she probably was like, oh yeah, they’re gonna for sure read this and be like, that’s crazy that she didn’t do that. But it’s like we need to like, like take a step back and be like, wait, you’re asking a bride and groom take out that it’s your brother and his wife?

Would you do this at any wedding you’re a part of?

Kati Kons: Mm-hmm.

Christa Innis: And if you wouldn’t, then don’t do it at your brother’s wedding.

Kati Kons: No. I feel like I couldn’t even ask my sister to do something like that. Same,

Christa Innis: yeah. I’d be

Kati Kons: mortified. I would be mortified. Oh my gosh, I don’t even both because I would, is would I, is it, would it be easier to ask my sister or harder?

I don’t even know.

Christa Innis: Right. Yeah. I don’t know. I couldn’t do it. All right. Well that’s a crazy story. Thanks for reacting with me. Um, well thanks for coming out and hanging out with me today. Yeah, of course. Can you, um, tell everyone again where they can follow you, find all your content and anything exciting that you’re working on right now?

Kati Kons: Yeah. You can find me at Portrait of a Bride on fire on Instagram and TikTok and I am always working on fun things on. Styling things. If you ever need to be styled or if you want to revamp your wardrobe or if you have a wedding coming up that you need to be styled for, let me know.

Christa Innis: Awesome. Well, thank you so much.

Kati Kons: All

Christa Innis: right.

Figure out how to stop this. Oh my gosh. Why am I, oh my God. There we go.


Follow-up Story: My Future MIL Confronted Me in a Pantry

What happens when your future mother-in-law corners you in the pantry to accuse you of ruining her son’s life? That’s exactly what went down in today’s jaw-dropping episode.

We reconnect with an anonymous guest, who now returns to share how her wedding journey unraveled into a powder keg of emotion, betrayal, and a confrontation she’ll never forget.

If you’ve ever questioned a wedding’s red flags, this story will stay with you. From a fiancé caught in the middle to a mother-in-law determined to divide, this episode is a must-listen.

Join me on Patreon and get bonus content every month! 

Episode Chapter Markers

00:00 Introduction

03:13 Engagement and Initial Red Flags

03:45 Mother-in-Law’s Demands Begin

04:52 First Major Incident: Venue Address

08:13 Boundary Issues and Kitchen Confrontation

11:56 Fiance’s Call and Silent Treatment

16:55 4th of July Weekend Tensions

20:43 Handling Emotional Conflict

22:11 The Pantry Confrontation

28:19 Post-Confrontation Reflections

31:22 Dress Shopping and Relationship Dynamics

33:25 Premarital Counseling and Lessons Learned

Must-Hear Insights and Key Moments

  • Pantry Blowup – A quiet moment at the rehearsal dinner turns into a private ambush from the mother-in-law.
  • Caught in the Middle – The fiancé’s struggle to balance loyalty between partner and parent creates more chaos.
  • Crossing the Line – The mother-in-law’s accusations include controlling her son’s life and “changing him.”
  • Silent Treatment Strategy – Post-fight, the MIL goes silent, leaving tension boiling under the surface.
  • A New Kind of Wedding Day – Despite everything, the couple finds their own way to move forward—with boundaries.
  • Delayed Fallout – A honeymoon doesn’t stop the drama. The emotional scars show up weeks later.
  • The Support That Mattered – The groom’s eventual stand for his partner offers a moment of healing.
  • Telling the Story – The power of sharing your experience and being heard, even years later.

Words of Wisdom: Standout Quotes from This Episode

  • “If you’re scared to speak up at your own wedding, that’s a red flag.”Christa Innis
  • “Respecting boundaries doesn’t make you difficult—it makes you self-aware.”Christa Innis
  • “A wedding should never be the battleground for someone else’s unresolved issues.”Christa Innis
  • “Silence doesn’t mean peace—it just means someone’s swallowing their feelings.”Christa Innis
  • “Just because it’s tradition doesn’t mean it’s healthy.”Christa Innis
  • “I knew the moment she opened that pantry, something was going to explode.”Anonymous Guest
  • “It wasn’t just about the wedding—it was about control.” Anonymous Guest
  • “She made me feel like I was stealing her son, not marrying him.”Anonymous Guest
  • “I kept waiting for someone to stand up for me, but no one did.”Anonymous Guest
  • “You think family drama will die down after the wedding, but it only gets louder.”Anonymous Guest

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Team Dklutr Production

Blog Transcript:

Note: We use AI transcription so there may be some inaccuracies

Christa Innis: Hi there. Thanks for joining me. Thanks for having me. I’m so excited. All right, so before we started recording, we said we are gonna keep you anonymous today because we have a kind of crazy story to dive into today. for those of you guys listening, they’re like, what is she talking about?

 I think it was episode, I wrote notes down here, episode seven. I had Suzanne Lambert on and we read was one of the craziest stories. I think one of the kind of intense mother-in-law story. It involved, a lot of, anguish, a debate and a pantry on 4th of July and a lot of drama that went up, from there and.

This was such an interesting story to us, and we were like, I think you ended it with part two coming soon because you’re about to do your bridesmaid or no, your wedding dress shopping. So I was like, I have so many questions, let’s reach out to her and see if she wants to come on the podcast. So here you are.

So I appreciate you for being vulnerable and coming on and sharing.

Anonymous Guest: Yeah, no, uh, thanks. I mean. Honestly, like it was such a crazy story and I just think, I was just like, well, someone’s gotta hear this, whether it’s for entertainment purposes or therapeutic for me, I was just like, someone’s gotta hear this, so it’s good.

Yeah. Yeah.

Christa Innis: So if you guys have not listened to the full episode, I would recommend you guys go back to episode seven and give it a listen. but let’s just do some quick bullet points here. We’ll kinda walk through it together. I might also put a little, audio clip from it so you guys can hear some of the crazy moments there.

But starting off, you said, my fiance and I got engaged in April. We were excited to plan our wedding for next September, and his mother has always been supportive, often teasing him about proposing. So when we called to share the news. She barely finished saying congratulations before asking if she could go dress shopping because she only has two sons, so I’m not gonna read the whole thing, obviously.

But then getting into it, the red flags started appearing when you guys all got together. At, I think, was it an engagement party?

Anonymous Guest: It was at our house with Father’s Day weekends. Okay. We were hosting all the men in our lives. Yeah.

Christa Innis: Okay. And so at that point was when she started to demand to know the venue, address.

So tell us what went down here and oh, actually I wanna know first before all of this, did you guys consider her like a good relationship? Like have a good relationship with her?

Anonymous Guest: Yeah, no, we had a great relationship and like it, my fiance’s relationship with his mom was always good.

Ours was good. She was very supportive of us. And I even noted, but his grandma was pa in the process of passing away and on her deathbed was like, you have to marry this girl in two months. And he is like, you’re nuts. And of course we wanted to get engaged, but there was like a lot of family support including his dying grandma, his mother, like all these people.

And so there was never really any signs of any like, anguish as you said, like, or upset feelings. really until. Like the wedding started coming to fruition and that like maybe we were making decisions that were for us and nobody else. So I think that’s kind of maybe where that happened or. Maybe her perception of how that was starting to unfold was different than the reality.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Okay, so let’s go to that first moment. Yeah. Where she starts pressuring you to tell the address, even though the month was still like a year out, and you said this is the name of it. We actually haven’t even been there yet. So what happened? What all went down?

The Text Message Debacle

Anonymous Guest: Yeah, it was crazy. It was like, so we were sitting in our living room just having like normal Father’s Day watching golf kind of thing.

And we had told her where we were getting married. we kind of had left out details from the beginning just as we were figuring them out, told her. And then, you know, she was like, can you send me the address? And I was like, well, I already shared it with you. And she’s like, well, I delete my text messages, which is something that I know you guys noted the first time.

Yeah. We were like, what is she saying? They were like, who does this? And I was like, no, she’s just somebody that’s just like, just delete. Them? I don’t know. I don’t know. She actually

Christa Innis: does. She wasn’t just saying

Anonymous Guest: that goes through and she just like deletes all, every thread. It gets deleted like every day kind of thing.

So she doesn’t keep anything. Oh. And she doesn’t have a, you know, she just doesn’t keep anything. So I knew that originally she was asking ’cause like she didn’t have it. but then, you know, as time went on, she started like, and I said, well, why do you need it? I told you we were getting married.

And she’s like, well, because I wanna go and I wanna go see where the hotels are in p. And because it’s not so far from where she lives, all this stuff. And I was just like, oh, no, no, no, no. You know? And I, I was just like, no, that’s like really not necessary. We have it all figured out. It. April and our wedding is the following September.

So we were so far away time I couldn’t even open a room block if I wanted to. And so my fiance and I were just like, what? So, this is kind of happening and this is like starting that conversation again. We’re just very casual and she’s just like, no, like, just send me it. And I was like, well, it seems as though you wanna go there.

And like that’s not, we haven’t even been, and I’m trying to like bridge and bridge and understand and like. Really press this down kind of quickly and as amicably as possible because I’m just, she keeps pressing and then I keep trying to bridge it. and so that was like the first of what I,thought were like three major incidents within this incident of a day was her pestering about the venue.

And it was just so shocking to us. ’cause we were like. why are you pressing on this so hard right now at this time and this day? Yeah.

Christa Innis: Yeah. It’s like, where is this all coming from? All of a sudden you have to go see it and it’s like, how can she not see that this is a special moment for you and your fiance at the time of being able to like go to the venue together, see together for the first time before people coming in, in with their opinions.

Anonymous Guest: Yeah. and we, to this day, still have not seen it, which is hilarious because I planned our whole wedding around a venue I’ve literally never seen. but that’s the thing is I was just like, I don’t know when I’m gonna go. I don’t have plans to go. As of right now, it’s four hours away from where we live.

Like this is just the reality of it. And just because you were closer, let’s not like prioritize You’re needing this to go. Also, I was expressing it to private property. Like it’s not like you can just show up like a ballroom or a hotel. You can’t just show up. And then, my fear was that like, as she was pressing, I started to realize, well maybe she would go and, go to the property and start talking to these people and having conversations that I was not a part of.

And so I kind of started spiraling myself and that’s where I think I started getting more worked up by the thoughts of it. of what could happen. Mm-hmm. And just try, like I said, just trying to shut it down in that moment, really. Yeah. as kindly as possible.

Christa Innis: Yeah. ’cause it’s totally understandable to be like excited be like, if you want me included, I would love to be a part of it, but to then press, especially after you’re like, well, we haven’t even seen it ourselves.

It’s a private property. You can’t just show up. And she’s still pushing for it. So then she corners you. In the kitchen. How does that all happen? And does this kind of fizzle out first and you guys are like, just kinda like moving up past it? like what are other people doing during this time? Like are they looking at this like.

Is this still happening?

“Aren’t You Just So Happy?”

Anonymous Guest: well, we have a kind of open concept floor, so like our kitchen’s connected to our living room and connected, and we were kind of outside, so we had a group outside, like no one was really in the house anymore, and she’d kind of come inside and we were in the kitchen together and everyone else was kind of outside, which is a very similar, like kind of set up as it was when we were in the pantry situation, which don’t get to, but, and she was just, expressing that she was like.

Are you just so happy? I’m gonna be your mother-in-law. And I was just like, in the moment, I was taken aback because I’m like. Why are you asking this? Like, is this something you’re really concerned about? Like, am I so happy? Am I so not? Because I’ve obviously been maybe giving off some energy that, I was not as excited by your excitement to go to the venue and I was kinda shutting that down and then I shut down the conversation with my bachelorette party, and so I’m like, are you kind of getting the vibe that my energy is coming back to you in a different way and now you’re trying to get validation through me by saying, aren’t you just so happy?

 I tried to like, address it as head on as possible and just say like, yeah, of course I am, but here’s what’s happening right now, is that like, I feel as though you’re kind of, you’re trying to step on this, what I would call a boundary and saying like, my boundary is that you don’t go to the venue and you don’t, like this is the situation and I would just appreciate that you kind of let us handle it.

And, I didn’t again realize at the time the weight of the words I was saying. Again, I was trying to be as amicable as possible, be very choosy with my words and being kind. And ultimately like I wanted to be kind to her and, just express clearly how I was feeling. And I did not realize the weight of the word boundary.

 and how like significant it would play into the rest of.

Christa Innis: She’s held onto that grip on it. They don’t do boundaries in this family. Gorilla

Anonymous Guest: Grip, gorilla Gripp onto it. Yeah, it’s crazy. and I think that like it maybe was the first time being put in a, like to be held back from something or maybe to be really put into that box.

But at the same time, like it’s funny because you guys noted like, where’s your fiance and this whole thing, he is outside having a drink, has no idea. We’re, you know, in the kitchen kind of thing together. And I think in the most of the story, like he and I and, the sentiment really is he was just as stunned as I was through the whole thing and.

I think his reaction in the fight or flight minus fight his is kind of take a step back and process. And so whereas I maybe was more communicative with my feelings and clear up front later in the story, he was much more like nervous and surprised and then had to find a way to then speak and speak up about it, which is after the situation when we were in the kitchen when he ended up calling her, but.

I mean, we were by ourselves in the kitchen. And then as I said, this is my boundary. She, I don’t really remember her exact kind of feelings about it, but we ended up, walking away and having the rest of the day kinda be fine. And we thought the day went kind of weird after that and we were just like, man, that was like such odd energy in front of everyone, not just at least the three of us.

And. That’s when he ended up calling her, which came after that.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Okay. So we have an issue with the word boundaries. I’m glad you said the thing about like you and your fiance. ’cause I think a lot of times, like stories like this are written by the brides and they experience it firsthand because of that kind of like, turmoil, I dunno if that’s even the right word, but it’s like.

The fiance we to remember too, is in a difficult position, right? It’s like, obviously they’re choosing you, but at the same time it’s like, I’ve never seen this side of my mom before. I’m really sorry. But also what’s happening, but also I love you, I promise. they’re like dealing with all these like different so of like emotions and things they’re going through.

so that’s important to say as well. okay, so these red flags are showing, you’re like, okay, we’re gonna move on from this like boundary day. Yeah. then your fiance calls her. Mm-hmm.

Anonymous Guest: yeah. so we decompressed, we talked about the day.

We were like, wow, that was really weird. Never had an interaction like that. just seemed as though like she was really pressing and feeling anxious or worked up about the details. And so we called her and was just like, Hey, like. I kind of told him, I said like, if you feel this way, say it on behalf of you.

Like, I don’t want you to speak on behalf of me. in any way, giving anybody ammunition as to saying, well, she feels this way, she feels that way. I said, just speak on behalf of you and leave it at that. So he said, you know, like, I feel like the other day was weird and the energy was weird, and it essentially like maybe being more.

Clear with how he was feeling. I think it really upset her and she ended up getting so upset with his confrontation of the behavior and just saying like, and I forget along the lines of what he said, but he was just like, talking about this and talking about that. She goes, well, that was a joke.

And like, I can’t, I was just teasing. And he was just like, yeah, it really wasn’t, a joke or whatever. You know, he kind of addressed like things. Clearly and she just had different perception of it. and then I think that being as though he was so clear with her and like how he felt, she felt very attacked by that and very like hurt by that.

And the only way I think that she knew how to process that was to literal hang up on him and not talk to him for three weeks. Yeah. Which was crazy. Do the silent

Christa Innis: treatment. Yeah. I find that so interesting because it’s like, okay, respect your elders, communicate and he did just that. Yeah. He literally called her in an appropriate way, did not out her in front of a bunch of people saying, Hey, you’re being rude.

You know, like literally the most respectful thing. But there’s a certain, I feel like certain people cannot handle being told they did something wrong, or, someone was hurt by the way they acted.

Birthday Silence Treatment

Anonymous Guest: No, that’s exactly, right. and I think again, their relationship was so fine, but why did this instance of confronting behavior, and maybe he never did, and what I’ve come to realize in the last year about him and his relationship growing up and stuff like that, like he is so unbothered by everything.

Like the man could not be bothered by a single thing. And it is what a peaceful life my fiance lives because he just does not get worked up about anything and. It takes so much for him to even feel worked up. And so when coming at situations like this, he can so easily take it in and brush it out and it’s like.

Most people cannot do that or you internalize a little bit. And so I think that in interactions with her previously or growing up, like he certainly has never felt the need to address anything head on and or felt heard enough. But I think when it came down to us discussing how we felt and how I expressed to him how that made me feel, he then felt ownership and saying like, okay, well this is something that obviously we need to talk about and I need to address, but maybe she had never.

Had that be addressed before or been told to your point Like, this was wrong or your behavior upset me in any way. So it definitely stunned her. And you said she hung off the phone and didn’t talk to him for three weeks. didn’t talk to either one of us for three weeks, which was a notable three weeks because his birthday fell during that time.

And, there wasn’t like a. Come back together kind of moment. And it was a little hard. I mean, she expressed after that in the story that that was hard for her. And it’s hard for us, like, to have such a normal, good relationship with somebody and then to know there is tension and to know what is present for that whole time, like.

It was definitely difficult for us too. Mm-hmm. Because like we’re just trying to process how we feel about the situation in general and celebrate our engagement. And then also there’s this like massive tension that’s like building and then kind of being expanded in the family as like more people were obviously present and then seeing what’s happening and hearing what’s happening and it’s kind of expanding it felt like.

So that was, it was hard. Yeah. And then of course it’s birthday, so it felt, it just felt terrible. Yeah.

Christa Innis: Oh my gosh. I find it all so interesting because it’s like she can. Beret is probably a heavy word, but she can like, call you out in front of everybody, make you feel a certain way, even though you were like constantly putting your boundary down, saying, no, no, no.

She gets contacted in private by herself. Mm-hmm. And that’s disrespectful. It’s not okay. And she goes into silent treatment mode. She goes into like victim mode of like, oh my gosh, you guys are attacking me. And it’s just kind of funny to see like the opposites and from different point of views like, how she can’t even see like past her own like lens.

Anonymous Guest: Yeah. And that’s like a lot of the work that I’ve done in therapy and personal therapy like is just understanding. Yeah, of course. Like you have two sides to every story, but like. The information that we had to your point, was in private, in a calm way and trying to be clear and communicative and it wasn’t receptive.

 she wasn’t receptive at all of it. So I think that’s a piece of, I. Getting feedback and then being able to process at the time, at least in the situation, she just did not handle like super well and then ended up, my fiance and then extended party, like ended up suffering in those, three-ish weeks to that before the next, major incident.

So it was crazy. Yeah.

Christa Innis: Yeah. So let’s get into a Father’s Day weekend. This was the part that 4th of July. This is

Anonymous Guest: 4th of

Christa Innis: July weekend. weeks. Year. Oh, fourth. Oh yeah. Father’s Day weekend was the first dinner. So we’re talking Yeah. 4th of July weekend. This was still over the, not talking to you stage.

Mm-hmm. Completely like blocking you guys out. Yeah. Yeah. So at that point, okay, let’s talk about 4th of July then. So you guys don’t hear from her. You guys have a 4th of July party at this house with a really big pantry. Yes. Yes. This is the part that Suzanne and I were just like, wait, what is happening here?

She’s in the pantry now. This doesn’t make any sense. Yeah. I’m like visualizing this like beautiful, like huge pantry.

Anonymous Guest: It is. Yeah. Um,

Christa Innis: so you guys had like a rented house?

Anonymous Guest: Well, yeah. So without giving too many details my fiance’s family has like a larger, lodge of sorts, very much like the Hallmark esque make big lodges that they spend their Christmases in kind of thing.

They have one in their family. it’s also like a hunting lodge kind of thing. Okay. So just very large. and the kitchen is like an industrial kitchen, so you imagine like the big industrial stoves and stuff like that. And so there’s just this larger like wraparound kind of pantry type of situation that’s adjacent to off of it, but yes.

Where at their family’s house. lodge for, better words, but yeah.

Christa Innis: So it’s his family’s house. Everyone’s there, but his mom just hasn’t shown up yet. She shows up late, right?

The Lodge and the Cold Shoulder

Anonymous Guest: Yeah. So she doesn’t live too far from there. and so my fiance has like, family ownership of the lodge.

So we go up, we bring my family, my parents are there, that we all join the lodge for the weekend. So we’re there for like the long weekend and it’s her family’s place. and his grandpa. Owns it and he’s there and then the aunt is there. So everyone that was at the original incident is also now, coincidentally at 4th of July weekend.

 so she had every right to be there and all the plans to be there. But it sounds as though like, obviously we were struggling with communication. We were obviously not talking and then, so it didn’t seem as though she was very excited about the idea of joining us as soon as possible. So we were there for a couple days before she ended up joining.

Yeah.

Christa Innis: Oh, and do you think that was her plan all along? Or do you think she was randomly was like, I’m gonna go and make my entrance, my grand entrance?

Anonymous Guest: Yeah, it’s, well, so there was up being a couple things that happened. So there was like this other party that we were going to within for the July weekend that was at a house very close, and we ended up seeing her there for the first time.

So she was also at this adjacent family party inside of 4th of July weekend. Oh my gosh. To give you the vibe, and that is where we first. saw her face to face since he had not speak to her, like been on the phone and she was very cold. Like, very much did not want anything to do with us. And at the time.

I was, I kind of saw her in the corner and I could see that she was talking to somebody. and I could see she was very heated about what she was talking about, and I could only imagine that, she was kind of recounting what has been going on in her life. and she said a couple things kind of verbatim that she repeated back to me in the pantry.

So I knew that’s ultimately what she was talking about and mm-hmm. So I could tell that, yeah, the vibes were a little intense and so he kind of went up to her and tried to embrace her in some way and she was very much not into it. I tried to do the same thing. She basically didn’t hug me probably the first time ever.

and so it was like a really cold interaction. and then my parents were at the house, you know, down the road kind of thing, and. Her whole point was to come there and to spend time with all of us. And she ended up leaving that house and never visited them. Never even stopped, like just kept going. So the plan was to be there kind of the whole weekend, and she kind of came in, did her thing, and left.

Left for a couple days, and then came back what would be ultimately like a couple days later. So,

Christa Innis: oh my gosh, very much.

Anonymous Guest: Not the plan. Not the plan

Christa Innis: at all. Yeah. Yeah. It’s so crazy. Like looking back, of course, like. I’m just like, she could have avoided all of this by just like responding to her fiance being like, I’m sorry I made her feel that way.

I would love to like, get lunch next week and just like, hear about your wedding plans or, just like, kind of just completely turn it over instead. have like a toddler blocking this out. We’ll have

Anonymous Guest: to, yeah. Yeah. I’ll have to cut this out, but she needs some serious therapy, so I’ll find something else to say.

But I mean, yeah, it definitely like. You could tell she was so upset and she just didn’t know how to process her feelings and or how to navigate the situation in general. And like, I get that. I totally get that. We were all in uncharted territory, so it’s like. We were all processing things and being in this interaction for the very first time.

And so I think it’s important that, we handled it how we felt we could defend and talk about and, be proud of. And, I don’t know if she felt the same way, but it seems as though like she was kind of. Operating on out of fear and like confusion and, we were really trying to make sure that we were clear and concise and kind, you know?

Mm-hmm. Like we didn’t want to create any animosity, but, a lot of it definitely could have been avoided. And especially this whole like buildup to not talking and to not, leaving and not coming and not embracing all this kinda stuff is like, well that’s just hard, you Like none of us really wanted to.

Start back up again after so many weeks kind of thing. But it’s like someone has to do it. That’s why the pantry situation happened was because I was like, we must like do this now. You know? Like it

Christa Innis: get rid of the tension.

Anonymous Guest: Yeah. We have to try. So try.

Christa Innis: Alright, so let’s, let’s talk the pantry moment. So the pantry moment,

Anonymous Guest: this large pantry.

Christa Innis: So. how did that all come about? So eventually she shows up at the house. On a day, like she kind of showed up later to everyone. Like you said, it was kind of weird. She kind of came in and out. Sorry, I’m kind of like looking back at the story. No, ahead. Tell how, tell me how that kind of like all started.

Because I think it started with your, fiance and her talking, right? And then you were kinda like listening in.

 The Pantry Confrontation

Anonymous Guest: I was like, we have to address this. And they had finally just exchanged his birthday gifts It was kind of okay, but we had no, that was in front of everybody and so we had had no, like, one-on-one time with her.

 and so she kind of went in inside and everybody again was sitting outside. And so I was like, well, we should go, we should gotta, we gotta do it. So I was like, go, I’ll be behind you. and. So again, the beginning of the conversation, she kind of thought she was having it with just him. And that’s why the detail about me coming into the pantry was kind of a note because she didn’t realize I was there because like he’s standing in the doorway, she’s inside the pantry and I’m on the outside behind him.

It’s tall, man. So it’s like, she didn’t know I was there. So he kind of says like, we gotta stop this. Like you gotta stop. And so then she starts explaining like how up upset she is and how this has been so upsetting for her she kind of starts venting a lot of her feelings.

And then the first thing that she kind of said that like threw me was she was like, and she said she would send me the address and like, she didn’t send me shit. And so then I was like, well, it’s my time to enter now. And so I hear my name, I’m being summed. Literally. I was like, well, you brought me into it.

Darn it. I’ll join now. So I kind of came around the corner and I was like, well, and I kind of said exactly that, like. Well, it’s not time to enter out. So, like I come in and I was just like,I didn’t even give any words out really before, she kind of came in and she got very close to me and got very aggressive as far as saying like, how dare you speak to me that way.

You know, how dare you talk about a boundary like that kind of referencing our, father’s Day weekend conversation and just essentially saying that like. She couldn’t imagine, speaking, having somebody speak to her that way. And, what the hell is a boundary kind of thing.

And it, what the hell

Christa Innis: is

Anonymous Guest: a

Christa Innis: boundary?

Anonymous Guest: Oh no. like she knows, but she lists like, what the hell, that has nothing to do with this kind of thing. Like, just not understanding the impact of really what I was saying. And she’s like in, you know, very close to my face and I was just like, are you really, like, is this really what you’re gonna do right now?

And my fiance. The man was stunned. The man’s mouth was probably a gate on the ground like, and he is again, he is definitely not a fighter and he’s not like a flight, but he’s definitely someone who just maybe a little bit freezes, especially in this moment. He’s a very like. Confident person. Like he knows how to handle stress really well.

But I think when it comes down to someone that you really didn’t expect it to be from, he just froze in that moment and he said nothing. and so it was just me, you know, me, Duke’s up, got my hands up, I’m so mentally prepared to handle this conversation. I’ve had so much therapy that I was like, I can do this.

and so I was just like. Are you really gonna, approach a conversation like that right now? Like, I am not being aggressive and I don’t have that tone. Like, I just don’t think that’s productive. And, her responses were very aggressive and trying to get her feelings across in a very, like, loud, big way.

 and then I. Lost every, all of my therapy in me and I started rising as well. Hard get to, to a point where you’re just like, whatever. My ears are bright red. I am just like my heart is beating outta my chest because I’m just, I’m trying so hard to contain my thoughts and be clear, but then I’m also being attacked when I’m trying to process that.

my fiance is obviously standing there. I know this is hurting him in some capacity, so it’s like a, culmination of quite a few things that I felt like were like, leaning on my shoulders and I just started apologizing and and I truly felt apologetic like I did, that my intentions maybe were not the result of like what I said or how she felt, and.

 those were just not received well at all either. So all I can do is apologize. All I can do is take ownership of what may have been unintended consequences and like it wasn’t being accepted. So at that point, like, what are we to do? we are not getting anywhere. and we went but I can go in circles for a while and we did.

So we went in circles for a while and then mm-hmm. Ultimately, it ended up kind of coming to a close in that moment, but, not without going on for quite a while before that point, and mind you we’re in a pantry that is extension of a kitchen, extension of a dining room that has got windows that are open to the outside.

So many people, I think, no real confirmation, this pantry has windows. So the pantry door was open. We were standing in the, literally, oh, we were standing in the door and then the kitchen’s open, and then there’s a doorway, and then the doorway goes straight outside. Stop. So did you see

Christa Innis: people walking by and like no one

Anonymous Guest: was in the house.

They knew what was going on, so they were like avoiding it, you know? Yeah, they, did your parents

Christa Innis: know what was going on? Like were they

Anonymous Guest: like everyone did? Yeah. It was sad. My mom actually ended up getting. Really drunk. She’s like so worked up. She was just drinking so much wine. She goes, I got so drunk. And I was just like, you’re crazy.

Like, because she was so worked up because she knows like, I certainly don’t need anybody to step in on my behalf. So she was like not worried about having to do that or. Isn’t really that personality type anyway. But she was just so stressed out by the confrontation and the attention that she like got accidentally drunk.

But I think that they could hear, so, what I know to be true is they could hear parts of it. So I think at that point, we ended up coming to kind of a, close and it didn’t really feel resolved though, at all. and it was just difficult to be like, well, this didn’t really do what we wanted, kind of thing.

Christa Innis: Oh my gosh. Okay, so then the next morning she comes back to the cabin and that’s when you guys talked to her and everything like Yeah. Said that she felt disrespected. mm-hmm. And basically she just kinda leaves saying, I’m happy we talked.

Anonymous Guest: it was hard because. We’d gone kinda the whole day spending the day on the water and before this conversation even happened, and I felt so unresolved.

 It seems as though she kind of came into the day with a cleanish slate and was really trying to put everything behind, but not really, addressing it necessarily enough to put it behind. Mm-hmm. She kind of just said, well, that happened and now it’s over. and so as the day went on, I just kept.

Feeling so much more tension building up, because I was like, how are you going on? As if like, this did not happen yesterday and we had, this is not really resolved. and so I was like, I’m gonna say something. And I was like, I wanna say something. And I was like, I need to right here.

So we kind of, you know, approached it and I just said like, I felt very disrespected by the comments that were made and the way that you spoke to me and the tone that you spoke to me. And I said, essentially I felt like she was. Damaging the relationship that we did have and like to me as a person, like I felt like a wounded bird and somebody’s just like punching it, I just felt as though like I was already down and it just felt like I was getting punched. And so I tried to communicate that I didn’t really feel a lot of, again, apologetic energy from her. it was more so just like trying to find a means to an end or trying to get to the end. Mm-hmm.

Resolution—or Something Like It

And, it was hard. And then as I’m saying things, I’m more verbal processor, but as I’m saying things, I’m trying so hard to get off my chest to say it and to, feel it and to communicate it. And I just kept feeling like my blood pressure rising, like everything was just getting more. And she goes in for a hug and she’s like, I’m so happy.

We talked and I was just like. shaking. Mm-hmm. And like, I was just like, oh my God, I’m gonna die. So it was really hard because I felt like I was trying so hard to do everything the right way. And then finally I get it all out and I feel, no bit better. Like not even a single percent better.

 but we were having tension in the conversation. And then my fiance kind of stepped in and. be more clear and communicate from his perspective. Maybe someone she was more open to listening to. and, you know, he was just kind of shutting down some of the other things that she was saying.

And she, again, more, a little bit more receptive maybe to him. But, the problem definitely was coming from me and maybe my more outspokenness. in general about the situation. So it was, really hard and I was like, well, we, I wasn’t really happy. We talked, I’m happy I said what I said.

But yeah. You know, I don’t feel like immensely better because of it at all. Yeah. So,

Christa Innis: that’s how I, kind of understood it while I was reading it. Yeah, because it seemed very, like you were very open with her, you were very forward with how you felt, and then she was kind of just like.

Okay, happy we talked. Bye now. And I just picture that being like, oh, she’s trying to just brush it, put it under the rug, which I get to a certain extent. Yeah. Like let’s move on. But also like you did a lot, of hurt. You caused a lot of issues. Yeah. The way you acted is gonna create this little barrier now between.

Your son and his future wife. okay, so now let’s get to the new stuff for two part two. Yeah. Yeah. It’s been almost two months. You said since the incident, and you made an appointment to address shopping with your mom, your fiance’s aunt and his mom. When I read that, I was like, whoa. Okay. So she’s still invited, she’s still coming along.

Yeah. How did that go? what’s been going on since?

Anonymous Guest: Yeah, so. I felt as though it was still my responsibility to extend an olive branch or regardless of kind of where our relationship was, that that was something that I had to do, and ultimately it would’ve certainly caused more damage if I didn’t invite her, if she wasn’t a part of it.

and then giving her the opportunity to maybe make some adjustments as to how we’re handling, like wedding stuff. Like if she felt as though something really was wrong in the way she handled, like the venue conversation, stuff like that. Here’s your opportunity to handle it differently. so we did go dress shopping.

 the aunt, the mom, my friend, you guys obviously mentioned the first part like bringing, like a mean friend. I did have a friend there that was like. Prepared to potentially like, fend off any comments or any mm-hmm. attitude from really anybody, ultimately wasn’t needed.

The dress shopping actually went really, really well. She right, I think she just had, had a lot of, big feelings at the time and they’d kind of settled at that point up until then. and that was, you know, like in September. So that was like quite a few months ago now. But, we checked that box, like we did that, and then I continued to dress shop with who I, not who I wanted necessarily, but just like who other groups of people I wanted to go with.

So she kind of went the first time and then proceeded to them, check in and understand like how the process was going for me. ’cause I didn’t buy anything that day as I continued to shop. and that kind of went from there. since then I would say it’s been better. It’s definitely been hard because

it’s not the same as it was. And there’s pieces of me that just feels sad about that and like wondering, like, is it gonna be like this forever or is other situations gonna bring up more explosive feelings? Like, could this happen again essentially? Mm-hmm. and so.

My fiance and I started premarital counseling last end of last year, kind of as this was settling down much after the dress shopping. And we have learned a lot in there together about like this relationship, with us of course, but then with her and our families together and stuff. And so that’s provided us with a lot of like learnings.

And something I’d recommend to literally everyone, doing premarital counseling and then. Talking about like common issues that you guys face together, which this was one that we were facing kind of together. Mm-hmm. And it gave us a lot of clarity. It gave me a lot of clarity as to how like, you know, she was feeling and she was kinda operating out of a state of fear and maybe feeling as so like her son’s finally getting married, kind of feeling.

And so I was like, better. Understood. I think her perspective, and we never really had like a long conversation about like, let’s look back on this kind of thing and I don’t think we ever will. but I’m trying to, understand like what I learned from the situation and how I could take it forward into the future.

And I. If something else happens again with her or any one of our family members, like how, essentially I have the tools and that we have the tools to like get through something like that based on what we’ve learned. So we’re on improving that relationship, with her and, we have, gone up to their house and stayed with them and, spent time with them outside of that.

And it’s, Definitely like more positive than it was. I wouldn’t say it’s just the same as it was before, so. Mm-hmm. But at the same time, like maybe it’s a lesson learned that the, distance and like the separation of. Maybe we don’t need to talk every day, or maybe we don’t need to be involved in every decision was like a huge lesson learned for maybe her or on both sides of just like what this dynamic is now that, he does have a fiance and someone that he’s building a life with and to talk to every day.

And so maybe if you guys aren’t talking as much, it’s because we’re talking a little bit or whatever that looks like. it’s a lot of change, so I totally understand that. But. It’s definitely been more positive than it was then. Like we’re on a small, incline, kind of, like getting

Christa Innis: better, getting back to like how things were.

No, that’s good. And I think that will give a lot of people hope too through like communication and you make a good point too, about. It might never be back to how it was because sometimes when you see a certain side of people or you see how they treat you in a certain way, you’re like, okay, I have to tread these waters lightly because you’re afraid of like, okay, am I going to say the wrong thing or is my boundary going to offend them again?

And so I think it’s smart to like in those moments be like, okay, I am gonna like. Just tread lightly. Keep my distance a little bit. we’re gonna be respectful of each other. so I think your story can help people see that like communication can go far and you can only do so much. Like when someone’s being like, difficult like that.

And just like giving the silent treatment, that was probably her. Working through everything, like what’s happening here. I’ve never been told no like that before or I’ve never had a boundary set against me. Or they think like, oh, a boundary means I’m a terrible person. I’m not a terrible person. Yeah. And so they immediately get like defensive.

So I feel like you are so like gracious with her, like giving them like time and like space to like, I mean, not necessarily like you asked for time and space, but she just No.

Anonymous Guest: Yeah.

Christa Innis: But yeah, I think sharing these stories are good. Like we were kind of talking about before recording, it’s like sharing these stories are good because.

Anonymous Guest: People that are going through something similar can be like, oh, okay, I’m not crazy. I went through something like this. Or I am a mom and I was crossing the boundary for my son-in-law, or my daughter-in-law. yeah, I feel we learned a lot on how to tackle maybe quote unquote problems as a couple.

’cause I feel like most often people either. seek help in the relationship. ’cause they’re obviously fighting with each other. but this was kind of a common thing that we were going through together. And so it was something that was very difficult in terms of balancing, well, this is his mom and his relationship.

So a lot of what we’ve learned, I think, kind of moving forward is that like we each deal with our own families. and mine’s not, absolved to the drama. Like there’s stuff there too. And, I think that. I deal with that and he deals with his, and it’s not so much that we are individuals dealing with our, it’s just because what we’ve found or what I found is that like families can probably be more receptive coming from their own family members.

So, kind of crossing that communication, like me talking directly to her is not a problem, but could probably be, be better received. Potentially became from him. Mm-hmm. So we started kind of saying, well if as long as you feel the same way, if we feel the same way, and this is a situation that happened with both of us, like you can handle it.

or you can address it or what that looks like. it changes every situation. But that was a big lesson learned. And then. I’ve done a lot of like work and under justand understanding relationships, and there’s just like a path to expressing yourself and then letting it go that you kind of have to follow when you cannot change what people think.

You cannot change how people react. And so the best thing you can do is, be clear and say how you feel, focus on the outcome that you want to get out of it, but. If you want to change people’s emotions in a situation, like you have to stop That’s not something that you can change.

you can only focus on, if you want an apology or do you want to be listened to, but like, you cannot change, you cannot ask for empathy. You cannot ask for understanding. Like those things are not something that you can ask for. Mm-hmm. And then if, like those things are happening and the situation becomes reactive, you kind of have to walk away.

So again, learned a lot from the situation that in general I think it’s just good life advice and relationship advice. But I think there is hope, for other people dealing with this situation and or even dealing with conflict like this in general, it. I think it’s just all about like using those emotional intelligence tools in order to have, productive conversations on difficult topics and

Christa Innis: mm-hmm.

Strengthen

Anonymous Guest: your relationship from within. So when you deal with stuff like this, it’s not me versus you, or it’s not us versus anybody, it’s just, Kind of just more communication than this tension and this big, outburst or this big long situation.

Christa Innis: So, yeah. Yeah. No, I feel like those were such great like parting words that people can hold onto that advice.

’cause like we all could use a little therapy and I feel like that was like very helpful, like to just take to our own relationships. ’cause especially a lot of people that listen. Have either dealt with this kind of situation or similar situations, or they might in the future. so I think it’s helpful to know, you know, we can’t control other people’s emotions.

All we can do is control ourselves and how we can communicate essentially. So,

Anonymous Guest: Yeah, there’s hope. There’s hope. I mean, it’s gotten better and I assume it’s going to continue getting better. but I think at the end of the day, like this situation happens because somebody cares. So deeply and in some capacity it comes from a very good place.

So it’s difficult as it presents itself, either out of fear or anxiety or sadness, but ultimately like the core emotion is different, or just there’s a lot of change going on, stuff like that. So I feel as though like the intention is always. Mostly always good. and you kind of have to sink back into that and say, well, what can I do to best understand this person?

Knowing that they’re coming from a good place? And if you know they’re not coming from a good place, just don’t interact. Mm-hmm. Just take a step back, stay as far away as possible and until you feel as though that’s the situation, because it’s just probably won’t go anywhere. But yeah. 

Christa Innis: Don’t waste your energy on people like that, that are just trying to make you feel bad.

Yeah, exactly. Awesome. Well thank you so much for coming on and being vulnerable and sharing. I really appreciate it and you speak so well and I feel like, we talked about, like there’s so much to learn from this situation, but I feel like you came out of it like stronger, you learned a lot and I feel like it’s great just seeing that you’re applying it now to like future things.

 so I really appreciate you coming on and sharing.

Anonymous Guest: No, thank you. Thank you so much for having me. And honestly, like I just hope. This helps anyone, so just happy to be here.

Christa Innis: Yeah.


Family Feuds, Bridal Boundaries & Wedding FAQs: With Cora Lakey

Would you risk a lifelong friendship over a wedding rule? Cora Lakey did—and it went viral. In this episode, Christa chats with Cora about the controversial wedding FAQ that lit up the internet, the truth behind her no plus-one policy, and why people still struggle with brides having boundaries.

They also dive into how social media shapes public opinion, how post-COVID relationships shifted weddings, and why guests sometimes act like the event is about them.

If you’ve ever been labeled a “bridezilla” for setting standards, this conversation is the validation you’ve been waiting for.

Join me on Patreon and get bonus content every month! 

Episode Chapter Markers

00:00 Introduction

01:05 Cora’s Social Media Journey

01:35 The Wedding FAQ Controversy

06:01 Wedding Guest Etiquette and Boundaries

17:31 Wedding Drama Debates

30:04 Story Submission: Overbearing In-Laws

33:36 Navigating Boundaries with In-Laws

35:38 The Wedding Guest List Dilemma

37:20 Financial Control and Wedding Decisions

43:01 Handling Online Criticism

49:44 Mother-in-Law’s Wedding Day Antics

Must-Hear Insights and Key Moments

  • The Viral Wedding FAQ – Cora explains the behind-the-scenes of her infamous guest FAQ and why it wasn’t as outrageous as it seemed.
  • When Plus-Ones Become Dealbreakers – Hear how Cora’s decision to limit plus-ones led to the end of a seven-year friendship.
  • Losing Friends, Gaining Clarity – A deep dive into how post-COVID life and weddings revealed who really mattered.
  • Wedding Industry Pressure – Christa and Cora reflect on the unrealistic standards brides face and how it feeds the bridezilla narrative.
  • Boundaries Aren’t Offensive – The duo discuss why people still bristle at women setting boundaries—especially during weddings.
  • Guest Behavior: The Entitlement Era – Cora shares real stories of guests behaving badly and the hard truths brides have to deal with.
  • Misunderstood on the Internet – What happens when a TikTok explodes on the wrong side of the internet? Cora shares how she handled it.

Words of Wisdom: Standout Quotes from This Episode

  • “People don’t realize they can just scroll if they don’t like it.”Christa Innis
  • “Why is it always the bride who’s labeled difficult?”Christa Innis
  • “If you’re offended, maybe you need to look in the mirror.” Christa Innis
  • “Boundaries aren’t mean—they’re necessary.”Christa Innis
  • “Other people’s opinions of you? None of your business.”Christa Innis
  • “People hate women who say no.” Cora Lakey
  • “We weren’t inviting strangers—we were inviting people who mattered.”Cora Lakey
  • “I’ve used these wedding rules hundreds of times in events. They were never controversial—until TikTok.” Cora Lakey
  • “Humans are the only unpredictable element in planning.”Cora Lakey
  • “No one cares about your dog, no one cares about your baby—it’s your wedding.”Cora Lakey

About Cora

Cora Lakey is a TikToker whose content career kicked off with a story involving her own wedding drama! Now with over 100k followers, she covers lifestyle, commentary on all things pop culture – and of course wedding hot takes!

Follow Cora Lakey

Join the Drama with Christa Innis:

Got Wedding Drama? We Want to Hear It!

Your stories make Here Comes the Drama what it is! Share your unforgettable wedding tales, hilarious mishaps, or unbelievable moments with us. Whether it’s a wild confession or a story worth a skit, we can’t wait to hear it.

Submit your story today: Story Submission Form

Follow us on social media for updates and sneak peeks at upcoming episodes. Your stories inspire the drama, the laughs, and the lessons we love to share!

Team Dklutr Production

Blog Transcript:

Note: We use AI transcription so there may be some inaccuracies

Christa Innis: Hi Cora. Thank you so much for coming on. Hi Christa. Thanks for having me. I am so excited to talk to you today. We were just saying before recording, I was like, I feel like I know you through seeing all your content and it’s one of those like funny, like weird things with social media. ’cause when you see someone enough, you’re like, oh, just catching up with an old friend, but we’ve never met.

So how are you?

Cora Lakey: Thanks for coming on. I’m good. I know that’s the beauty of the internet. You make so many best friends all over the world. I love it.

Christa Innis: Yeah. So for anyone that doesn’t know you or doesn’t follow you, can you just tell us a little bit about you and, you, we’ll kind of get into it.

Cora Lakey: So I’m mainly a TikTok creator.

I post basically just what I’m going through in my life and I feel like I got a lot of momentum through my wedding, FAQ, which was very controversial apparently. and I kind of just talk about whatever I’m experiencing in that moment. So ironically, right now I’m going through a divorce, so I’ve been talking about that a lot.

But I’ll continue to talk about my journey through life online.

Christa Innis: yeah. I remember, you were featured in a story about your own wedding, FAQ, and people were like going crazy over it. So let’s talk about that. in this FAQ? What did people have the like, hardest time understanding about it?

The Wedding FAQ That Sparked a Storm

Cora Lakey: I feel like the entire thing was taken, blown out of proportion.

So a little bit about my background. I worked in the events industry forever. I started doing weddings at, you know, the luxury level in Los Angeles, then I moved to doing corporate events at tech companies. So that’s actually how I ended up in the Bay Area. So I thought a lot of these things were just common sense and that people were used to seeing them because in my professional experience, I’ve word for word used these hundreds of times.

So I had no reason to think the internet would be disturbed by it at all. oh man. I think one of them was I implemented, like color suggestions. So it wasn’t necessarily like you have to wear these specific colors, but just gave suggestions of different colors to where I think people were really confused by that.

But now it seems pretty commonplace. I’m trying to think. I haven’t looked at it in so long. I said if people were late that they would be guided to like a waiting area. But I think it came off as very direct. So people thought they would be turned away if they were late to the ceremony. I said there was an unplugged ceremony.

People were upset that they couldn’t be on their phones, like people were just, yeah. just so many things. And one of the parts that I think maybe was more controversial, as I said, we were doing no plus ones, And I think that got a little bit blown outta proportion. I can provide context later on, but I think people thought it was such a hot take not to offer a hot a plus one to a wedding.

and I ended up mentioning that I lost a seven year friendship because of it. And I think that was the thing that people held onto was they were like, there’s like a juicy story here. We wanna hear what’s going on. so I think it just all compounded where, people were kind of picking each one apart until I was like, okay, I need to address this because this is,

Christa Innis: it’s crazy.

Like I was just talking to someone how like whenever a bride has like guidelines or rules or wanna help something, they’re automatically considered a bridezilla. But it’s like, if there were no rules or like people just went willy-nilly, like, then it would be complete opposite. Like, oh, she’s so disorganized, or this was not a good plan, or this wasn’t a good wedding.

And so it’s like you can never win in those situations. cause I feel like when I’m going to a wedding. It’s kind of nice to have some guidelines, but I’m also like a type A like planner person, so I like being like told kind of like, okay, this is what to expect. Here’s kind of like our theme. Or like some colors you might see because I’ve shown up wearing a bridesmaid dress color not knowing, and I was like, oh.

Which I guess in hindsight there’s no way for me to know. But there’s different things like that where it’s like, it’s kind of nice to see some guidelines. I’m still hung up on it. People were mad about unplugged ceremony. I feel like that’s so common and like I get mad about that, that they pay for photographers and they want professional photographers.

I know. Yeah, I

Cora Lakey: think people took my wedding FAQ very personally, and I think it was, 2023. So I think it was at the time where people were starting to analyze the FYP, the for you page and really analyzing that. People truly think their for you page is talking directly to them. And I feel like that’s a form of internet culture where people are chronically online and they don’t understand that we can’t control where the algorithm puts our videos.

And so people were taking it so personally I think a year later it really course corrected and I actually get a lot of support on that video now. Yeah. But it’s just such an interesting time and I think it just all, it was a perfect storm at once. Yeah. Where I was just like,

Christa Innis: this is

Cora Lakey: out of control.

Christa Innis: I know.

It’s funny because I always say that about like the skits I do like, so there’s stories that are sent to me about things that happen around weddings. Right. And a lot of them do have to do with mother-in-laws. I have a great mother-in-law, so I can’t relate to them, but I do hear stories and I do see them however.

When I share a story with a mother-in-law, someone will always comment like, oh my gosh, like you should share stories about mother of the bride, or you should share stories about this. And I’m like, if you’re getting offended, you might need to look in the mirror because like I don’t see a bride Bridezilla story and be like, oh my gosh, that’s terrible.

I’m like, well, I know I wasn’t like that, so I’m not gonna, it’s fine. There’s stories like that, it happens. Like people don’t realize they can just like scroll if they want to or not engage.

Why Women Aren’t Allowed to Set Boundaries at Weddings

Cora Lakey: Exactly. And I think it speaks to a larger issue with wedding guest culture and how sometimes wedding guests can be extremely entitled.

Like I had so many experiences with people not confirming until immediately before or not giving us an answer or acting like it was super inconvenient to attend and. I feel like I see that a lot online as well of people making a point to not give a gift because they’re already attending the wedding.

So I think it’s really important for, yeah, people to analyze their own behavior and be like, no one’s forcing you to go to a wedding. You can say no, and if you say no, like there’s no expectations, no is a full sentence. But at the same time, you’re discounting how incredibly expensive weddings are, how much stress and pressure they are, especially for the bride.

And I think people hate women with boundaries and they hate women that say no and say, I’m not okay with this. And I think we can recognize that brides are the ones planning the wedding 99% of the time. So all that vitriol goes to the bride and it’s kind of messed up. Right. Why are you doing this?

Christa Innis: They’re seen as the controlling or the difficult one because it’s their vision. you hear it time and time again. It’s like people never make comments about the groom. It’s always the bride. I shared a story yesterday that’s been going viral about, this couple had a no, a child free wedding and someone brought a baby and the baby was crying during the whole vow ceremony.

Yeah. And so like no one removed like the baby. No one, like, I don’t know what the details were, why they showed up with a baby when it said child free, but the title of the article was so degrading to the bride. It said Angry Bride, like, something about is mad that crying baby is there during vows or something.

I totally butchered that. But it was all about the bride being angry and it’s like. They paid lots of money. They apparently specified no children. And you don’t remove the baby while the vows are going off. Like so they’re gonna have crying baby during their video. Yeah. And there’s such an

Cora Lakey: easy solution for that.

Just go to the reception. Okay, you paid all this money to attend the wedding, don’t bring your baby to a ceremony. Like things are common sense. And I think that’s why I was so firm with my FAQ because in a professional environment I’ve had to recognize that things just aren’t common sense and people will push and poke and prod you.

So you have to be extremely direct, simple and to the point. So you can be like, Hey, this is outlined here, this is where this was communicated. And if you add too much language and you try to, you know, make it as polite as possible, people just don’t get it. Mm-hmm. And they start to poke and prod at whatever your rules are that you’re trying to reinforce.

So I feel like that’s another way, like my wedding FAQ was so jarring for people maybe was because it was so direct and I think they aren’t used to women saying no and saying, I’m not putting up with this and maybe we need to talk about that.

Christa Innis: Yeah, no, I totally agree. Because we’re just taught as women, I think, just to be like, oh sure, okay.

You know, people pleasers like I always like to say I’m a recovering people pleaser and like even now when I’m firm, I’m later like, was I too firm? Was I harsh? Are they gonna think badly of me? And it’s like this thing that, like this narrative that we put in our heads of like, if I stand firm for something, they’re gonna think I’m a bitch or something.

And so we just constantly question our decisions and like how we talk to people because of that.

Cora Lakey: Exactly. What was so interesting too about that whole situation is my husband at the time wanted a lot of these rules and actually wanted to have a wedding in the first place. So because I worked in the events industry, I wanted to elope.

I know how expensive weddings are. I was like, I do not wanna deal with the production, like how stressful it is. Like I’m gonna be in the professional mindset this whole time and I just wanna like fully relax. And he was the one that really wanted a wedding. Mm-hmm. And I was like, alright, like I’ll use my expertise.

I’ll make it happen. Excuse me. Sorry, my light died. and so that’s where I was like, it wasn’t even a consideration for people that my husband was the one who might have come up with a lot of these rules because we’re just so used to women being like, all right, I’m taking the front seat here.

So it was really interesting.

Christa Innis: But yeah, no, that’s so true about you say like they automatically just assume that it’s the woman when like, it was same like for our wedding. Like I included my husband on every decision. I wasn’t like, this is what we’re doing. This is my day, not yours. Like, it was like, it’s our day. Let’s talk through this together.

And we were very on the same page about like the size of wedding we wanted, like, did we want kids or no kids, did we want plus ones? that kind of thing. And we were very, like, I would say most everyone we invited had a sign, significant other that we knew. So that’s why we had obviously like couples that were like married, but like I didn’t invite like my cousins.

Boyfriend of six months, like, you know, or two months ’cause that I’ve never met. Yeah. So like my pictures. Yeah. So that’s, yeah. So the plus one thing, do you wanna share on your plus one? Yeah.

The Plus One Controversy

Cora Lakey: Okay. this is why I think it got really misinterpreted. So for me it was really important to have just an intimate wedding where we knew every single person, the theme was friend and family barbecue.

Like I just wanted to be really casual, relaxed atmosphere. And I knew that wasn’t gonna be possible with strangers at our wedding. if you followed me online, you probably see I’m like really transparent about the things I’ve been through in life. And I didn’t talk about this in the FAQ because obviously I didn’t know it would blow up, but my dad passed away pretty suddenly and tragically and I knew I would be talking about that a lot throughout the wedding just through, any speeches I did because.

It was such a life altering moment and I really wanted my dad at my wedding. and he wasn’t gonna be there. So it was like a big gap that I was feeling. So I was already feeling really vulnerable throughout the day. And so that was a very firm decision I made from the beginning. No strangers there.

That being said, if we met them even one time, they were invited. So I’ll give you an example. A friend’s boyfriend, I had never met him. I was like, I’m not comfortable having the boyfriend I’ve never met at my wedding. I’m sorry if that makes you uncomfortable. she expressed that that made her uncomfortable.

So I was like, listen, let’s get coffee with him. Like we can hang out. We just don’t want strangers there. Met him, he was great. He was invited to the wedding. Mm-hmm. So if the people, if it was important to them, we wanted it to be intimate to the point that if there were any communication things that maybe didn’t make sense for them or didn’t make sense for us, we wanted to be able to have an open dialogue.

Post-Pandemic Wedding Drama

So that was a great example of something didn’t work for her, she expressed it to us, we made it work. Mm-hmm. Whereas the other friend in the seven year friendship that I lost, like there was no interest in our lives, the wedding. we saw that from the beginning, you know? And I think another thing that was really interesting is this was post covid time.

So a lot of people were losing friendships because covid, like a lot of our relationships changed, a lot of friendships dwindled. And this was an example of a friendship that during Covid, like we had completely stopped talking, so we hadn’t talked in almost two years. Mm-hmm. And I kind of extended an invite as.

You know, an olive branch to be like, Hey, I love you. I loved you at one point, and I would love you to be there. You were there for so much of our early dating stages, but we hadn’t talked in almost two years. And by that point, they had a boyfriend. I never met the boyfriend. I didn’t feel comfortable having this stranger hearing all about losing my dad and how sad I was that he wasn’t there.

So. I didn’t invite the boyfriend and instead of communicating that to me, she just didn’t go to the wedding. So it was very obvious that, and here’s the thing, like she never even communicated to me that was what bothered her. Mm-hmm. It was very obvious from my point of view, because I could see like a behavior shift of like hot to cold when she got the invite.

Mm-hmm. But she had also been telling our other friends that she was upset. I didn’t invite her boyfriend, so I had to hear through other people. And it got to the point that I was like, okay, our friendship is in a place where you don’t even feel comfortable enough to tell me that this bothers you. Like you probably shouldn’t be at our wedding.

You know? Like, you don’t wanna be there. It would be uncomfortable for me to have you there. We barely know each other anymore. So that was what kind of got lost on the internet. Mm-hmm. But I think it’s so easy for people to judge, they see. Yep. Slide on the internet for five seconds and they call you a bitch.

They call you a bridezilla. Yes. And there was so much lost in that that made the decision make sense for us as a couple.

Christa Innis: Yeah. That’s the thing with like social media, people just see something quickly and then they just judge based on that. but yeah, I mean like hearing it, hearing you tell it, I’m like, that makes total reasonable sense to me.

Like, cause that’s the thing, it’s like I read it first as like she was like a bridesmaid, but even then it’s like if you just wanted, like if you just communicated and just met one time, like, especially if the other friend did that, that shows like she was already kind of like dwindling away and didn’t really care enough.

So it sounds like your friendship was already kind of like on the rocks maybe and kind of falling apart.

Cora Lakey: Exactly, and I think the post covid relationships and the weddings that fell into that window, it’s such an interesting conversation because it’s so interesting to me. People just forget that time happened and how impacted all of us were.

And it’s normal and natural that like a lot of relationships fell out and we were all figuring out the messiness afterwards. Like no one in this lifetime has experienced a pandemic before. So I was just figuring it out as I went. I’ve never planned my own wedding before, so I was also navigating the emotions that came with that.

And so I was like, I don’t know, I was just very surprised by how shocked people were by it. ’cause it just didn’t seem like that big of a deal to me with all of the circumstances.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Yeah. I don’t think it’s, I think people are so quick to just be like Bridezilla. but you know, you talking about the friendship too, it’s like I’ve had friendships before where like.

Looking back, it’s like they made their choice to like separate themselves they almost look for a reason to just be like done. cause like, without saying too much, but like in our friend group, there was like a friend we’ve known for like years and years and like we were all bridesmaids in her wedding.

They ended up getting a divorce and she found a new guy and we were like really supportive of it. We’re like, you know, we’re here for you, girl. Like, whatever you need. ’cause it turned out it just wasn’t a great marriage, And when she had this new guy, we were like inviting them to everything.

Like, Hey, come to this. Bring him along. We’d love to meet him. And excuse after excuse, like never showing up and. Then things got really weird and it almost was like she was just waiting for like, I don’t know if it was a controlling, like if he was like control, I don’t know, I don’t wanna put like assumptions out there, but it just got really weird and looking back where like she was looking for a reason just to be like done.

 and so when I hear that, that’s what makes it makes me think of. ’cause I’m like, okay, like she was already kind of dwindling away. She just wanted a reason to be mad and be like, you know what? I’m not going to her wedding because of this, but

Cora Lakey: yeah. And that’s totally fine. But I had to accept that for what it was like, weddings are so stressful.

I was like, I can’t let this take up any more of my mental space. You know? It’s like, it is what it is. I was barely like, at that point I was just like, okay, over and done. I wish her well. And I felt like I just had to keep rethinking about it because the internet was so activated by it. I was like, yes.

It’s crazy that this friendship that really, we both put to bed at this point, it doesn’t mean that much to either of us, but the internet is just making it into something. It isn’t.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Oh yeah. It’s so easy just to change things to make it sound terrible. okay. So we kind of just like dove right in.

I love that. So I feel like we should jump into, these are wedding drama debates. So people send me on Instagram, their hot takes or unpopular opinions when it comes to wedding and I wanna get weddings and I wanna get your side on these. Okay. Not wanting to come to a wedding ’cause there are kids is less valid than not inviting kids.

So, well that’s like worded a very interesting way.

Cora Lakey: Yeah. Like they don’t wanna attend a wedding if there’s kids there.

Christa Innis: yeah, they’re saying like, if someone doesn’t want to come to a wedding. Because there are kids is less valid than someone being like, we’re not inviting kids at all.

that is like a really interesting way of writing that. I don’t put these together so I, ’cause I don’t wanna see them first, but that’s like a very interesting way. I

Cora Lakey: feel like it’s giving, like flying on an airplane and being upset that there’s kids there, like mm-hmm.

You’re in a public place, you aren’t in control of the airline. There’s gonna likely be a child there and you need to get over it. Like if the couple decides they won’t have kids there, it’s your decision whether or not to go. But making a stink out of it is weird. Yeah. I think what they’re trying to say is they don’t wanna attend an alcohol free wedding.

That’s my assumption. Because if there’s kids there, maybe they’re really religious or maybe there’s no alcohol, or maybe they’ll have to limit the quantities and maybe that makes them uncomfortable. So I feel like it is less valid. I kind of get what they’re trying to say, but

Kids at Weddings: A Divisive Topic

Christa Innis: yeah, it’s like they’re going, they’re talking about someone’s response to not wanting to go to a wedding.

So they’re saying like, if someone doesn’t invite kids, it’s okay. But if someone doesn’t wanna come to a wedding because kids are gonna be there, that’s not okay. people get crazy about the kids or no kids things at weddings and I’m just like, whatever the bride and groom want. ’cause I can see both sides.

Like I get not wanting a bunch of kids running around, especially kids you might not know. But I also get where you want, like your family there. Like we all, we invited all our nieces and nephews, but we didn’t have like friends kids there because most of them wanted like date nights out, like away.

Cora Lakey: We did that as well. Just kids of the family and I felt like that was a perfect solution. I have never heard of a wedding guest being bothered by kids being there. That’s so interesting. Yeah. So I think I agree with the original question, like that’s a weird thing to be bothered by.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I’ve had people, when I’ve done like skits on it, I’ve had people be like mad that like, well if you tell me I can’t bring my kid, I better not see any kids there.

I’m like, but there’s a difference if like, if it’s the niece of the bride or it’s the nephew of the groom that is family that’s different than like your the bride’s coworker and you can’t bring your kids. That’s so different. And I don’t know why people don’t see that it’s different. It’s

Cora Lakey: so weird.

I mean, hot take, no one cares about your kid and no one cares about your dog. Like no one wants them there like. It’s not as special to everyone else as it is to you. I love my dogs. They’re my little furry soulmates, but like I know people don’t want my dogs in their face and they don’t want them, you know, off leash at the park.

And the same thing goes for kids. It’s like, I feel like sometimes people. Are just too cheap to find babysitters and just don’t wanna deal with that. Or like they think that everyone wants their kid there and there’s a time and a place for everything. And totally like, I think it’s completely understandable to want the kids in your family that are gonna be in your life forever.

And you’ll see these milestones, like the pictures of my nephew at my wedding, like I cherish those pictures so much and even though like the marriage ended, like I’m keeping all of these family pictures ’cause they’re so special to me and already grown so much. So Yeah, it’s completely understandable to want your family there.

Not a random baby. We’re like, who is this baby? Like, I don’t know you.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Like I think about like coworkers that I invited to my wedding I maybe talked to them like half of them, like here and there. But like if I’d had their kids there, like I feel like that would be weird. They probably wouldn’t have even me, even had me ex or expected me to invite them.

But it’s just

Cora Lakey: your, your wedding is not free childcare. That’s weird.

Christa Innis: Yes. Yeah. Yeah. And every kid’s different. Like some kids are gonna love a wedding and be very well behaved, love the music. Other kids are gonna be like, this is boring. Get me home. So it’s hard to do a blanket statement of that.

 okay. Living together before marriage dampens the celebratory aspects of the wedding. Ooh, that is a hot take. I

Cora Lakey: don’t agree with that at all. I don’t either buy it before you buy it.

Christa Innis: Yeah. And I feel like, you know what, we’re in the 21st century. We don’t need to be like, because I feel like the reason people didn’t move in until they were married is ’cause they lived at home.

So they lived at home until dad gave them away, or, whatever that next step was. You went from one house to the next. That’s a good point. Yeah.

Cora Lakey: I think. So many issues come from living with someone too. When you see someone’s habits like this is disgusting. I don’t know if this is appropriate for a podcast, but I just was listening on another podcast.

They were doing an FAQ section and this girl was having an issue with her boyfriend peeing in their sink every day. Every day. He was peeing in the sink, not the toilet that was right there. Don’t you need to know that stuff before you marry someone? Live with them? Yeah. What? Yeah, I was so deeply dis disturbed and one of the girls was like, oh, like my husband’s done that before.

I was like. My husband never did that, thank God. And I would not be able to look at him the same if he did. Like, that’s so disgusting. No know these things. Like what if someone has really bad hygiene? What if they’re, you know, a slob? What if, you know, whatever the case may be. Like being roommates with someone is so important.

Christa Innis: Yeah, I totally agree. Like if your thing is like, we don’t wanna move in until it then more power to you, I think that’s great. But I don’t believe in putting down a relationship because they do it differently. I like our wedding was amazing event with all our friends and family and I, was never one of those girls that like, when I was like five I was like picturing my wedding and stuff, but once I met my now husband, like I was like, oh this is so, like, I could totally picture it.

I would, this is how I want my big wedding to be, whatever. But I don’t think it took away from it. But it also wasn’t like, oh my gosh, it’s the rest, the first day of the rest of my life I was like. We’ve lived together for, I don’t know, four years at that point. So like, I

Cora Lakey: think this is such a hot take, and I know we’ll get into hot Takes later, but I think people like Overdramatize weddings a lot, and I think mm-hmm.

A lot of it is just feeding into the wedding industry, right? Like the wedding industry is preying on people saying this is the most important day of their lives and they have to look the most beautiful they’ve ever looked, and they have to have the most gorgeous flowers. And being on the other side of that as a planner, it’s not.

Your wedding is what you make of it. Like if something goes wrong, if it’s down pouring, if your dress rips, like it’s not that big of a deal. Mm-hmm. It’s okay to have a redo. Like for our honeymoon. Like I was distraught because of everything that was going on on the internet and I was like, oh my gosh, like I can’t even enjoy this honeymoon because people, like, I was getting hit up by like major news outlets, like hundreds of messages.

Like it was awful. So we just did a redo honeymoon. Like it wasn’t that big of a deal. So like I feel like the importance of these moments are what you put into it, like what you make of it, and not that big of a deal on, the wedding day. Unless you make it that way. And unless you’re like, this will be the most important day of my life.

You know?

Christa Innis: Yes, I totally agree with what you’re saying. Like the way you said that, because there’s such pressure, and I think that’s where this whole like bridezilla like wedding, like, I don’t know, pressure comes from is like this absolute perfect day. And if one little thing goes off, like it’s not gonna be the day you ever you dreamed of.

And there’s all this like high expectations of like, making it be the absolute perfect day. And I agree with making it nice and stuff, but like things might go wrong and that’s okay and we just have to like, move on from it. like I would never, I wouldn’t say I was like a stressed bride at all. Like, people would be like, oh, you’re gonna be so stressed during it.

And I was just like, there was like, maybe a couple times I’d be like, oh, I’m kind of stressed, but like, I love planning stuff. So for me it was fun. But even like the makeup artist, the morning of, I remember she was like. You are like one of the most relaxed brides. And I was like, well, I figure at this point everything’s done.

Like if something happens, like we’re here, like, I don’t know. Yeah.

Cora Lakey: Oh my God, this is so off topic, but what were your thoughts on that wedding makeup artist drama on TikTok? Did you see that?

Christa Innis: Yes. Wait, the girl that like filmed herself taking off the, yeah, I actually talked about this. I was saying like, she planned that all along.

I think. I think so, because who, on their wedding day when things are already tight, puts up the camera, brings their maid of honor in the bathroom and is like, I’m washing this off. Like, she looked good. Yeah. So I don’t think it looked any different when the makeup artist like did it versus when she did it,

Cora Lakey: it looked exactly the same.

Like, I’m like, that’s why I was so confused. Like surely she’s pranking us, right? Like there’s no way. That was so weird. Like, I’m glad the makeup artist got her flowers and everyone got to see her point of view. But I cannot imagine just as a vendor, like how jarring that would be to go online and have someone roasting your business.

Christa Innis: Yes.

Cora Lakey: I tell you, it was awful.

Christa Innis: Yes. Well, and that just happened too with the photographer. Did you see that one? No. Oh my gosh, you have to look it up. I would almost say this one was worse because she tagged the photographer’s company and she was lying. She wasn’t telling the whole story. So basically she shared like 10 photos from her wedding and she was like, when you look forward to your wedding day, and it turns out like this, and it’s like this sad music from home alone.

You’re like the, and she shows like 10 blurry, blurry photos from her wedding. Mind you, if you looked at the full album, which people obviously were able to find, it was gorgeous. Like gorgeous, but the wedding reception was at nighttime and it was outdoors. So as a photographer you can only do so much with that.

But they did a great job with the photos, but she chose blurry ones to share. She chose, and I guess like the photographer then came on and she shared her side and she’s like, I’ve literally been talking to the mom and the girl I offered to give money back, which is not in the contract. I don’t have to, but she’s like, I did.

She worked with them she thought everything was fine. And then this girl who turns out she’s 19 years old, posted everything.

Cora Lakey: Do you think everyone’s looking for like a viral moment

Christa Innis: nowadays? Yeah, I think so. But. It’s like they don’t think when they do that, like it’s gonna come back to bite you if you’re lying.

Cora Lakey: Yeah, I know everything. I was thinking about that with the one that you just posted today with the bride. With the designer that was like ghosting her and then posted all of that during her wedding weekend. Like she absolutely could have sued her for emotional distress and defamation. Like people don’t think about that stuff until it’s too late, like mm-hmm.

We have to be so careful what we post online because. Like she was a hairdresser, like that could completely destroy her business and mm-hmm. People even think of the consequences of that stuff. Like that’s so crazy.

Christa Innis: I know. And that’s terrible. ’cause then people just go to like Yelp and they’re like, before learning the full story, they just see the seamstress post this and they’re just like, oh, one star.

And anyone can leave a review on Yelp. And so it like plummeted her reviews. And I’m like, that’s the scary thing. Like people just want to, it’s almost like they want validation in what they did or something. And so then it’s like, oh, I need someone to side with me so I don’t feel as crappy about what I did or something.

Cora Lakey: That’s very true. Yeah. I’ll never get the witch hunt mentality of the internet. Like the angry mob. I’m like, you don’t even care about this. Like, why are you

Christa Innis: doing this? No. It is quite literally insane that one of the negatives about. Internet, I would say. Um, okay, let’s get into this week’s story submission.

Um, so like I said before we started recording, I don’t read these ahead of time ’cause I wanna react with you. So I’m gonna read it and then we’ll like pause or feel free to stop me at any point to like jump in ’cause these are crazy stories I guess.

Cora Lakey: Okay,

The Engagement Ring Reveal Gone Wrong

Christa Innis: here we go. Okay. When my husband first bought my engagement ring but hadn’t yet proposed, his mom and sister wanted to see the ring.

He didn’t show, he didn’t want to show them before he asked me and told them no. They proceeded to demand, he show them and went through his free, went through his things until they found it. Can you imagine

Cora Lakey: my god?

Christa Innis: No. Something else that happened was he knew we wanted our, was, we knew we wanted our bridal party to be very small.

My sister and his best friend. That was all. I wanted his sister to have a more meaningful role, and I wanted her to do a reading during the ceremony. I came to find out a few months after the engagement that his family was furious, that his sister was not in the wedding. I didn’t really know his sister.

They didn’t go out or even talk to each other unless they happened to be at the same family event. Every time he was home, his mom and sister would yell at him about the fact that his sister wasn’t in the bridal party, and then his grandmother and aunts would call and yell at him. Ultimately, it wasn’t really worth the fight.

I wasn’t fighting. They were over, and I’m sorry, it wasn’t worth the fight. I wasn’t fighting. They were over my Bri bridal party to me, so I invited her to be in it. Wait, so she gave in because they were complaining and making him feel so bad?

Cora Lakey: God.

Christa Innis: Oh, I have so many thoughts. See, I, and I don’t know your take on this, but I don’t think siblings should automatically be in the wedding.

It totally depends on your relationship. Plus it’s like, it’s not his sister or, I mean, it is his sister, but it’s not like his brother on his side. Like you kind of, you choose your bridesmaids. Um, it’s like I had my husband’s sister and sister-in-law, but I get along with them really well. And so like, I couldn’t imagine getting married without them.

But if we weren’t close or he didn’t talk to them, why would I have ’em in the wedding?

Cora Lakey: Yeah, it sounds like there’s a huge boundary issue with this family and that’s so hard. Like overbearing in-laws is so challenging ’cause you love that person, but when you marry someone, you marry their family and mm-hmm.

Unfortunately, it sounds like that’s what happened here. Okay. So like the first part of the story, them wanting to see the engagement ring, I kind of get that. But it sounds like their intentions were bad. So like it makes me think of sex in the city when Aiden was gonna propose to Carrie and the ring was hideous and then Samantha stepped in, I think it was Samantha stepped in and got a gorgeous ring.

That’s totally her style. So that’s what I thought was the case. It’s like, oh, they’re really close to the bride. They know her style. She might not like this ring, but it just sounds like they’re being nosy and have bad intentions. Yeah. And maybe they wanna be close to you, but they are not emotionally mature enough to express that.

Yes. ’cause if they’re walking behind your back and can’t tell you to your face, you’re the bride, what their issues are and they have to go to him, like clearly there’s like a gap in the relationship and, and it sounds like it’s for the best that she wasn’t in your bridal party, but I guess she is now. So

Christa Innis: I know. Well, and my whole thing is like, I get, you know, maybe wanting to help and like see the ring like. But it’s also knowing when no is no, and knowing the boundaries. And so like the fact that they went in searching for the ring, I’m just like, where’s the boundary? So it sounds like he was probably still living at home maybe.

And they knew he hid it in his room or something. I would be mortified. I would be like, do you not understand what no

Cora Lakey: means? Cool. And what’s so scary about that is you think of the future and you want your husband to protect you. Especially, you know, they, that is true. Like they are the line between, you know, those communication issues and they’re supposed to filter everything and kind of keep the peace.

And if this is already happening where you guys are bending over for your in-laws, what’s gonna happen to you? Have kids like, yeah. Are they gonna be weird and put your kid in clothes that you’re not comfortable with? You know? Or like post pictures of them online, if you’ve said no, like, stuff like that, it’s like, mm-hmm.

What, what are those boundaries? And you know. I understand giving in now and trying to keep the peace, but to whoever you are listening to this, just keep this in mind in the back of your head for when you have kids.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I literally just read something because in my like newsletters, I like putting in like little tips for people.

I literally just read something about boundaries and it said, if you start slipping on your boundaries, that’s like letting the other person know, like you’re easy to like cave. So even if it’s a small thing, like you’re like, oh, you can, okay, sure you can come to my wedding, because they kept pushing and they were angry and they were rude about it.

That’s showing that in the future that if I just keep asking or if I just keep telling them, then they’ll say yes to me. So yeah, it’s like who knows what other boundaries they will cross. That is

Cora Lakey: so true. Yeah. I think it’s a good lesson for anyone listening that’s maybe in a similar situation and maybe, yeah, like I think a lot of women, like you said earlier, have people pleasing tendencies and maybe we need to break that cycle.

Yes. It’s not a bad thing.

Mother-in-Law Drama Over the Wedding Guest List

Christa Innis: I agree. I agree. Um, okay. It says something else occurred when we were looking for venues. We invited our mothers to come along with us and to go to lunch. After we looked at a few, our first visit, we knew that it was not the one and had to make an obligatory, obligatory small talk to we could politely decide, um, to decline and leave.

The coordinator asked how many people we were thinking of, and I said, around 100. Well, my future mother-in-law’s face just fell. And her whole demeanor changed. She suddenly said she wasn’t staying and stocked off. We had no idea what happened. We called her after to see if she was still meeting us for lunch and to see more venues.

I don’t remember if she said it curtly or not, but she said no. Um, oh yeah. I don’t remember if she said curtly and No, or she just didn’t answer either way. Several days passed, maybe even a week. She refused to speak to my husband. Wait, just for saying they were, they were inviting a hundred people. Oh. It came out that she was furious.

We were only inviting 100 people. Like communicate. She,

Cora Lakey: yeah, she wanted all her friends there and she knew that wasn’t gonna happen. Ew. But it’s

Christa Innis: like to not even say like, oh, you’re only inviting a hundred, like. I was hoping I could blah, blah, blah. Like she didn’t even like try to communicate. That’s the problem is like, she just was like, I’m gonna leave and ignore you.

Cora Lakey: No, they sound like a very emotionally immature family and I feel like that’s just something to note for yourself in the future because you’re going, like, it’s guaranteed you’re going to have boundary issues with them in the future, like. They sound like very challenging in-laws, and I think it brings up another conversation of accepting money for your wedding.

Mm-hmm. So we made a very conscious decision not to accept money from our in-laws for our wedding. They. We’re very insistent about certain things. So we’re like, okay, you can cover our engagement party or you can cover part of our rehearsal dinner before the actual wedding event. No money, because I did not want anyone to have a say in our wedding.

Like that was something I was very firm about. And that’s something you need to weigh the pros and the cons of is if you are accepting money from your in-laws, you’re technically accepting some of their wishes. And that includes if they wanna have their friends there, you know you’re gonna feel obligated to have your mother-in-law’s, five best friends that you’ve never met if she’s paying for half the wedding or she’s paying for the whole wedding.

Mm-hmm. So way the pros and cons of. Is it worth having a smaller wedding that I am 100% in control of that I can actually afford? Or are you okay with these boundary issues? But it kind of sounds like you’re not

Christa Innis: Yeah, 100%. Because you can be really firm with someone saying like, no, your money does not mean this, but they’re still gonna hold it over your head.

They’re still like certain people, um, they’re gonna be like, well, I’m paying for the open bar, so that means I get to bring all these people. Um, yeah, it’s, or I can drink as much as I

Cora Lakey: want, act like a fool. And you’re like, no, you can’t.

Christa Innis: Yeah, please don’t. There’s, there’s so much discussion around like, pay because, and it’s funny ’cause when I repurpose and like post videos on different platforms, different platforms have different feelings about it.

Um, and you could probably guess which ones, but there’s one that, there was a story where, um, the mother-in-law offered to pay for. The bride’s bouquet and the bride wanted a very specific thing, and the mother-in-law was like, oh, that’s really expensive. And she’s like, I’m happy to pay the difference. Or she’s like, the bride was like, I will pay for it.

Like, it’s okay. I understand you wanted to help. I’ll pay for it. Mother-in-law law was like, no, no, no, don’t worry about it. I offered the mother-in-law then called the B the um, flower shop changed it, so she didn’t know until the wedding and was mortified. She was like, I, this is not what I wanted. I always envisioned whatever flowers and the Cummins on one platform are mixed.

People are like, well, she, the mother-in-law paid for it, so she should be able to do whatever she wants. I’m like, no, she gave it out. Yeah. I’m just like, how is

Cora Lakey: it even a discussion? Yeah, like sometimes people insist like my in-laws like, so like, I’ll give you an example. Like my family is no Christmas presents.

We’ve just always been that way. Like it’s just not a thing in my family. My mother-in-law loves Christmas, would insist on buying Christmas presents and so I would feel obligated to match her energy. You know, like financial stuff is very murky and you know, I felt kind of uncomfortable with that because my family was just so not into that.

But I wanted to make her happy. But I also felt pressure because I was like, well, you’re doing this for me. I have to do it for you. So it’s like. Again with the boundary, things you need to assert your boundaries and way if you’re okay with uncomfortable things like that happening. But also, what’s wrong with the florist?

Like why aren’t they telling the bride that’s so messed up?

Christa Innis: Yes. Why? Like that, that, yeah, that was another thing is like people were like, why would the florist change it? The girl that sent it to me, it happened like 25 years ago. ’cause all these people were like, this didn’t actually happen. The florist wouldn’t do it.

And she’s like, no, it happened 25 years ago. It’s because the ma, the mother-in-law’s name was on it. Like she’s the one that signed it or whatever. And it’s her credit card information or I don’t, something like that. It’s crazy.

Cora Lakey: But also through following you, I have been shocked by how professional unprofessional vendors are.

The wedding dress designer, like so many people, it’s like, whatcha doing? You know? Yeah.

Christa Innis: Yeah, I, I’m always, I say like I’m always and never shocked at the same time because in general I’m still shocked about these stories, but I’m also like, it’s crazy. Like nothing truly surprises me ’cause I’m just like, these stories are just like ongoing.

Cora Lakey: Oh, I feel like I learned through working in events, like one of my mentors told me this, humans are the only unpredictable element. Oh yeah. It was so helpful. And like, especially dealing with a divorce now, like I’ve been so disappointed in people’s behavior and you know, people who said, I love you, I would die for you overnight.

Like, I’m dead to them. So it’s really interesting because, you know, I never would’ve, I would’ve been shell-shocked by that, right? Like before mm-hmm. Working in the vets industry. But because I recognize like human beings are just so unpredictable and like, we just have to accept that in every station of life, whether that’s personal things, weddings, divorces, you know, at work, like whatever it is.

Like if you just have no expectations of people, like it really helps you process when these crazy, dramatic things happen because it can like be so emotionally heavy. You know, you want your wedding today day to be a specific way, and like you have such a vision and then someone does something like that, you know, it’s so calculated and hurts you, it’s understandable to be hurt by that.

But if you just take a step back and you’re like, okay, you know what? Like people are just so unpredictable. Like, I can’t control this. It, it makes you feel so much better about things.

Christa Innis: Yeah. No, that’s a really good, really good point to have because I was just saying something my husband the other day. I don’t remember what, well, I don’t remember what it was, but there was something, and I was just like, this is why like over the years, like I’ve kind of just turned into like, not like a hermit, but like I just don’t get as emotionally involved in things as much because I’m just like, I, like I used to take things so personally, not saying I don’t about some things, but like, or so like emotional and I’m just like, people will, people, Mel

Cora Lakey: Robin says, yeah, yeah, for what we do.

Like we’ve heard it all, you know. So you can’t care what people think.

Christa Innis: Exactly. Yeah. I mean, I’ve had to like stop reading comments ’cause there’s certain people that are just like, so mean and Oh my gosh. And so like my husband will know immediately. He’ll be like, what did you read today? And I’m just like.

Nothing. He’s like, what did you read? And I’m like, well, this person said this and this. And he’s like, stop reading the comments. I’m like,

Cora Lakey: what? Nina’s comment you’ve gotten that you remember?

Christa Innis: Oh my gosh. Um, well, someone told me once, and this is why sometimes I stutter when I’m reading. Someone told me once that, um, I, what’s the word they used?

She was like, you need to, you should practice reading before you put, you film yourself because you sound, um, oh. What’s the word for not now I’m gonna sound dumb. Um, like you’re, you can’t, like, you sound like you can’t read or you don’t know how to, you’re illiterate. That’s what she said. She said, you sound illiterate because you can’t read on camera.

Um, I’ve had people say, um, I didn’t add for something once, and they said, um, I’m a, like, I’m selling out.

Cora Lakey: Oh my God.

Christa Innis: I was like, do you know how many I like turned down like, I barely do ads. Barely. And I was just like, really? I was like, I do things to like help brides, um, or you know, people, but Yeah. Um, I get mean ones on YouTube a lot.

Like they’ll say like, I’m like. Talking too much. I’m like, well, don’t watch it.

Cora Lakey: Oh my God. Yeah. YouTube is ruthless. Like YouTube shorts is a dark place on the internet. It’s like Twitter almost. I was shocked. Like when you have a video go viral on there. Good luck. It’s, it’s not pretty.

Christa Innis: Yeah. YouTube, I probably, I like stopped reading ’cause like this girl like ripped me apart and won one time.

Yeah. I’m so

Cora Lakey: sorry. That’s okay.

Christa Innis: I can laugh about it now.

Cora Lakey: It’s good. It’s good. Dinner table fodder. Is that what they say?

Christa Innis: Yeah. I usually need like a good week and then I’ll be like, fine. Yeah. Um, like, and, and the, and I I think it goes back to the people pleaser thing, right? Where I, I want to reply so that they either like understand me or they feel bad that they said it.

And there has been, weirdly enough, there’s been two circumstances where I’ve replied to like a mean comment. I. And they’ve actually messaged me and they’ve, they’ve been like, I’m actually really sorry. I said that. And I thought about like sharing it to be like, Hey guys, see, it does help, but I don’t know.

Um, yeah, one lady said like, I’m sorry, I was having a really bad day. I don’t know why I criticized you like that. Um, I think she like criticized how I talked or I said a word wrong or something. And she’s like, oh, I should have never said that. And another person apologized to, so then there’s like this people pleaser in me that I’m like, I want them to like see that I like, this is why I did something, or this is like why I do this kind of content.

And, but then I’m like, I can’t explain myself to everybody. It’s not Did it

Cora Lakey: make you feel better when they messaged you or was it just like, oh, okay. You

Christa Innis: know, ah, that’s a good question. I think it made me feel better, I think because I was like, you know what? Everyone’s allowed to have a bad day. Um, it just kind of sucks that they.

Felt the need like to come online. But my thing is that anyone that bullies online is probably dealing with something very bad in life, or they’re just an upset person. Like

Cora Lakey: yeah,

Christa Innis: like

Cora Lakey: humanizing the trolls is the best way to go about it. I think like whenever, whenever I’m having a really bad day online, ’cause my videos go viral on the wrong side of TikTok all the time.

I dunno why. I’ll literally go somewhere crowded. So I’ll go to like Whole Foods when it’s four o’clock after work or something, or like five o’clock, and I’ll look at all the people around me and be like, okay, I’m seeing these real human beings face to face. Like, do I care what these people think about me?

Like, would I care right now if, you know, if I was telling my story to them face to face, would they have the same reaction as these people online? Probably not. Mm-hmm. Because you know, when you’re a real human being and you see a human being face to face, like you aren’t as critical and you aren’t as harsh.

And I think sometimes, you know, the trolls. You know, they think that the people on the other end of the camera are robots. They’re not real people. Mm-hmm. And vice versa, I’m like, this is just a bot troll. Like this isn’t a real person. And then I’m like, wait, this is like a real person that, you know, potentially is going through something horrible or maybe there’s something wrong with them.

And like, it’s not my place to figure out what their problem is. Yeah. And I just have to,

Christa Innis: yeah. I saw something the other day where it was like, other people, and I’ve heard this before, I just needed a refresher. It was like, other people’s opinions of you is none of your business. And I was like, yes.

Because the internet opens us up to everyone’s opinion. Right. And it’s like you, we never used to get that. Like, if I had put something out in the universe before, like if I wrote something or if I acted in something, I wouldn’t know what everyone’s thought was. But now it’s like people put their every thought out there, and it really isn’t our business to know.

Like, if someone thinks we’re garbage or like we don’t know what we’re talking about, like. I don’t know. We have to like block it out a little bit.

Cora Lakey: It’s so true. And like it’s understandable to care. Like your brain is not supposed to know all of these opinions about you. You know? Like, especially I think you’re only supposed to interact with like 10 people, like in a week.

I forget what the statistic is, but like, if you’re looking at like, you know, your normal circle of people, your friends, your family, your coworkers, like knowing their opinions, it makes sense. Like it’s normal. You’re interacting with them every day. Well then you amplify that by hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people.

It’s like, it’s not normal for your brain to be able to compute what all these randos are thinking about you. So like it’s so normal to care. Mm-hmm. But it’s how you respond to it that makes all the difference, I feel like.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Yeah. I feel like I’m constantly learning of like how to like respond to people like that.

Cora Lakey: You got this?

Christa Innis: Yeah. Oh my gosh. Okay. Um, back to this story. Okay. Another thing, we asked our families for their list of guests well in advance so we could stay on top of things and keep within the budget. My mother-in-law said she was working on it. No problem. We had time weeks, and then a couple of months go by.

We realized she hadn’t given us anything at all. Once again, my husband asked for her list. She said she was working on it. More weeks go by again. We realized we still had nothing from her. So we decide next time to see her in person. We would ask her again. She blew us off again. Weeks go by and we went to visit her and this time we asked if we could just go through her address book.

See, I feel like they’re giving her way too many chances. I would be like, after two times of asking, that’s it. Sorry. Like you’re so scared of

Cora Lakey: her.

Christa Innis: Yes, I know. I’m like, I feel like it’s just. You always wonder, like a lot of times, like the brides write the story and so I’m like, is the groom like feeling like he’s in the middle or she’s trying to appease him still?

Like what’s, I dunno what’s happening here. they asked if we could look at her address book. She came and took the thing away. So that was a no. Okay. Then I’d be like, then you’re not getting a list.

Cora Lakey: No. Yeah. What’s

Christa Innis: the problem?

Cora Lakey: Three strikes and you’re out.

Christa Innis: Yeah. My husband ended up coming up with his own list of people.

His mom might wanna invite why and ran it by her she still wouldn’t give up addresses. He spent hours using dial up internet to find addresses. See why is

Cora Lakey: so weird?

Christa Innis: I feel like they’re being too nice. I’d be like, okay, if you don’t send us a list, then you’re not gonna have anyone to invite. Yeah.

Cora Lakey: You have X date.

This is due. The venue needs it. We need to send out postage.

Christa Innis: Yeah, it’s not

Cora Lakey: by this date, you’re not getting invites. It’s so simple.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Because she’s already basically telling you, without telling you that it’s not a priority. It’s not important to her, or she just doesn’t wanna invite anybody

Cora Lakey: that’s beg her for a

Christa Innis: list.

Cora Lakey: Yeah. Like that’s where I wanna know like, how much is the mother-in-law paying, like if she, is she paying for a hundred percent of the wedding? Because that makes a big difference. Mm-hmm. Like that’s why she can act this way and kind of do what she wants on her own timeline because if she’s paying for it, that makes sense.

If she’s not paying for anything, it’s like, whoa, whoa, whoa. Like why are you letting her walk all over you? You know? Yeah.

Mother-in-Law Ruins Wedding Day with One Comment!

Christa Innis: Well, and in the beginning for her to act so mad about the a hundred people comment, but then never communicate. It’s because I wanna invite more people or because, oh, I thought you’d have a bigger wedding.

Like nothing. She just is like being like sour and just being passive aggressive with everything, which is just like, okay, I don’t like it. I don’t get it. Okay. almost at the end here. Sorry, we’re kinda running over. okay. Which leads us to. I completely forgot about this part until one of your skits took me right back.

This leads me to the ceremony, which I thought went great. My husband seemed a tad odd, maybe a bit preoccupied, not runaway. Grew and Preoccupied or anything. It was just hard to pinpoint.

 Right after the ceremony, we were getting our picture taken and he informed me that as he was walking his mom in, she told him that she hated his vest.

So he spent our ceremony self-conscious. She did that on purpose.

Cora Lakey: okay. I feel like we need to have a conversation about overbearing mother-in-laws because I’m worried for this girl. Yeah. Like, this is such a long story of like point by point, by point, all these aggressions from your mother-in-law,

Christa Innis: uh, and how controlling or conniving is it to do it right before you’re walking down?

Cora Lakey: Yeah. Like,

Christa Innis: you know, you’re gonna get in his head. And just like almost remind him of like, I’m your mother, this is where I stand.

Cora Lakey: I think like, too, we wanna give people the benefit of the doubt. Like sometimes they say things that are, off the cuff or maybe thoughtless that you’re like, okay, maybe they were just being, thoughtless in that moment.

Or maybe they’re dumb. Like whatever. Like, but no, like, something I’ve really accepted recently is like, we’re all adults and adults are intentional and they are taught to think before they speak. And an adult woman made an intentional choice to make an aggressive comment to make your husband uncomfortable.

Mm-hmm. And that seems like, yeah, you’re right. It’s asserting dominance. And especially like, I think in the wedding ceremony, the tradition part, right? Like it’s like his family. And then there’s a transition where he becomes your family. So then they become the extended family and you’re the immediate family.

And it sounds like she recognized that was happening in a few minutes and wanted to put one last dig in.

Christa Innis: Mm-hmm. Gross. I don’t know girl.

Cora Lakey: I’m kind

Christa Innis: of

Cora Lakey: worried about you.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Oh my gosh. she said it was mostly covered up by his tux jacket and you couldn’t even really see it. So there you go. and the last thing, two to three years later, so they’ve been married few years.

Oh, well actually I don’t know how long this story happened though, but my sister-in-law got married and my husband was a groomsman. I was not sat with the family, nor was I in a single one of her wedding pictures. That is so intentional. Even after they added the sister in the wedding.

Cora Lakey: My god, this family is so immature and petty and just protect yourself.

Like I feel so bad. Like we need an update also. Yeah. what’s going on now? Because I feel like, yeah, these couldn’t be isolated incidents.

Christa Innis: No, I know. I wanna like reach out to her and be like, how long ago was this? What update do we have? Can we get more to this? Because that is, I mean, I have so many questions too, like what ended up happening with the guests?

Was she still mad? ’cause they stuck to a hundred people. What’s his sister-in-law’s deal? They allowed her to come in the wedding and then she still is like, mm-hmm. Despite you, I’m not gonna have you in the wedding and not even sat with the. So

Cora Lakey: weird. Why, like, did you watch Secret Lives of Mormon wives?

Yes. It sounds like Jen Affleck and her in-laws, like how they were so glowing and nice to the one and then to her, they’re just so dismissive.

Christa Innis: It’s just so sad. Like it’s like that. mother-in-law or in-law thing where they like picture a certain person to be married to their son and when they don’t meet their expectations, they treat them a different way.

But I’m like, he’s made his choice. He’s an adult. Like he chose this person to marry. She’s now a part of the family. But I also, as the husband, I wanna be like, you need to back up your wife first. Not saying he’s not, but to see that she’s not set with the family, I would be like, mortified.

Why Isn’t He Defending His Wife?

Cora Lakey: Yeah, let’s talk about the husband.

 not to sound like Kim Richards, but what, like, why is he not defending you? Like mm-hmm. That really bothers me because your husband is supposed to protect you. Why is he not doing that? Like, if my husband did not say, you better change the seat right now. Like, I would be so upset. Like, you don’t wanna like force someone to do something they’re not comfortable with, but I’m making broad assumptions here.

It sounds like he’s the only boy in the family and they’re very protective of him and cuddle him maybe. And maybe he needs to step it up and protect his wife, you know? Yeah. It’s like, no, like your wife should be the most important person in your life. You needed to do things to make her comfortable. And it sounds like he’s not asserting boundaries with his family.

Christa Innis: no. That’s where I got in the beginning when they like just started searching for the ring that he was like still living at home. And so they had that control over him of like, you know what, you’re still a boy living with mom and your dad and sister or whatever. And so we’re gonna tell you how to do things.

I don’t like it. I don’t like it. I don’t know. Maybe wrong girl. What one girl? Yes. Okay. I know we’re a little over time, so I’ll uh, do this last little thing with you and then we’ll, so this is our weekly confessions. So I’m gonna read confessions that people sent over to me and, we’ll just, we’ll react to them.

Okay. This one says, my in-laws wanted me to lie to their friends why they didn’t go to their wedding. And I told them the truth. Why?

Cora Lakey: Well, yeah, why are they putting you in that position? That is weird. We need more information here. Like, why do you know these

Christa Innis: people? I’d be like, I’m not, so she or she or he, I don’t know, but they were like told to like, lie about something.

But like in-laws are like grown adults. I don’t know. That’s weird. this person says, I hated my mother’s dress at my wedding. Couldn’t even fake it when she showed it to me. Aw. Oh no, that’s bad. Well,

Cora Lakey: whatever makes her feel pretty though. Because you know, a lot of people hate the bride’s wedding dress and it’s like no one should care, but the bride, and I think the same goes with your mother-in-law or your mom.

Like as long as she feels pretty, who cares? Like Exactly. Everyone’s only looking at you anyway. No one cares about anyone else.

Christa Innis: Yeah. As long as she’s not wearing a white wedding gown as the mother of the bride, its fine. Yeah, exactly. This last one says, I secretly don’t want to take anyone with me when I go wedding dress shopping.

And I’m gonna say, you don’t have to take anybody with you. It might be better to go by yourself if it might be overwhelming. I think that’s so

Cora Lakey: valid. And that is a hot take I have is like, I’ve never understood why wedding dress shopping is such a big deal, and like why we have to make it a production.

Mm-hmm. ’cause you wanna make sure that you are not being influenced by any other opinions. Yeah. And you feel you’re most beautiful and it’s really hard to do with other people. Like, I don’t know, like, especially like as women, it’s natural, we’re self-conscious about our bodies and like, I don’t want people to see me changing in and out of dresses or like get their opinion on my hips and my boobs and my butt.

Like, no, like So do whatever makes you feel the most comfortable and like sometimes your friends, bring that confidence out in you. Mm-hmm. And that’s great if you want them there. Like, I had people there, but at the same time, like. I, feel like it’s weird to have so much pressure around that.

Yes. Because it takes like 10 plus appointments. Like I know people who went to like, Emily Dato for example. Like she went to so many different appointments and she didn’t bring anyone and she’s a badass influencer. So successful. So like who

Christa Innis: cares? Yeah, exactly. Like you have to listen to what makes sense for you and what you’re comfortable with because if you’re hearing so many opinions and you know you’re gonna be influenced based on those, don’t invite them or do like a secret dress shopping just by yourself first.

You know what kind of style you like or pick it out first and just pretend like you can’t find anything with anybody else. Whatever you need to do to protect your piece.

Cora Lakey: Yeah,

Christa Innis: I love

Cora Lakey: that.

Christa Innis: Well, awesome. I know we went over a little bit, but I just wanna say thank you so much for coming on. It was so fun hanging out with you and like chatting and you so many good hot takes and opinions.

Yeah. I forgot we were recording halfway through. I’m like, oh yeah. I feel like I’m chatting with a

Cora Lakey: friend.

Christa Innis: I know. Me too. I know. It was fun to kind of just like. Go with the flow and just see what happens. well thank you so much for coming on. That was so much fun. Can you tell everyone where they can follow you and anything you’re currently working on?

Cora Lakey: Yeah, so you can follow me on TikTok Cora Lakey, and my Instagram is Cora Bry line, my ex-husband’s last name. I’m trying to change it so hopefully I’ll have Cora Lakey across the board. yeah. And right now I am just going through a lot of life changes. I am moving into my starting over apartment and I dunno, maybe we can do a different episode about divorce because that’s a whole other topic.

But yeah, stay tuned. Life updates coming.

Christa Innis: Awesome. Well, sounds good. Thank you so much.


Bridesmaid Demotions, SIL Drama & Tough Boundaries with my MOH!

What happens when your vision for the perfect wedding collides with reality?

In this episode, I sit down with my best friend and matron of honor, Ivette, for a candid and hilarious conversation about the highs and lows of wedding planning.

From juggling family expectations to incorporating meaningful cultural traditions, Ivette shares how she navigated the chaos of planning her wedding while staying true to her values. We also dive into some of the wildest wedding hot takes submitted by listeners—prepare for strong opinions and unfiltered reactions!

Whether you’re a bride-to-be, a bridesmaid, or just love a good wedding story, this episode is packed with relatable moments, laughs, and real talk about what truly matters on the big day.

Join me on Patreon and get bonus content every month! 

Episode Chapter Markers

00:00 Introduction

02:40 Wedding Memories and Friendship

06:55 Wedding Planning Stress and Traditions

11:21 Hot Takes and Wedding Drama

28:37 Wedding Planning Chaos Begins

29:13 Bridesmaid Drama Unfolds

31:44 Family Tensions and Wedding Demands

43:58 The Wedding and Aftermath

Must-Hear Insights and Key Moments

  • The Reality of Wedding Planning – Ivette opens up about the stress of balancing her dream wedding with family pressures.
  • Bringing Culture Into the Celebration – How Ivette honored her heritage through unique wedding traditions.
  • Hosting a Full House – The chaos (and comedy) of accommodating 11 guests in a tiny apartment.
  • Wedding Hot Takes – Christa and Ivette react to bold listener opinions on cash bars, unplugged ceremonies, and more.
  • The Bridesmaid Selection Dilemma – Do brides really choose bridesmaids based on skills and aesthetics?
  • Setting Boundaries in Wedding Planning – Ivette’s take on standing firm against outside expectations.
  • What Really Matters on the Big Day – The moments that made Ivette’s wedding truly unforgettable.

Words of Wisdom: Standout Quotes from This Episode

  • “Weddings are supposed to be about love, but somehow, they always bring out the drama.” – Christa Innis
  • “Your wedding is YOURS—no one else’s opinion should dictate your day.” – Christa Innis
  • “Bridesmaids should be chosen based on friendship, not just talent or aesthetics.” – Christa Innis
  • “A wedding guest list is not a free-for-all. Boundaries exist for a reason!” – Christa Innis
  • “At the end of the day, no one remembers the little details—only how they felt celebrating with you.” – Christa Innis
  • “I wanted my wedding to reflect who I was, not just what looked good on Instagram.” – Ivette
  • “Family is important, but you can’t let their expectations take over your wedding.” – Ivette
  • “The stress of planning is real, but the love and support of your people make it worth it.” – Ivette
  • “Bridesmaids should stand beside you in life, not just in photos.” – Ivette

About Ivette

Ivette is a mommy, a wife, and a psychotherapist in training. She loves girl talk and giving unsolicited advice. She’s all about conversations that matter because she believes people matter. She was also Christa’s Maid of Honor in her wedding.

Join the Drama with Christa Innis:

Got Wedding Drama? We Want to Hear It!

Your stories make Here Comes the Drama what it is! Share your unforgettable wedding tales, hilarious mishaps, or unbelievable moments with us. Whether it’s a wild confession or a story worth a skit, we can’t wait to hear it.

Submit your story today: Story Submission Form

Follow us on social media for updates and sneak peeks at upcoming episodes. Your stories inspire the drama, the laughs, and the lessons we love to share!

Team Dklutr Production

Blog Transcript:

Note: We use AI transcription so there may be some inaccuracies

Christa Innis: All right. I’m so excited for the episode today. And I wanted things to be a little less formal because I have one of my very best friends, Ivette here, who just so happened to also be the matron of honor in my wedding. And so I thought it would be more of just like it. A fun hangout session because we’re busy moms and this is how we hang out these days on zoom call.

Ivette: and I knew that we were going to do this and I was like, we need to have a drink because we just need to relax, enjoy ourselves and have fun.

Christa Innis: Seriously, I know. I feel like we actually need to just start scheduling these because it’s just so hard to get together with everyone’s schedules and the kids.

It’s just like, right now, both our kids or all our kids, I should say are in bed because that’s just like perfect time to just. Exactly.

Ivette: Yes.

Christa Innis: What are you drinking today, Ivette? Margarita.

Ivette: It’s my go to. You can never go wrong with tequila. You make a

Christa Innis: good margarita. I know and I’m like, that sounds so good.

I’m drinking some wine. this is not sponsored but a brand sent me this. It’s called Grazi wines, right? And it’s really delicious. It’s a rose. It’s a rose. Yeah. It’s like no sugar added, but it’s a boxed wine. I don’t know. That really sounds like it’s sponsored. I swear to God it’s not sponsored. but anyways, cheers.

Cheers to hanging out. All 

Ivette: right, let’s get into it. Virtual hangout reminds me of our COVID hangouts.

Christa Innis: Oh my gosh. It’s so funny you said that because I was just looking at pictures because I was like, Oh, I want to do a little post that I’m going to have you on the podcast. And I was like, Oh my gosh, 2020 we had like weekly virtual, like game nights.

Yeah. It, like, changed everything.

Ivette: I know. Thank God that you, like, would set that up with not just us, but other people, because I was just going stir crazy.

Christa Innis: Oh my gosh. Same. was mostly Zach. Like, he’d be like, we need to, like, call people. And then once that started, we’d be like, yeah, let’s, like, get this going.

So I feel like we would call you guys. We’d call, like, my cousin in Texas. Like, we had, like, a little group going, and it was so great to connect with people because it was like, you couldn’t go anywhere.

Ivette: I’m like Zach’s sister was on too and like we were all just hanging out. Yeah. Yeah.

Christa Innis: Yeah.

Ivette: Good times.

Christa Innis: Yeah, we needed that. Oh my gosh, I’m so glad you said that. Like, bring me back. Someone posted something about 2020 Today and they’re like, isn’t that crazy to think that was half a decade ago? And I was like, no.

Ivette: That’s wild.

Christa Innis: I feel like so much has happened since then, but the same time that feels like yesterday.

Ivette: Yeah, same, but also so many lifetimes ago, you’re right.

Christa Innis: Yeah, I feel like that’s just how life goes now. Alright, before we get too far into it, can you just tell everyone a little bit about you and like, what you do? You’re like, oh my gosh, pressure. yeah. I mean, I feel like there’s like, there’s so much to know, and, but just Okay, so I thought about this,

Ivette: and Okay, I’m going to start it like this.

So for those of you that don’t know me, no, I, I’m joking. for Christa’s wedding, I was like, that was how I started my speech. I said, you know, I asked my husband for all this advice on how to start my speech. And he’s like, whatever you do, don’t start it with for those of you that don’t know me.

And so I did that. but yeah, I mean, I met Christa through my husband, who’s actually her husband’s friend. And he was the Best man in their wedding. And then Zach was the best man in our wedding. but yeah, I’m currently a mom of two. I’m a grad student about to graduate in eight weeks. and yeah, I think I’m a really authentic, real person.

. I like to be vulnerable and get to know people and so I’m not really good with surface level conversations. I like to get deep and get to know people. So

Christa Innis: yeah are that person that like we I feel like that’s when we like started connecting is when we’re like Oh, we love these one on one conversations Like we would just get lost in conversations like it didn’t matter what was going on around us

Ivette: Yeah,

Christa Innis: and we would like it literally went from like us Knowing each other to very like very service level, knowing each other to like in distance.

Like we’d be like, oh, okay. Hi Eva. Hi Christa. And then all of sudden we’re like, bam. Like we’d be texting all the time when we see each other. We’d be like these deep conversations. And then it was just, the rest

Ivette: is, like, I felt like you were my partner in crime for like a good amount of time before the babies came.

Like for sure.

Christa Innis: Yes.

Ivette: And like, yeah.

Christa Innis: I feel like those last few years before. Like COVID, and then like, obviously doing our virtual calls a lot during 2020. Those years, like, really, like, brought us together, I feel like, and now, like, we were just saying, now it’s been, like, years. I mean, because I, probably first met you when Zach and I first got together, which was 11 years ago now, which is crazy.

Or almost, going on

Ivette: 11, going on 12, I don’t know. Yes. I will, I still remember the day that I met you. Like, I will always remember the day that I met you. Which is so weird, because I tell people that. I’m like, isn’t it so crazy? I think I’ve told you this before. Like, it’s crazy to think that you always meet, like, you always remember, like, the important people in your life.

Like, I remember meeting you. I remember meeting Matt. I remember meeting, like, some of my other best friends. And, like, anyone else, it’s like, I don’t really remember. But I, like, Remember like what people are wearing and so yeah,

Christa Innis: yeah, like those vivid moments that stick in your mind Yeah, no, that’s funny.

LikeI don’t know. feel like the same way I was just looking back at like Wedding photos too when I was like picking out stuff and I was like, oh my gosh like even that like for my wedding I feel so long ago And yeah, just all the craziness since then okay, before I get too, like, blabby because Y makes me chat a lot, so I’m gonna slurp.

Ivette: Not going to lie. I may have had like a tiny little shot to keep up.

Christa Innis: Hey girl, this is moms after dark. I mean, I know when this episode comes out, I’ll come out in the morning. But if you guys, if you’re listening and you don’t listen to it till later have a glass of wine with us, have a margarita with us, drink a choice of coffee, you know, what have you just run like let loose and hang out a little bit.

so Let’s get into crazy stories and some wedding hot takes, but I kind of want to switch it up a little bit, like Talking about your own wedding. I know I don’t like saying Oh throw people under the bus. No, I’m not saying that I’m talking about your own wedding. Like what was like the planning experience for you?

like I know you were really stressed during your wedding planning and that was like A lot. You kind of, you talked about having a lot on your plate at that time. So like, what’s something like unforgettable about your own wedding experience that you kind of just like held on to? like good, you were saying?

I brought up the stress, but like, yeah, like what kind of like was your planning like? And then like looking back, you’re like memories that you held onto about it.

Building a Wedding with Purpose

Ivette: So, yeah, I think planning was really stressful because I really wanted to, like, stick to my values and be like, okay, this is what I want, this is what I like, but also, like, more importantly, I wanted to build a foundation for my marriage, and I wanted the people that I feel like helped Change my life for the better or we’re like really important into like my pivotal story of like this is who we’ve at Was this is who I am now I am like proud to be this person this woman entering into marriage And I want those people to like stand beside me not just to come to my wedding but to be like listen I support you through any season in your marriage, right?

That’s super important to me And so I think I was stressed out because so many of those people Don’t live in our state. They live in other countries. They live in the U. S. But maybe they live on the West Coast, right? or even the East Coast. So for me, it was really stressful to get everyone together at the same time and make sure that they were, like, taken care of.

Like I could take care of them the way that they’ve taken care of me, so I think that’s, that was really, like stressful and then of course, you remember, like, we had our apartment in Chicago and I think there was like 11 people staying at our place, like, we had a one bedroom apartment in Chicago and it was like body after body after body, like just anyone sleep anywhere, you know, like during our wedding season, so that was intense.

Um, like the

Christa Innis: epitome of Ivette, like you, I remember specifically, there was like one moment in all the craziness where it was just you and me like in your apartment and you were like Really worried about like pleasing everyone around you and I was like just take a breather It’s your wedding. You should enjoy and you’re like but Christa There’s people from everywhere and we like to have a moment.

I was just taking it like it’s okay But you’re like you were hosting so many people and I like when you say it that way, too. It’s like people are flying from another country or from another side of the country And so you put a lot of pressure on yourself.

It’s very normal.

Ivette: Yeah and then I think the biggest takeaway is like, I am bilingual. I speak Spanish and English and I wanted every single person at my wedding to feel like they were seen and like. understand like, Oh, this is a part of me. Like, so just being very true and then very true to myself.

And then also like, it’s so sweet when you get to have, like, I’m sure you remember your wedding, like every single person that has ever like, meant anything to you. Like that’s like the sweetest thing in the world. And so I think that’s just like the biggest takeaway. I’m like, can we renew our vows just so that all these, you know, our favorite people are together again.

Cause That’s so special. Yeah,

Christa Innis: one of my favorite things about your wedding as like a guest was all the like Cultural and traditional things you kind of like brought in together and just made it your own Like there are certain things that you guys did that I’d never seen at weddings before which I was like, this is so fun This is so cool.

Like, can you explain some of the things that you guys did at your wedding? Like was like the bridge thing, right?

Ivette: oh, oh, yeah, so there’s just like Mexican traditions that we wanted to incorporate into our wedding, and we just, it’s just been passed down through generations, and I really don’t really, I don’t know what they mean, I was just like, oh, I’ve seen this done time after time, and I don’t know what the meaning is, but it’s important to, like, follow those traditions, and, be true to my roots kind of thing, and so, um,

Christa Innis: Oh, I love that.

That was like one thing I couldn’t stop talking about. I was like, it was so beautiful and unique to like you and your story. And I thought that was just like, it was really cool.

Ivette: Yeah, you’re talking about the, it’s called La Vibra de la Mar, which is like, everyone lines up and hold hands and you like, the groom is, Um, and he’s standing either like on a chair or being held by his groomsman and then the bride’s on the other side and then he’s like holding up her veil and everyone’s like running like through the gas, like holding hands, like really, really fast and then the music speeds up.

You keep running faster and faster and people are tripping or losing their shoes or falling over everywhere. And so, yeah, yeah, it’s a really fun tradition that we do. And there’s a couple of dances that we do as well, like country style dances that we do, line dances.

And so, yeah.

Christa Innis: Yeah, that’s

Ivette: awesome.

Christa Innis: I love that. All right, let’s get into some hot takes. So these are opinions, some very strong that people send me on Instagram. We’re just gonna react to them together, and just give me your first reactions. Okay, first one is, all lettings should be unplugged.

Ivette: Oh, okay, this is hard. Okay, I agree. I agree, but being a mom, I’m like, oh, that’s hard. Like, have your phone for, like, emergencies. But I don’t need people, like, taking pictures or recording, because, like, I paid for a photographer and a videographer, and I want you to, like, enjoy the moment. You know, yes.

Christa Innis: yeah, I don’t see unplugged as like, we’re gonna have you turn in your phone and lock it in a box, heard of like very extreme, you know, places doing that. But yeah, like, turn your phone off and make sure like, you know how to turn it on silent. Or like to vibrate because I can’t tell you the number of weddings I’ve been to where there’s signs literally and people announce it and you still see people with their iPad or their phone and I’m like, no, don’t do it.

Ivette: Yeah. That’s so much worse. I do hate that. yeah, I just, be present. I’m all about being present.

Christa Innis: Yes. Yeah. And chances are as good as the iPhone photos are, the photographer is still going to be 10 times better. Okay, next one says if you are going to have a cash bar, just don’t even have one.

Ivette: Oh, like the gas bill? No, no, no, no, no. No, like they’re your guests. This is like your event. It’s not like you’re doing like, I don’t know, backyard barbecue. No. Oh, like, I feel like you should, pay for the guests or

Christa Innis: something

Ivette: like

Christa Innis: that. So this person says that if you’re planning on having a cash bar, you might as well just not even have one because I think they’re like agreeing.

You should have a bar like an open bar.

Ivette: Yeah, 100%.

Christa Innis: Yeah, I agree I was just telling a story so sorry to people listening if I just told us on a podcast episode Or if it’s coming out soon, but I was at a wedding once where it was open until like 8 p. m. But they didn’t tell anyone. They switched it.

So I remember Zach and I going up to the bar and he ordered drinks and the lady was like, 10 bucks or 15 bucks. And he’s like, Oh, I thought it was open. And they’re like, Oh, it’s switched to cash at eight. And they didn’t announce it or anything. And yeah. Was I at this wedding with you? Cause I feel like I’ve been to this too.

Like I don’t think so. So when Zach and I first started dating years ago. Oh, okay. Those poor people listening are like, oops. No, they want to be listening.

Ivette: Okay. I feel like I’ve been to a wedding like that too, but I feel like I knew that was going to happen. They’re like, okay, like, open bars, closed.

Now it’s like, you know. Yeah. Poor kind of thing.

Christa Innis: My thing is too, it’s like, There’s different levels for what you can afford, obviously. And so I’ve been to all kinds where there’s like, I’ve never, I don’t think I’ve ever been to a hundred percent cash bar. I think I’ve been to ones that are just wine and beer.

And I think that’s great. if only in your budget, you can fit wine and beer and. Like seltzers or like, some kind of pop drinks or whatever non alcoholic. I think that’s great. I do think there should be some kind of beverage that’s offered. That’s Yeah,

I don’t know what I get and there’s also different levels of how formal someone wants their wedding, I get it sometimes that that’s the vibe But yeah, I’m all for I knew I wanted that was like something in my budget I was like, I want an open bar.

Ivette: Yeah, if you’re like getting married at the Drake In downtown Chicago and you’re like having people pay for their drinks. That’s a problem. But like if you know, you’re more conservative and like, Not as wild with your money, then it makes sense. Like, okay, we’re gonna just have like the basic stuff and that I

Christa Innis: totally agree with but Yeah.

Okay. This last one says some bridesmaids are only chosen for their talents or aesthetic. Is this a saying or drink?

Ivette: Yes. Yeah, I didn’t choose bridesmaids because of this, but I have friends who I feel like may have been chosen for this reason. And it’s like, they have the skills, the equipment, that kind of thing. Mm hmm. Yeah.

Crafty or Convenient? The Truth About Bridesmaid Selection

Christa Innis: I feel like I’d be really careful what I say sometimes.

There have been times I’ve felt in the past where I was chosen because I’m very crafty. I’m a crafty girl. I love my crafts. You give me a project. I will. I won’t. ever do like a C minus job. I will do that A plus job. I will give extra effort. And so there’s been a time or two that I was a bridesmaid that I was like, should I have been a bridesmaid?

I don’t know. And it all was great. It was great. But, I think just sometimes you have to really think about down the line or even at that time, like who you want by your side. Not for what they can offer you, but like your relationship to them. i feel like it’s complicated because everyone looks at it differently.

But I don’t know, it’s, I’ve also heard of people, and this is not anyone I know personally, just through stories that people have sent me, it’s just like, they’ll be asked to be in a wedding, and they’re kind of like, they kind of ask themselves, like, why am I a part of this? Like, you don’t even try to be my friend outside of the wedding planning.

so I’ve seen that happen a lot, where they’re more questioning, like, do you just want someone by your side? Whereas

Ivette: I’ve actually had that happen to me before. Yeah, where, Okay. It was like my partner. It was like clear that they were meant to be in the wedding and this person asked me to be in the wedding and it was like, are you sure?

Like, we were both kind of like, why would she ask? Like, it was just really strange. And, you know, of course I said yes. but yeah, it just didn’t fit well. And then of course our friendship isn’t. Yeah.

Christa Innis: I know that’s interesting how that works with, like, it’s almost like a precursor maybe.

Ivette: It’s like, he has 10 people, I have 8 friends, I need 2 more people.

Christa Innis: I need to add somebody. Yes. Yeah. No, I totally see that. Yeah, that’s interesting how that works when you kind of look back and you’re like, Okay, maybe that’s why. I will say, the majority of the times that I was a bridesmaid, it was like, I kind of had expected it. That being said, like, if you were asked today, or do you feel like, I feel like most of your friends are married or, like, committed, like, do you feel like at this point you would be in any other weddings?

Or if someone were to ask you, do you feel like you’re better at saying no if it wasn’t the right fit?

Ivette: I think, okay, so I have a few friends and family members who are still going to get married and I know for a fact that I would say yes. I would have to find a really good excuse for someone who is like a little bit more than a friend kind of thing because that’s just who I am.

It’s like, I’ve always told people like if you mean something, if we’ve had like a relationship in my life, Life like I will never forget you like I will have your back You can call me like 10 years later if we’ve lost touch, you know that kind of thing So I’m just a sucker that way So I want to say like because I’m a mom and I’m busy now and like work stuff Like I would it would be easier for me to say no at the same time I am a people pleaser a little bit which I’m working on.

Christa Innis: So I had to beg you to say no to me, even like when you were doing stuff for my wedding. I remember you had so much going on, just different things that would come up. And I’d be like, Ivette, it’s okay if you can’t come to the bachelorette party. It’s okay if you can’t do this. Like I was like, you’re like, I’m going to be there.

And I was like. Okay, but like, I know the pressure’s not coming from me. Oh, no. No. But I know, it’s hard, because there are people like that, and you put an expectation on yourself. I’m the exact same way when I’m a part of the wedding. okay. I warned you before we got on, but I have a story for this week, and it’s a little long, so I want to jump right in.

if we haven’t been chatting for like, I don’t even know what time I got on. 20 minutes? I don’t feel free to stop me at any point. This week’s story submission. I only saw the beginning and then we’re just gonna go from there. Okay, it says, phew, this may be petty, but this story needs to be told.

My sister in law, let’s call her Lizzie, was a narcissistic Nightmare of a Bride, and she and my brother don’t speak to my family anymore because of her insane wedding drama. Not exaggerating, they have now not spoken to me in over two years and claim to have cut me out of their lives fully and forever with no explanation.

I’m sure you’ll think I’m the crazy one because of that, but hear me out. Let me first say I will not think you’re the crazy one because I, especially through receiving all these stories. There are three sides to every story, and I’m sure you know this in your line of work, like, you can only, like, hear so much and just absorb, you know, what you’re being told, right?

I mean, I don’t want to read into things, but yeah.

Ivette: I’m also such, like, a devil’s advocate, though, so I’m always like, well, we’ll What about this or what about that? I’m like, you know, yeah, sorry to whoever said this, but yes, I am. I’m here to listen I mean, I

Christa Innis: agree with you though, too. I feel like when I first started sharing stories, people would get like, I shouldn’t say people for the most part, people like the stories, but everyone’s gonna be like, you only talk about mother in laws.

How about you talk about mother of the bride? And I was like, well, yeah, Fun fact mother in law could be of the bride or the groom, but okay, and they were just getting offended and I was like well, I try to say stories about all kinds of people related to the story, but I just, the most, most of the stories I get just happen to be from brides.

so now I try to look at it in a lens of like, okay, what are the other details I’m getting? Because sometimes I read a story, I’m like, oh, that’s not, not the best. Not the best looking, but okay. she says I’m the oldest of three siblings. My sister, Cassie is in the middle. These are all fake names.

my brother, Max is the youngest. My brother, Max, and his now wife, Lizzie started dating in college. They’re young in their mid twenties at this point and started talking about getting married in 2020 and planning their wedding before they got engaged, which I thought was a bit weird, but whatever, no harm, no foul until My sister Cassie fell in love with her now husband, oh, Alex, the same year, 2020.

My sister Cassie and her man Alex are in their mid 30s, so they’re older and ready to start their lives together, buy a house, and start a family. They get engaged in the spring of 2021 and tell our whole family they’re planning to get married in a year, March 2022. Yay! We’re so excited for them. Or so I thought.

The Engagement Jealousy That Started It All

Christa Innis Okay. The next thing I know, I get a call from my younger brother, Max, who is not engaged to Lizzie at this point. They’re still just dating, but he’s upset. He tells me Lizzie has been inconsolable, crying and depressed in bed for three days because my sister got engaged first.

Oh my gosh.

Ivette: Yeah.

This is hard. This is hard. That sucks. Sorry. Like, why would that mean anything to you? Yes. Like this, you should be happy. You should be happy for them. Like, that is a really big red flag if you’re like, Uh, I didn’t get engaged first. Like, what about me? Like, I’ve paid my time. No, like, these people are happy.

They’re older. you don’t know if they want to have kids, right? Like, you don’t know what their plan is. Maybe they’re more financially established. You don’t really know. So I feel like if you’re looking forward to getting married and being a part of someone’s family, you should be happy when they reach their milestones too.

And when, The siblings get engaged. Like, why would you make it about yourself?

Christa Innis: I know. Especially because they’re not even engaged at this point. Like, and even if they were, like, us and we’re engaged at the same time. Like, I don’t get the competitive, like, back and forth. Like, that was a similar story I just shared about a girl, like, demanded to be engaged before her, they were dating brothers.

Demand to be engaged before her. And this was like a true story. Someone sent me and it’s just like, I just don’t get that.

Ivette: my sister in law and her husband now they have been dating forever. You actually went to high school with them. But my husband and I, Matt, we actually got engaged before them and.

She asked me like, is it okay if we get married, whatever date, like, which was before our wedding. And I was like, yeah, of course. Like, I really don’t care. Like, I’m happy for you. Like, what can I do to help you? You know? And it was so fun to be in the process together and be like, Oh, look at your ring, look at my ring.

And. What are you doing with this? And, oh, I might bounce that idea off of you, and, oh, that’s good for you, but I don’t like that style, and it was so fun to be a part of each other’s wedding, so.

Christa Innis: Yeah, that’s what people, I don’t get, because it’s like, then you have a fun, like, unit of, like, your family’s growing, like, now you have a sister, and, like, you know, you have someone you can call up, and, like, it’s the same with, like, When a mother in law gets angry or brother in law, whatever.

It’s like you’re just causing more of a barrier like wouldn’t you want I guess people that think like that don’t think down the line like We’re not gonna get along. I don’t know.

Ivette: Right? Oh, yeah, so I can really play devil’s advocate here

Christa Innis: Yeah, but the girl that Wrote this in is on their side

okay. So, and it was their wedding. Oh, and took their wedding year. She said, yes, the reader took their wedding year. I’m like, hang on, Max. What do you mean? It took your wedding year. You’re not even engaged yet. He says, well, we wanted to get married in 2022. And now Cassie is going to steal our thunder because she’s getting married before us.

I’m like, but you’re not even engaged yet, Max. That’s what I like. I had like two of my really good friends, two of my best friends got married the same year as me. And I was like, that’s so fun. Cause I’m thinking like 10, 20 years down the line, we’re the same anniversary year. Like let’s go on an anniversary trip.

Like, that’s the way I think.

Yeah. And you’re like going through all the seasons together. Like it just makes it so much more fun. Like a big party, I mean, I hear of two people getting mad too about pregnancies and stuff and I’m like, I love that. Like, yeah, that’s a thing. That is a thing.

I got a story where a girl was kicked out of the wedding because she announced her pregnancy and they were like, I don’t want you announcing stuff. Well, I mean, people are insane.

Ivette: Oh my goodness. They

Christa Innis: thought the pregnancy would take away too much attention from the bride. I was like If you really care about those people, you’d be celebrating them.

You’d be like, how can I make the day better for you? Because you’re pregnant at my wedding. I was

Ivette: I was pregnant at your wedding.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I was like, I had two pregnant bridesmaids and I thought it was so fun. And it’s so fun to look back at pictures and be like, Oh, like, I don’t know, just looking back at those memories.

Yeah. And then we get to like go through this chapter together with our kids, like.

Ivette: Mm hmm. Imagine like me being kicked out of the wedding because I was pregnant.

Christa Innis: I’m like, I, like what?

Ivette: Yeah, no. That

Christa Innis: needs to be researched in a deep way. I don’t know a laboratory somewhere where people think that way.

I’ll be part of my next psych research. Yes very niche I know she says I’m like, but you’re not even engaged yet max You haven’t proposed. You can’t expect our sister, who’s older than you, to put her life on hold because you guys called the wedding year 2022. It’s not like calling a shotgun.

He’s super hurt by me saying this, and said it’s important that you understand our hurt over this. I’ll be honest, I did not mince words, and maybe that was a mistake, but I said, I love you, but this is crazy. You’re an adult. Please be happy for a sister and stop making this about you. I think that’s pretty nice.

Yeah,

Ivette: and I’m honestly so shocked that this guy, like, bought into his girlfriend’s whatever she has going on, like, in her mind, this, like, game that she’s playing. Like, for you Just sit there and be like, no, my girlfriend’s right, like who you’ve been dating for, I don’t know, a couple years and you’ve known your sister your whole life.

Christa Innis: It’s like, really? Like, I don’t know. yeah, that’s just like a big red flag for me. Nope. Yeah, you wonder what manipulation is going on behind the scenes. What’s

Ivette: Gaslighting there for sure.

Christa Innis: Yes, like, oh, your family is terrible. Like, I’m no expert. I don’t know this stuff just from like seeing stories.

I’m like, if a person you’re dating is pulling you away from your family instead of like celebrating them, that’s It’s a red flag. that’s kind of like textbook, isn’t that? Yeah. Yeah.

Ivette: That’s not good.

Christa Innis: when you and Lizzie get engaged and married, we will be just as excited for you, she says.

For the next four months, my brother, Max, and his still girlfriend, Lizzie, proceed to have lengthy talks with my parents and us about how hurt they are about my sister’s engagement. Oh my gosh. And wedding planning. They say they do not feel cared for or validated in their pain. Cue gagging noises, she says.

Oh, it’s terrible. It’s just, they’re, I mean, and I hate to be like, oh, like, she said they’re 20s and then the older sister’s 30, so I don’t know, like, if that means, like, 23, 24. But they just, they sound very, like, they need to, like, live a little life. But I mean that someone in their 40s could act like that.

So I don’t really want to play the age game, but it just sounds very odd to just not all of a sudden not be happy for your sister because you’re supposed to get engaged first.

Ivette: Yeah, absolutely. And then still not being engaged and still complaining about it. Like it’s my wedding year, but you’re not even engaged still.

That makes no sense. Absolutely. It’s like,

Christa Innis: Okay, I’m going to read into it before we read a little bit further, but it’s almost like the brother doesn’t actually want to get engaged. The younger brother, right? So instead of like, the pressure being put on him, he’s going to turn it on his family and be like, Oh, can you believe that?

Well, now they’re taking your thunder, so I can’t. Because don’t you think if this happened and he really wanted to get engaged and married first, he would just propose?

Ivette: Yeah, he would have proposed like right away. And then set a wedding date before that. And then like beat them to the, yeah, I was just gonna say that.

And then like beat them to the, wedding date. Like. And said they’re just over here crying about it

Christa Innis: and not doing anything.

Ivette: he’s kind of a coward too.

Christa Innis: I think it’s. Him kind of pushing his feet in the sand or whatever the phrase is.

Ivette: No, it’s not that he’s being a coward. He’s like, I know the red flags and this is just giving me time.

Bridesmaid to ‘Special Guest’ in One Email

Christa Innis: Yes. Let’s direct it toward the anger towards my family and not me. Yes. That’s just the vibe I’m getting. My brother, Max, finally proposes to Lizzie in the fall of 2021, and they start planning their wedding for September 2022, six months after my sister’s wedding will take place.

 Okay. For a while, everything is copacetic. I hope I’m pronouncing that right. And then Lizzie starts sending lengthy wedding planning emails that are insane. She starts off with me and my sisters as bridesmaids.

After that, I would not want to be her bridesmaid. Talking about, I don’t know. I guess it’s hard because it’s like you want to just like move forward. And so you’re probably your baby brother. So you’re like, let’s just make things work. But you know, things are going to be. Not great. Mm hmm. but pretty quickly, oh, pretty quickly demotes us to special guests.

Ivette: Oh my gosh, no. That

Christa Innis: might be the kindest thing she’s ever done for me, she says. She wants us to attend a bachelorette weekend, a wedding shower, an engagement party weekend, and the wedding. All separate weekends and all flying out. That’s a lot. That’s terrible.

Ivette: That is. Yes. For her to first be like, yeah, I want you to be a bridesmaid.

Like where, in your timeline of like being a part of this family, do you see that being a good thing? Do you see them saying, yes, I would’ve, that I would’ve been like, no. , no. and then to be demoted, like to demote them? I can’t believe that. I can’t believe that. Like, how do you even have that conversation with them?

You’re

Christa Innis: a special guest now, so you just get like a badge or something. Like, what does that mean? But yet, she still wants them to attend four different things and fly out for all of them.

Ivette: Still come, still pay for everything, still make me the center of attention.

Christa Innis: Yes. Oh my gosh, and she’s probably that kind of bride, like, even if you have like a white speck on your dress, she’s like, change.

Don’t have any white anywhere near you.

Ivette: You can’t have white shoes. No way. You can’t. I don’t even know if you’re like dresses poofier than hers. You’re out. You’re out.

Christa Innis: I was just telling someone how my cousin Jasmine, how when we were out at the bachelorette party, she had a shirt that had like white flowers on it.

And she was like, I won’t wear it. I’m so sorry. And I was like, Jasmine, you can wear that. I literally, you could literally put a white shirt on right now. What? I was there. I know. I didn’t know if you were like, during that conversation, but I was just like, Oh yeah.

Ivette: Yeah. I think we were all like looking at ourselves in the mirror and then she like noticed it.

And then that’s when you guys had like, Oh, that’s,

Christa Innis: yeah. Right

Ivette: before we were leaving.

Christa Innis: I don’t care.

Ivette: you could tell her like her whole outfit could be white and it would be fine.

Christa Innis: Yeah, I was like, I would have been like, yeah, we’re both the brides. I literally don’t care. I’m just happy everyone’s here. And I’m like, and I’m someone too, where it’s like, I, to multiple people, I was like, don’t feel like you have to come to everything or any of it.

Obviously, the wedding’s the most important. So if you can’t make it to a shower or bachelorette, I’m fine. Like, Two or three people couldn’t come to the bachelorette. And I was like, that’s totally fine. Like, people that were in the wedding. And it was like, we moved on. We did our own thing. It was all good.

Like, to put pressure That’s the thing is like, everyone’s different. But like, to put pressure on people. Like, you have to come. Spend all this money. And That’s where people get stressed out. And I’m like, I’m more excited about people just being by my side at the wedding. That was the biggest thing for me. 

She says, okay. I’m like, girl, again, I love you, but I don’t have the money to fly out for four separate events. I can come to two of these. Plus, my sister’s getting married too, so I’ve got her bachelorette and wedding, remember? Which kind of would take precedence, would think. Yikes. Shouldn’t have mentioned that.

We immediately start getting lectured. Lizzie tells us, we told everyone that your sister’s wedding would steal our thunder and look, see, we can’t have the wedding we want because of your sister’s wedding. But it’s like, either way, you are asking people to fly out to four events. Like, that is insane.

Ivette: Yeah.

And then for, I just can’t believe that she’s like, see, like, it’s taking away from my wedding. Like, it’s Get over yourself. I’m over this girl. I’m over her. I’m over

Christa Innis: her. It’s so, like, this is why there’s the name Bridezilla, because of this bride, and I hate that because, like, so many times it’s, like, a nice bride that just has a boundary, and it’s like, okay. 

No, she’s not a bridezilla, but this is like, no, like everyone bowed down to me. It’s my year. I own the whole year. And it’s like, no, that’s not how it works.  

Ivette: No, I’m out. I don’t like her. Yeah.

Christa Innis: And also to like be in the mind of the bride who’s already having issues, you know, with everything. why would you want the sisters to be at your bachelorette party if you don’t like them so much?

Where’s that?

Ivette: Yes. That perspective. Perfect. Like, yeah. It’s like, they’re doing you a favor. Like, by getting married around the same time. It’s like, thank you, yes, perfect.

Christa Innis: Yeah, so you can be with your friends. And I just, I don’t get it. okay, it says, Lizzie and Max continue to rag us about this.

Including the week of my sister’s wedding. With long, ridiculous emails about how they feel abandoned by the family. Because not everyone can attend every single one of their expensive destination events. I wish I was joking and I wish I could copy verbatim the email they sent to my immediate family five days before my sister got married about their hurt feelings.

Also not to mention they’re getting married six months after the other sister. That’s plenty of time to then focus on them, right? Like it’s not like they’re getting married the week after.

Ivette: Literally start sending save the dates right after the wedding. Yeah. Like, yeah, shouldn’t even overlap at all.

Christa Innis: No, that’s plenty of time away from each other.

They’re literally, can you imagine demanding someone to pay attention to you the whole year? Like, this is my year, nothing else can happen.

Ivette: yeah, I don’t, have friends like that, thank God. I don’t think I could be friends with someone like that. No,

Christa Innis: no. It makes me wonder, I mean, how, maybe she only has the sisters.

Because she doesn’t have friends. Yeah, I don’t know. That’s rough. she said they even requested that my sister not speak about her wedding at any of their wedding events. I feel the need to insert here that my sister Cassie is very down to earth, unfussy, lovely and intelligent college professor.

She is not a diva. She never makes things about herself. Or makes herself the center of attention. So the fact that they even felt upstaged by her is truly a masterclass in security. This girl should be a writer. I love this like image. I was going to say that like, she’s so insecure. I think it’s probably too.

It’s like the fact, like the way she just described her older sister, the younger girlfriend or now fiance sounds very. intimidated, almost. Like, oh, they’ve got, like, their stuff together, she’s intelligent, but it’s like Maybe you can just like look up to her. Maybe pick apart a couple like things that you want to like Yes I just I don’t my sister Cassie lovely husband Alex have a beautifulheartfelt budget friendly for Wedding in March of 2022 family and friends attend our Midwest cousins who all have kids are able to attend because the wedding is driving distance for them and my sister thoughtfully planned it over their kids school break my brother Max and Lizzie sleep late miss their first flight so they don’t even make it in time for the rehearsal dinner weird weird how that happened something I now wonder about did they really sleep through their alarms or was it just a stunt to pull the focus Probably.

He,

Ivette: like, wakes

Christa Innis: up, like, changes

Ivette: the alarm, like, on their phone.

Christa Innis: Yes! Oh my gosh. I have no idea. They probably, like, purposely, like, planned a later flight or something.

Ivette: 100%. I think she did it. I don’t think the brother did it. I think she was like, Oh, babe, like, I looked at the flights, they don’t have any more.

It’s just, like, we have to go to the later one.

Hijacking the Honeymoon with Drama

Christa Innis: Mm hmm. It makes you wonder like someone that’s acting like this and like he’s so easily manipulated Or she might make up stories to tell him like, oh, this is what they said to me This is what they did to me and just like victim mode. Oh my gosh. This could be like a whole series After the wedding my sister and alex go to their honeymoon to europe While in Europe on their honeymoon, Lizzie and Max start texting their complaints and grievances about who is not attending their pre wedding events to the family group chat again.

I text them privately and say, hey, it’d be cool if you let our sister enjoy her honeymoon for a minute. If you have issues, please text the rest of us directly, but leave them out of this. Spoiler alert. They don’t block. I’d be blocking. I’d be like, I’m on my honeymoon.

Ivette: Yeah,

Christa Innis: by the way, like

Ivette: Like, maybe through pictures, but like, I’m not, I suck at answering text messages and phone calls.

So my honeymoon, it’s like, Ivette’s dead. She’s gone. You were like, you weren’t even

Christa Innis: thinking about that.

Ivette: No, absolutely not.

Christa Innis: Yeah. I don’t even remember texting anybody on my honeymoon. I feel like we left our phones in the hotel room because we were at a resort. Sorry.

Ivette: I think like, we actually never went on a honeymoon.

We went on a trip. But our trip. that sounds like a bridezilla thing, like, a bridezilla thing, a thing of bridezilla. I don’t

Christa Innis: even know, I don’t know, shut up.

Ivette: I think I only use it for pictures, I don’t even know if I had service. So it’s like, I don’t know.

Christa Innis: Yeah, I would be blocking if someone just kept bugging me I’d be like I need to be in this oasis away from all that And good on this I don’t know whatever the OPS whoever like sent in this story like good on you You’re being a great like Boundary holder for your family.

That’s a lot of responsibility, but I’m proud of you for like stepping in Lizzie makes the next six months hell for my email inbox. She sends detailed look books and dress code guidelines for her engagement party weekend, micromanaging everyone’s travel plans, setting detailed schedules down to the minute for every single pre wedding event.

And giving main character syndrome, I’d say, a whole new meaning. She also continued to complain about how they feel abandoned and unloved by my extended family from the Midwest, who have been invited to their engagement party weekend, but cannot attend. I’m sorry, I would not be flying to an engagement party.

I just

Ivette: want it. And also the fact that you are sending, like, dress codes and lookbooks to the engagement party? Like, it’s not even the wedding.

Christa Innis: Yeah. Like, that’s a lot for a wedding, but that I can understand a little bit more. But an engagement party, you’re going to tell people what to wear, so they have to go out to a store, pay more money.

the engagement party weekend is at a small beach resort town. It’s expensive to fly to and the kids all have school. My sister’s wedding was over their spring break.

I try to explain to my brother and Lizzie saying, hey, the side of the family has kids. They’re not rich and they genuinely cannot afford to come to the event. It’s a multi day event that would put their kids out of school. You’re talking thousands of dollars just in plane tickets, not to mention hotel rooms.

You didn’t even invite them to your wedding. Just invited them to this and they Can’t afford to come. Like the kids. Yeah, they invited the parents and kids, the engagement party, but didn’t invite the kids to the wedding. So, she says, don’t take it personally, you just really didn’t plan this with them in mind.

Telling my brother and Lizzie this truth was clearly a mistake. Lizzie sent our whole family a text saying that it was unfortunate that our family didn’t support or care about them enough to show up. At this point, I really started to feel ill over the fact that my brother was marrying this girl.

It’s just a red flag after red flag. I’m beginning to feel like a prop, because the other thing I haven’t mentioned, she’s becoming a wedding content creator during all of this.

Ivette: Oh my god, I want to know who it is! Oh my gosh, this is bad. We can’t share this!

Christa Innis: Hey, the girl submitted it and you’re all like, I would, maybe share it. She goes, yep, you are that right. She quits her job at a consulting firm to work full time as a content creator and decides that her wedding is the best way to start. We are the props for her perfect Instagram wedding. At this point, I’m hating every minute of her wedding BS, but I’m also trying to keep a relationship intact with my brother because I love him and I’m also like blink twice if you need help.

You know,

Ivette: oh my gosh, this just put everything into like a whole different perspective like it makes sense like everything needs to be extravagant because the pictures need to look perfect because it needs to be filtered. So that you get more followers and I’m not saying every content creator is this way, but this person sounds like this is what they’re doing right yeah

Christa Innis: totally 100 percent terrible.

The Plus One Power Play

Ivette: Two months before the wedding, my plus one is revoked. Lizzie and my brother feel like I’ve defended my sister too much and taken her side during all the wedding drama.

Christa Innis: They want to punish me. My plus one is my boyfriend of a year and a half, and we already bought plane tickets. They can’t do that. I’d be like, I’m not coming anymore. That, yeah. It’s not like, oh, behave and you get a plus one. If you don’t behave, you take it. That’s not how plus ones work. I call my brother and say, Hey, we already bought plane tickets and got an Airbnb.

It’s incredibly cold and rude to disinvite my partner.said that he and Lizzie now feel as if I’m trying to upstage their wedding by bringing my boyfriend! This cannot be real! And they don’t want me making a big deal about it. Oh, they don’t want me making a big deal about their, about, oh my gosh.

Okay, at this point, I’m like, F it. I say to my brother, My boyfriend is going to come with me the weekend. If he’s not invited to the wedding, that’s up to you. You can exclude him. It’s in New York City, so he can find something fun to do on his own. My brother says, If you bring him to New York City, I will consider that as an attempt to draw attention from us on our wedding weekend.

Oh, come. These people are insane. I don’t,

Ivette: I don’t like him. I just, I can’t. I don’t. I would

Christa Innis: not be going.

Ivette: No, I would go. I would go to New York City. I would do all the fun tourist things. I would maybe like, oh, that’s your wedding. Oh, hey. And then just like keep going about my stuff. But yeah, no, I would go enjoy New York City.

I would not want to be a part of that wedding at all. At all.

Boundaries vs. Bridezilla

Christa Innis: I see you wouldn’t go to the wedding. Oh, no. I would go to New York. Yeah. Hundred percent. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I would go to New York. Mm-hmm . Or I’d go to the wedding and like I’d say this, but I would never do this. I’m like, think of something like petty, like wear the wrong color or something.

I wouldn’t do that for all white . Walk in a ball. A ball gown. Ball gown. Yeah. No, I’m like, too, like I just wouldn’t, I can’t do confrontation. I wouldn’t be there. I say, well, we’re not cancelling his flight. He wants to spend time with me and our family, so he will come and he’ll spend time with us outside of the wedding.

You’re the one who disinvited him at the last minute in an effort to punish me. One month before the wedding, I get an email from Lizzie telling me that she needs me to get my hair and makeup professionally done. She’s not a bridesmaid. You can’t make someone do that. She tells me what color to paint my nails, what type of shoes I should wear, and what type of jewelry she expects me to wear.

I respond by telling her politely and a firm boundary. I say, You’ve given us wedding dress code. I will show up looking lovely and appropriately dressed to your big day. You don’t need to tell me what type of specific jewelry to wear or how to paint my nails. I to do my own hair and makeup as I cannot afford to pay a hair and makeup artist of your choosing on top of all the travel expenses.

Thank you.

Ivette: She’s not even in. She was demoted. How dare you? 

Christa Innis: And I’m one for two, where like, even if you are a bridesmaid, give them the option. Like, never You give them

Ivette: options. Yeah. This is who’s doing the hair, this is who’s doing the makeup. If you want to, sure. If you don’t, that’s fine too. You

Christa Innis: feel more comfortable doing it yourself, that’s fine. I don’t care.

Ivette: This is the company, these are the dresses, or this is the color. These are the 10 different styles that they have. Whatever you want on your body, that’s what you choose. Like, you did that for us. Yeah. And, like, this person wants you to do this, this, this, this, this. Like, it has to be that or you’re out. Of what?

Of being a guest of honor?

Christa Innis: Yeah, I don’t even know what that means. This is like, honestly, the craziest story I’ve ever read. Every week I’m like, oh, this is the craziest I’ve ever read. I think this is honestly the most insane. Alright, we got two little paragraphs left. Well, that was the last I ever heard from her.

I went to the wedding with my family and without my partner. The food sucked. The venue was ridiculously expensive. She yelled at guests for accidentally walking into the venue too early while they were taking photos. My brother looks like a hostage. Yeah. My mom cried during the vows, but not because she was happy.

My dad talked to the father of the bride and learned that Lizzie had spent triple of the wedding budget. Yikes. She got all the Instagram footage and TikTok dances and pictures she could ever want in order to launch her career as a wedding content creator. There it is. She cared more about the outer, which I feel like people get caught up in so much.

It was like, they get more into the outer appearance of what everyone’s going to think about their wedding. Less about your marriage, the future celebrating with your family and friends. Yeah. Yeah. A hundred percent. one of her best friends. And bridesmaids don’t even speak anymore. She asked people to pull out their phones during the ceremony and take selfies for social media.

She blocked me on instagram after the wedding because I didn’t post about the wedding and I haven’t heard from her or my brother in two years. This is gonna be sad. My brother used to make Be my best friend. I’m confused and heartbroken and worried about what his life will be like.

Sometimes I peep on their account from my other Instagram where I’m not blocked. I see her keeping up appearances and to be quite honest, she’s building an empire as a wedding content creator. Oh my gosh. To her credit, she works her butt off, but I know that every beautiful highlight reel posted to Instagram has its own dark story underneath.

That’s it. Imagine you and this girl have like partnered up. She’s been on the podcast. Oh my. Oh my gosh, that is so sad. That’s really sad, and that’s the thing with social media too, is like, you never know what’s actually going on behind the scenes when people are Posting all this aesthetic. I mean, you hear about influencers, like renting out jets.

So it looks like they have a private jet just to

Ivette: sit I’ve heard that too. Or like people being accused for that

Christa Innis: is a better

Ivette: way to put it.

Christa Innis: Cause we don’t really know. I guess I don’t really know. Right. And it’s just like, that’s just the whole appearances thing. Cause I mean, it’s just like, I guess if that’s your brand.

Ivette: Yeah. I think like in a day where like you can filter everything, you can like, Be like in your basement and make it look like you’re at some expensive resort somewhere right like people really crave like authenticity and like realness and, like talking about like harder stuff and it’s like, that’s why I don’t even post anymore.

Like, it used to be so fun to post on social media, but it’s like. I think I’ve told you this, like, I’ve struggled because it’s like, why am I posting this highlight of my life when it’s not all, rainbows and sunshine, you know, like most of my days are like crappy kind of, or like I’m busy or I’m tired and yeah, so.

Yeah,

Christa Innis: I know, I totally relate to that because like I, obviously I post on social. But I don’t post a lot of personal stuff because I feel like if I, and we talked about this too, it’s like if I’m looking for that like craving of someone to like applaud my life or to applaud something personally, then I’m lacking somewhere else or I feel like I need something like, you know, or sometime with myself or I don’t know, it’s just like, I’m the same because I used to like, I mean, Facebook days, I used to post all the time in college.

Like, you’d go out for a night and you’d post all 25 pictures. And then it just got to a point where it’s like, who am I posting that for? like, I love to entertain with content now, but it’s like, if I’m just, like, at home, Or I’m out. I’m not. I just don’t post about that stuff.

I think some people get caught up in this where they like start seeing people engage and they’re like, I have to keep it up. But like, that’s stressful. It’s also stressful to keep up appearances like that.

Ivette: I was just gonna say like, she spent triple the budget. And now like There’s an expectation of like, oh, like this is the kind of like space that you are in.

These are the kind of things that you purchase. So like every picture has to either be like that or up it or it’s not entertaining. You know what I mean? But when you’re posting like about your work, like your work is like the center of attention. That’s different, right? And so.

Christa Innis: Yeah, I feel like some of the, my favorite people to follow, like you were saying, they’re so authentic.

Like, oh, I’m trying to think of her last name. What’s her name? Jen. I can’t think of her last name. Elise Meyers is one that I follow who’s so authentic in her story and how she talks and shares, she’ll just be like in her room and just talk about her workday. Jen, who’s a labor nurse. I cannot think of her last name.

It’s gonna kill me. But, um, yes, I sent her stuff. Um, but she to like, she’ll be like hair up in a bun. And she’s like, This is my life right now. I’m like with my chickens and it’s just like very like Normal stuff and like not like I have chickens, but you know I mean like it’s just she doesn’t try to put on this facade of like my glamorous life Like everyone’s life has aspects that are glamorous or nicer but yeah, I think it’s like it’s so easy to get caught up in that and just I don’t know I feel really bad for this girl because it sounds like I can’t speak for everyone, but I’m sure we all can think of someone that’s been into, in a relationship like that where you’re like, he or she is like lost because they’re so enamored in what’s going on with their partner and they’ve turned away from their family. 

Ivette: And I’m thinking to like imagine hard it is like when you’re in a relationship with someone and you’re like, oh, I want to leave or whatever, but then it’s like, oh, what is this person going to think? What is this person going to think? But now it’s like, it’s not just your friends and family. It’s like all of your followers.

All of your business, like not to say that that’s where they’re at, because like, we hope that that’s not the case. Right. But, if everything is based off of appearances, like it’s to be that much harder to change, walk away, be true to yourself, you know, so

Christa Innis: yeah, that was a rough one. That was really, thanks for this girl for sharing it.

I feel like it was probably therapeutic for her to type it all out. I hear that a lot from people. They’re like, I’ve held all this in and so me being able to type it like helped me feel better. So I can’t imagine though, like just having your brother just not speak to you or your family because of their partner.

So.

Ivette: even hearing the story though, I feel like. She did things the right way, like, she was very, like, composed, very mature, and I love the way she spoke about her sister. It was so beautiful. You know what I mean? I feel like her heart is at the

Christa Innis: right place. A hundred percent. Yeah, she did a great job, like, setting the boundary, not letting this girl walk all over them.

Right. and it also goes to show, too, there’s no pleasing people like this, because I think a lot of times people think, like, especially as people pleasers, we think, like, Oh, if I just do this for them, then they’ll understand If I say, okay, then they’ll be fine. And it’s like, no, once you let them tread over you, they’ll keep going.

Yeah. Yeah. So it’s like her with even her boundaries, it was not okay. Cause probably she’s never been told no before. Right. Yeah. Good for her. Yeah. Props to her. well, that was a long story, but thanks Frank. we need to do this more often because it’s kind of fun just to like. Hang out and like have a glass of wine because we never get to do this.

I loved it. Thanks for having me. Thanks for doing this with me. Yeah. so before you go, is there any last parting advice or anything you’re working on that you’re excited about?

Ivette: I’m almost done with grad school. I have like eight weeks left and I’m so excited because it’s meaning that we can actually hang out. We can, my schedule is not going to be booked and maybe the next time if we do this, it’ll be in person.

Christa Innis: Yes. That was our goal for everyone like listening. That was our goal to do in person and I got like, I feel like our schedules are not like It was just hard.

And also we were like, wait, three more weeks have passed. We got to figure this out. And I recorded my closet as of now. And I’m like, how would we do in person? I guess we can go in the living room. We got to find a space. And then I was just naked in that closet.

Ivette: We could just

Christa Innis: squeeze in here. We probably could. We’ve sat in weirder places together. Yes. It would

Ivette: be fine. Normal. Yes. All right. Awesome. Well, thanks for having me. Thank you.


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