
My wife Linda and I were invited to my old buddy David’s wedding. At the bottom of the RSVP card, someone had scribbled:
“LADIES – PLEASE WEAR WHITE, WEDDING DRESSES WELCOME!”
Confused, I called David. He sighed.
“It’s Emily’s mom, Dorothy. She plans to wear her own wedding dress to upstage the bride. She’s done it before — hijacked the bridal shower, mocked Emily’s venue, and even threatened to walk her down the aisle.”
What a plan! We were thrilled to help the bride.
On the day, we arrived to a room full of women in white.
David and I took our post outside, where we spotted Dorothy pulling up in a luxury car.
She stepped out in what I can only describe as a bridal explosion — sparkling tiara, blinding rhinestones, cathedral train.
She looked ready to walk down the aisle herself.
Her husband, Alan, trailed behind her, looking quietly mortified.
David welcomed them warmly, grinning and holding the door open.
Finally, Dorothy strutted into the room.
What happened next? Well, she barely made it two steps inside before realizing something was… very, very wrong.
The entire ballroom was white — white décor, white tablecloths, and white-clad women everywhere.
At least thirty women had followed the anonymous dress code and come in bridal gowns of all kinds — poofy 80s sleeves, minimalist slips, sparkly mermaid styles, and even vintage veils. Some were clearly thrift store finds. Others looked like they came straight from a runway.
Dorothy froze. Her tiara twinkled in the overhead lighting, but the effect was less regal and more clownish in a room full of “brides.”
One woman walked past in a Victorian-style gown and gave her a wink.
“You look adorable, Dorothy. Great minds think alike!”
Dorothy blinked like she’d just walked into a cult.
The real bride, Emily, emerged from the back with her father and the biggest smile I’d ever seen. Her dress — elegant, modern, ivory with a slight blush undertone — stood out just enough from the sea of white to make it unmistakably hers.
Everyone clapped. Except Dorothy, who stood there, frozen in her glory — suddenly just another guest in white.
Linda leaned toward me and whispered,
“Do you think she’ll stay for cake, or just fake a fainting spell to steal attention again?”
David overheard and chuckled.
“Place bets. I give her until the toasts.”
But we were wrong.
Dorothy didn’t even make it to the end of the ceremony.
When the officiant announced, “Let’s take a moment to recognize the love between Emily and David…” she actually cleared her throat loudly — trying to interrupt.
Someone behind her (God bless Aunt Patty) hissed,
“Sit down, sparkle queen. Your time is over.”
Dorothy sat.
But the final nail? During the family portraits, the photographer — the same one who’d shot Dorothy’s own wedding decades ago — said:
“Alright! Let’s do the immediate family of the bride — excluding anyone attempting a fashion encore from 1986.”
The room howled with laughter.
Even Alan chuckled — quickly masking it with a cough when Dorothy shot him a death glare.
She left before dinner was served, claiming a “migraine.”
We all know it was ego whiplash.
And the best part? Emily got every ounce of joy she deserved that day.
David and Emily danced late into the night under twinkling lights, while Dorothy’s tiara sat forgotten on a bathroom counter, abandoned like the stunt that finally backfired.