Three days before the wedding, I found out his mom had the vegan dishes removed. My fiancé shrugged:
“It’s not a big deal.”
No one asked me. I felt erased from my own wedding.
So I cancelled it—two days before—but I didn’t stop there. We’d been planning the wedding for nearly a year. It wasn’t fancy—just a modest outdoor thing at a family friend’s vineyard in Sonoma.
I’d chosen the venue because it felt calm, personal, and I liked that we could customize everything, including the food. I’d been vegan for seven years, not because I’m preachy or anything, but because it’s what made me feel healthy. My family and a few close friends were vegan too, and it meant a lot to me that they’d have good food.
We worked with a local caterer who’d put together this beautiful mixed menu—vegan lasagna, grilled vegetables, some chickpea curry, and also meat options for the other guests. I’d fought hard to make it inclusive. Then, three days before the wedding, I got an email from the caterer confirming the final menu.
There were no vegan dishes listed. I read it twice. Three times.
All gone. Replaced with chicken skewers, lamb sliders, shrimp pasta. I called the caterer immediately, thinking it was a mistake.
He sounded uncomfortable. “Uh, I thought the groom’s mother called to approve the changes… she said you both had agreed.”
I hung up without saying much and went straight to my fiancé, Dario. He was sitting on the couch, half-watching basketball.
“Oh yeah,” he said casually, “Mom didn’t think people would like the vegan stuff, so she made a few swaps. Don’t worry about it—it’s still good food.”
That’s when my stomach dropped. “It’s our wedding, Dario.”
He waved his hand like I was being dramatic.
“It’s not a big deal. Most people won’t even notice.”
But I noticed. And I’d been noticing, for a while now, how little space I had in this relationship.
It wasn’t just the menu. It was how his mom referred to me as “the girl” when she thought I wasn’t listening. It was how Dario never corrected her.
How she insisted on hosting the rehearsal dinner even though we had a plan. How she tried to change my dress fittings so they’d happen at her preferred boutique. And how he always, always shrugged it off.
That night, I lay awake until 4 a.m. By morning, I’d made my decision. I canceled the wedding.
People thought I was insane. Two days before the big day. Deposits already paid.
Guests flying in. Dresses steamed. My mother cried, not because she disagreed, but because she saw how hurt I was.
Dario was stunned when I told him. “You’re throwing this away… over some food?!”
“No,” I said calmly. “I’m walking away because you don’t see me.
You never have.”
He didn’t fight for me. He just got quiet and stormed off. His mom called me later and actually laughed.
“Well, that’s probably for the best. You two weren’t very compatible.”
The way she said it—like she had won something—I swear I could feel the last flicker of regret burn out right then. I spent what would’ve been my wedding weekend in Santa Cruz, with two of my closest friends, barefoot in the sand, eating tacos and crying until I laughed.
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