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The internet has discovered the ultimate mother-of-the-bridezilla

Taking unreasonable to a whole new level.

It’s safe to say that planning a wedding brings out nobodies best side.

Bridezillas, Mother-in-Laws from hell and disagreeable best-friends – but this has to be one of the worst, most insensitive mother-of-the-bridestories we have ever seen.

Writing into Slate’s well-known agony aunt advice column Dear Prudence, a mother rather naively asked if she was being unreasonable by asking that her daughters handicapped best friend did not take place in her daughter’s wedding.

Say WHAAAAT?

Under the heading, ‘Daughter’s friend being in wedding’, the mother asked writer Mallory Ortberg, aka Dear Prudence what she should do:

My 27-year-old daughter and her best friend, Katie, have been best friends since they were 4.

Katie practically grew up in our house and is like a daughter to me. My daughter recently got engaged to her fiancé and announced that Katie would be the maid of honor (Katie’s boyfriend is also a good friend of my future son-in-law).

The problem is that Katie walks with a pretty severe limp due to a birth defect (not an underlying medical issue). She has no problem wearing high heels and has already been fitted for the dress, but I still think it will look unsightly if she’s in the wedding procession limping ahead of my daughter.

I mentioned this to my daughter and suggested that maybe Katie could take video or hand out programs (while sitting) so she doesn’t ruin the aesthetic aspect of the wedding. My daughter is no longer speaking to me (we were never that close), but this is her big wedding and I want it to be perfect. All of the other bridesmaids will look gorgeous walking down the aisle with my daughter.

Is it wrong to have her friend sit out?

The response from Dear Prudence was exactly what we’re all thinking right now.

“I am having a hard time wrapping my mind around this letter,” it starts.

“I encourage you to reread it and to ask yourself that time-honoured question, ‘Do I sound like a villain in a Reese Witherspoon movie?'”

It continues:

You are, presumably, sympathetic to your own situation and are invested in making sure that you come across as reasonable and as caring as possible, and yet you have written a letter indicting yourself at every turn.

This girl is “like a daughter” to you, and yet you want to shove her to the side of your other daughter’s wedding just because she walks with a limp.

Your daughter’s wedding will be perfect with Katie as a full and honored member of the bridal party.

A limp is not a fly in the ointment; it’s a part of Katie’s life. It is not only wrong to have asked your daughter to consider excluding her best friend over this—it is ableist, and cruel, and it speaks to a massive failure of empathy, compassion, and grace on your part.

You must and should apologize to your daughter immediately, and I encourage you to profoundly reconsider the orientation of your heart.

Speechless.

H/T: Yahoo.com.au

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