My in-laws tried to quietly push my father out of my wedding because he’s a garbage collector.They said it was for “appearances.” I was shaking with anger—until my dad calmly asked for the microphone. After what he said, the room was never the same.My name is Anna. The man who raised me works for the city.My father, Joe, has been a sanitation worker my entire life. My mother died when I was three, and from that moment on, it was just the two of us in a small apartment. We didn’t have much, but we always had enough—heat, food, and stability. He left for work before dawn, came home exhausted, and never once missed a school meeting or my birthday.
He never apologized for his job. When people asked, he said simply, “I work for the city. It’s honest work.”I met Ethan during my residency. When I told him what my father did, I braced for judgment—but he only said, “That’s hard work,” and smiled. I fell in love with him then.They were comfortable, well-off, and quietly ashamed of where I came from. The comments started early and never stopped. Ethan defended me, but the pressure grew—especially when they insisted on a large, elegant wedding to meet their “standards.”My father arrived early, nervous but proud. Ethan hugged him warmly. Still, I noticed the looks, the whispers, the empty chairs around my dad’s table.