In the quiet countdown to her dream wedding, everything seemed perfect—four years of love, a beautifully planned celebration, and a custom lace dress that held her deepest hopes. But just weeks before the day she was supposed to say “I do,” her world shattered with a single, heartbreaking phone call from her younger sister, tears spilling over a devastating secret: the man she loved was carrying another woman’s child, and that woman was her own sister.
Betrayal crashed down like a storm on what should have been her happiest moment. The man she trusted, the bond with her sister, the future she envisioned—all torn apart in an instant. It was a cruel twist of fate that no amount of planning or dreaming could prepare her for, leaving her to face a shattered engagement and a family fractured by lies and heartbreak.

AITAH for refusing to give my sister my wedding dress after she got pregnant by my fiancé?















As renowned family therapist Dr. Terri Apter explains, “When a betrayal involves someone intimately close, like a sibling, the ripple effects can be catastrophic because they violate foundational trusts we hold about our closest relationships.”
The OP’s immediate reaction—blocking both individuals and canceling the wedding—demonstrates a strong, albeit painful, assertion of self-preservation following a catastrophic double betrayal. The sister’s request for the wedding dress is highly inappropriate; it shows a profound lack of empathy and an attempt to erase the OP’s pain by claiming a symbol of her lost future. The sister attempts to minimize the betrayal by framing the dress as “dust collection” and pivoting the narrative to a family obligation, suggesting the OP is placing a “man” above their sisterhood. This deflection is a common defense mechanism to avoid accountability for severe wrongdoing.
The mother’s reaction aligns with enabling behavior, pressuring the OP to prioritize reconciliation and perceived social norms over validating her own emotional trauma. The OP’s actions in refusing the request are entirely appropriate; the dress symbolizes what was stolen from her. A constructive recommendation for the future is for the OP to maintain the current boundaries, focusing resources (time and emotional energy) strictly on her own healing process, rather than accommodating demands stemming from the actions of those who caused the initial harm.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.










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The original poster (OP) is facing a situation where her sister, who had an affair with the OP’s former fiancé resulting in a pregnancy, is now demanding the OP’s custom wedding dress for their impending wedding. The central conflict lies between the OP’s understandable desire to maintain boundaries and protect herself from profound trauma, and her family’s expectation that she should forgive the infidelity and sacrifice her personal property to support the new couple’s relationship and the perceived needs of the unborn child.
Given the extreme betrayal by both her fiancé and her sister, is the OP justified in refusing to give up her wedding dress and severing contact, or is she being overly dramatic and petty by prioritizing her emotional well-being and property over her sister’s wishes and family harmony?







