The bride’s heart was bursting with joy and anticipation on her wedding day, a day she had painstakingly planned down to the last detail. Yet, beneath the shimmer of celebration lay a shadow of hurt and frustration as her parents, who knew the exact time, failed to arrive on time, shaking the foundation of what was meant to be a perfect moment.
As the minutes ticked away, every unanswered call deepened the sting, forcing the couple to choose between waiting and honoring their commitment to their guests. The resilience to start without them marked a bittersweet triumph, a testament to love persevering even when those closest falter.

AITA for starting my wedding on time and not waiting for my parents?









As renowned family therapist Virginia Satir, known for her work on communication, suggests, “. . . feelings are facts, and feelings are information.”. In this scenario, both the OP’s feelings of anger and the parents’ feelings of fury are valid reactions to a deeply stressful and disappointing event, though the expression of those feelings is the core issue.
The primary conflict revolves around boundary setting versus flexibility, compounded by technological limitations. The OP established a clear boundary regarding the start time, which was essential given the financial commitment to the venue and the desire to respect the time of all invited guests. Moving forward without them was an action consistent with that boundary. However, the parents’ inability to communicate their emergency due to reliance on a landline highlights a critical communication vulnerability that impacted their ability to manage expectations during a crisis.
From an objective standpoint, the OP’s decision to proceed was appropriate, as waiting 15 minutes for an unknown delay disrespects the majority of attendees who arrived on time. For the future, the constructive recommendation is for the OP and their parents to establish a clear, pre-agreed communication protocol for high-stakes events. This protocol should include designated emergency contacts (other than the couple) who can relay critical information when primary lines of contact are unavailable.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.






















![[deleted] Info: you realize your parents don't have cell phones...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/bcc8d1894feeecfb462d9180fcbf858b.png)










The original poster (OP) experienced significant frustration when their parents missed the wedding ceremony due to a car accident, leading to conflict. The OP prioritized the strict schedule and respect for other guests, while the parents felt they should have been waited for, creating a clash between respecting commitments and accommodating unforeseen family circumstances.
Given that the OP set clear expectations for timeliness, was the decision to start the ceremony on time, despite the parents’ absence due to an accident, a justifiable act of prioritizing all guests and contractual obligations, or did the severity of the emergency warrant a brief delay out of respect for the parents’ roles in the event?







