Excluded From My Sister’s Wedding, I Booked a Vacation. When the Wedding Fell Apart…
Karma at Work
“Oh, it gets better,” Melissa remarked.
“Mom told Lisa she was acting ridiculous and then they started fighting loudly. Then grandma became involved, saying Emily brought this on herself because she offended the cosmos by not inviting her brother.”
I almost choked on my drink. Melissa was cackling now.
“Grandma lectured Emily in front of everyone, stating, ‘If you had treated your family better you wouldn’t be alone in your wedding dress right now.'”
I leaned back, smirking.
“Wow, that’s beautiful.”
“Oh, and then,” Melissa said.
“Your mother attempted to contact the groom’s family to resolve the situation. His mother just smiled and said, ‘This is your issue now.'”
I had to set down my drink before I spilled it from laughing so hard.
“So,” I said, collecting my breath.
“Where does that leave Emily?”
Melissa sighed, still weeping, still blaming everyone except herself.
“Last I heard she was trying to save the wedding with some sort of backup plan. But let’s be honest, she’s not going to recover from this.”
I shook my head, grinning.
“You know what the best part is?”
“What?”
I took a slow sip from my drink.
“I don’t care.”
Melissa roared with laughter.
“Honestly I don’t blame you. I just thought you’d appreciate knowing that karma did its job.”
“Oh, I love knowing that,” I remarked, smirking.
“Thanks for the update, Melissa.”
“No problem,” she replied.
“Enjoy your trip. And for the record, you did the right thing.”
Zero Regrets
I hung up more satisfied than I had been in years.
They wanted a wedding without me and now thanks to their own selfishness they had a disaster instead.
I grabbed up my drink and raised it to the heavens and I toasted to the best decision I’ve ever made.
Then I turned off my phone and relaxed back in my cabana. Let the beach air sweep away the rest of my shame.
For the remainder of the day I didn’t look at my phone.
Instead I scheduled a sunset cruise, allowed the warm breeze to wash over me, and had a five-star meal by the seaside.
My family was still picking up the pieces from Emily’s wedding tragedy. I was enjoying the greatest steak I’d ever had.
At some point a notion occurred to me.
“Perhaps I should feel sorry for her.”
Then I remembered how she left me out without hesitation.
“Yes, no.”
I took a sip from my wine. I took one last shot of the view and shared it with one caption:
“Zero regrets.”
Finally, with a contented smile, I turned off my phone again. Let them stew.
I was done being their backup plan.
The following morning I awoke feeling lighter than I have in years.
There is no guilt. There will be no tension.
There were no last minute family emergencies that became my job to solve.
Just myself and the sound of waves and an entire day of nothing but rest.
I stretched, ordered room service, and out of curiosity I turned my phone back on.
A big mistake. Within seconds my notification surged.
“You need to stop acting like a child and call me,” Mom said.
“I can’t believe you’re doing this to me. You are so selfish,” Emily responded.
“This isn’t funny. Emily is heartbroken. Do you even care?” Your mother asked.
“We need to fix this family before it’s too late,” an unknown number, possibly my aunt, said.
Cutting the Cord
I groaned and shook my head.
It was almost surprising how swiftly they moved from ignoring me to expect me to cure everything.
Then one message struck my attention from Melissa.
“Okay, I understand you are ignoring everyone, but please read this. Your mother is trying to gather the family for a discussion when you return. Just a heads up.”
I almost laughed aloud. Oh, they assumed I would return as if nothing had happened.
As if I’d just come up and let their guilt trip me and pretend the entire thing never occurred.
Yeah, not happening.
I quickly replied to Melissa.
“Thanks for the warning, but I won’t be there.”
“Wait, what do you mean?” Melissa says.
“I’m extending my trip. They wanted to cut me out? Okay, I’m cutting myself off altogether.” Me.
I could almost see her reaction, a combination of astonishment and amusement.
A few seconds later she responded.
“Okay, that’s iconic. Tell me everything when you get back whenever that is. LOL.” Melissa said.
I grinned, set down my phone, and grabbed up my laptop.
With a few clicks my trip was officially extended another entire week.
There’s no family. There’s no drama, no family discussions.
Just me and the water. They never allowed me to have peace.
And the best part? They couldn’t do anything about it.
Before going to the beach I sent one final text.
“Oh, so you want me around? Sorry I’m too busy enjoying my reactions. Have fun cleaning up your own messes.” Me.
Then for the last time I blocked their numbers.
I put my phone down, ordered another drink, and let the sun warm my skin.
There is no guilt. There will be no tension, no regrets.
Just peace. And it was the best decision I’ve ever made.
