I always imagined my wedding as a quiet, simple day—vows under the trees, good food, and the people we love. Evan and I aren’t flashy; we’re the type to dance in the kitchen and hike on weekends. Everything about our farmhouse ceremony felt peaceful—until Janine, my dad’s girlfriend, decided to make herself the star. Janine is glamorous, loud, and always performing. I tried to ignore it, even when she “accidentally” announced our engagement before we could.
But things changed when she revealed the dress she planned to wear: a white, beaded gown that looked uncomfortably close to a bridal dress. Worse, she somehow saw my dress and contacted my seamstress to request a more “glamorous” version of it. That’s when I made a plan. A week before the wedding, I emailed every woman on the guest list—except Janine—and suggested wearing soft ivory or cream for a cohesive, rustic look.
Then I asked my seamstress to create a second dress for me: bright sunflower yellow with lace accents. On the wedding day, the lawn glowed with women in shades of white. Then Janine arrived in her faux-bridal gown…and froze. Her attempt to stand out instantly vanished. My yellow dress shimmered in the sunlight, and the ceremony unfolded beautifully.
Throughout the night, her attempts to reclaim attention fell flat. Days later, Dad apologized, admitting he should’ve stepped in. He and Janine broke up soon after. When I think back, it wasn’t about revenge. It was about keeping the joy where it belonged—on the marriage, not the drama. And in the end, no one forgot whose day it was.