On our wedding day, everything was perfect—except my sister-in-law Jenna. She sulked through photos, complained nonstop, and rolled her eyes at every turn. Weeks later, when we got our wedding pictures back, she called in a fury.
“Delete every photo I’m in—or else!” she demanded. My wife, Nina, was devastated, but I had an idea.
That night, I stayed up cropping Jenna out of every single photo. She’d insisted she didn’t want to be in them, so I granted her wish. The next day, we posted our pictures—beautiful, joyful memories, minus Jenna.
Her reaction was explosive. “You ERASED me from your wedding?!” she screamed. But I calmly reminded her: she told us not to include her.
Nina braced for a storm, but instead, she laughed—relieved. For once, someone had stood up to her sister’s manipulation.
In the end, we kept our memories, unspoiled. And Nina learned something freeing: she no longer had to carry the burden of excusing Jenna’s behavior.