{"id":4979,"date":"2026-06-04T16:13:55","date_gmt":"2026-06-04T16:13:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/readingtimes.online\/?p=4979"},"modified":"2026-06-04T16:14:07","modified_gmt":"2026-06-04T16:14:07","slug":"part-1-my-sister-made-all-seven-bridesmaids-wear-beautiful-lavender-gowns-she-gave-me-a-different-dress-it-was-bright-orange-size-2xl-it-was-the-only-one-left-she-said-smilin","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/readingtimes.online\/?p=4979","title":{"rendered":"Part 1 : My sister made all seven bridesmaids wear beautiful lavender gowns. She gave me a different dress. It was bright orange, size 2XL. \u201cIt was the only one left,\u201d she said, smiling. My parents told me to \u201cstop being dramatic.\u201d"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"xdj266r x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs x126k92a\">\n<h1 dir=\"auto\">PART 1<\/h1>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/z-p3-scontent.fpnh18-5.fna.fbcdn.net\/v\/t39.30808-6\/712086646_122283051926256415_8170140335738543135_n.jpg?_nc_cat=107&amp;ccb=1-7&amp;_nc_sid=833d8c&amp;_nc_eui2=AeF_eRsY8iVas0cHmyA1VmOz-ps4yufgLVr6mzjK5-AtWp5vCTBsnXxHYnch3CG2UZ5Mo3uyeGkPhC71VYpgkN_u&amp;_nc_ohc=7vVT2mpAQmMQ7kNvwF0Zw5c&amp;_nc_oc=AdqfJmTETgPfm-_fCBJlltm12-zlJxn22M6NADozMVFP7SzWRDDIY-pj3zPVxsiLxu4&amp;_nc_zt=23&amp;_nc_ht=z-p3-scontent.fpnh18-5.fna&amp;_nc_gid=7al1dt5LWG_iBhXaIhywow&amp;_nc_ss=7b2a8&amp;oh=00_Af8_1Z2b8oB_jn1J98g9mkAfV5C27VUjs4YNOkDsxsGhhg&amp;oe=6A27625E\" alt=\"May be an image of wedding\" \/><\/p>\n<div class=\"code-block code-block-7\">\n<div id=\"fanstopis.com_responsive_1\"><iframe id=\"google_ads_iframe_\/23293390090\/fanstopis.com\/fanstopis.com_responsive_1_1\" width=\"0\" height=\"0\" sandbox=\"\" data-load-complete=\"true\" data-google-container-id=\"true\" data-origwidth=\"0\" data-origheight=\"0\" data-mce-fragment=\"1\"><\/iframe><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">At the reception, the groom\u2019s grandmother walked up to me. She took my hand and said six words that made my sister leave her own wedding.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">My mother clenched her jaw, aggressively dragging me behind a marble column.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">\u201cListen to me, the Whitlocks have extreme expectations. Your sister needed a flawless, self-made narrative to marry into that dynasty. She had to borrow your engineering background!\u201d<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">I stared at her in sheer horror. \u201cShe told her wealthy new in-laws that she is a structural engineer, and that I\u2019m\u2026 mentally unstable?\u201d<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">\u201cYes! She needed a logical reason to explain why you two aren\u2019t close, and why you are wearing that hideous, oversized orange bridesmaid dress,\u201d my mother hissed. \u201cAccept it, Brooke. Do not ruin your sister\u2019s big day.\u201d<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">She marched back toward the ballroom, leaving me paralyzed. They hadn\u2019t just excluded me from the photographs. They had stolen my entire identity, erasing my blood, sweat, and tears, rewriting me as a tragic lunatic to elevate a liar.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">Disgusted, I turned toward the coat room, desperate to grab my car keys and vanish from this toxic wedding forever. But as I stepped into the dim corridor, a voice drifted from the shadows.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">\u201cYou\u2019re the one who actually finished the engineering program, aren\u2019t you?\u201d<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">I flinched. Sitting on a velvet bench, her hands resting over a pearl-handled cane, was Margaret Whitlock\u2014the groom\u2019s formidable, terrifying grandmother.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">\u201cCommunity college transfer, completed your degree with honors in 2017,\u201d she recited with the clinical precision of a bank auditor.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">My pulse thudded in my throat. \u201cHow could you possibly know that?\u201d<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">\u201cI am seventy-nine years old, dear,\u201d Margaret smirked, her sharp gray eyes locking onto mine. \u201cI never hand over this family\u2019s legacy without reading the fine print.\u201d<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">She tapped her cane twice against the tile\u2014a sharp sound like a judge\u2019s gavel.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"x14z9mp xat24cr x1lziwak x1vvkbs xtlvy1s x126k92a\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">\u201cI strongly suggest you stay for the toasts, Brooke. Don\u2019t leave yet.\u201d Her gaze flicked toward the oblivious ballroom. \u201cYou will want to be in the room for what comes next.\u201d\u2026<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\"><\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">\n<div dir=\"auto\">On stage, the maid of honor projected into the microphone: \u201cA toast to Sloan! A self-made woman who waited tables to put herself through engineering school, built her own firm, and selflessly nursed her dying grandmother\u2026\u201d<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">They were toasting a rotting soul! Every single achievement she listed was STOLEN directly from my life! Below the stage, my mother beamed with the pride of a successful con artist.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">I clenched my fists, ready to swallow the humiliation to avoid making a scene. But across the room, Margaret Whitlock\u2014the groom\u2019s formidable billionaire grandmother\u2014did not raise her glass. Her sharp eyes were locked intensely onto me.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">Then, she placed both hands firmly on her pearl-handled cane and stood up.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">The entire ballroom fell dead silent. Instead of walking to the stage to congratulate the bride, Margaret parted the crowd. She walked slowly, radiating terrifying authority, heading straight toward the darkest corner of the room\u2026 toward my table.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">\u201cPlease, don\u2019t get up,\u201d she murmured.<\/div>\n<div dir=\"auto\">\n<p><strong>The Architecture of a Lie<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Chapter 1: The Color of Caution<\/strong><\/p>\n<div class=\"code-block code-block-8\">\n<div id=\"fanstopis.com_responsive_2\"><iframe id=\"google_ads_iframe_\/23293390090\/fanstopis.com\/fanstopis.com_responsive_2_1\" width=\"0\" height=\"0\" sandbox=\"\" data-load-complete=\"true\" data-google-container-id=\"true\" data-origwidth=\"0\" data-origheight=\"0\" data-mce-fragment=\"1\"><\/iframe><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>I am Brooke Bennett, and I was exactly thirty-three years old on the afternoon my younger sister handed me a garment the glaring hue of a highway construction barrel.<\/p>\n<p>Inside the bridal suite of a sprawling estate in the Shenandoah Valley, seven bridesmaids milled about in the afternoon sun. They were slipping into identical, floor-length lavender gowns\u2014impeccably tailored, whispering of understated elegance and quiet wealth. I, however, stood banished to a cramped utility alcove just outside the main room, holding a stiff, synthetic sack clearly tagged 2XL. It was, without exaggeration, three sizes too large for my frame.<\/p>\n<div class=\"code-block code-block-9\">\n<div id=\"fanstopis.com_responsive_3\"><iframe id=\"google_ads_iframe_\/23293390090\/fanstopis.com\/fanstopis.com_responsive_3_1\" width=\"0\" height=\"0\" sandbox=\"\" data-load-complete=\"true\" data-google-container-id=\"true\" data-origwidth=\"0\" data-origheight=\"0\" data-mce-fragment=\"1\"><\/iframe><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>I attempted to salvage it, pinching the excess fabric at my waist and securing it with a heavy-duty safety pin I had salvaged from my travel duffel. The cheap metal instantly bent under the tension. The polyester bunched outward around my hips, billowing like a poorly packed parachute. When I finally stepped into the main suite and asked my sister, Sloan, about the catastrophic sizing, she didn\u2019t flinch. She merely tilted her head, flashed a camera-ready smile, and delivered her lines.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cOh, Brooke. It was the only one left.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>My parents, hovering nearby, instinctively commanded me to stop being so dramatic. The hired photographer subsequently spent the next two hours physically maneuvering me behind hedges, groomsmen, and floral arrangements to erase my glaring orange presence from every frame. Yet, by the time the five-tier fondant cake was sliced, my sister would be sprinting out of her own lavish reception. She ran because an elderly woman sitting three rows back possessed the one trait my family entirely lacked: she paid attention.<\/p>\n<p>But I am getting ahead of the blueprints. To comprehend the collapse, you must first understand the structural foundation of a family that hands their eldest daughter a clown suit and demands she call it a privilege.<\/p>\n<p>I am a licensed structural engineer. I co-own a mid-sized firm in Raleigh specializing in commercial structural inspections and complex retrofit designs. It isn\u2019t the kind of work that garners magazine covers, but it is undeniably mine. I laid its foundation with a community college transfer, three grueling years hauling heavy trays at a downtown steakhouse, and an NC State degree I funded myself, dollar by agonizing dollar.<\/p>\n<p>My sister Sloan is twenty-nine. For almost three decades, she has operated as the blinding sun at the center of our family\u2019s solar system. She possesses a magnetic charm. She photographs flawlessly. She has a musical, infectious laugh calibrated to make wealthy people lean slightly closer. And on this particular Saturday, she was marrying Daniel Whitlock. The Whitlock dynasty effectively owned half the vineyards and land trusts in the valley.<\/p>\n<p>Our mother, Diane Bennett, had been orchestrating this matrimonial campaign with the ruthless precision of a military general. Every baby\u2019s breath centerpiece, every rehearsed toast, every asymmetrical seating chart was mathematically engineered to maximize our perceived value to the Whitlock empire. I was included in the bridal party strictly as a tactical necessity. A bride who excludes her only sister invites uncomfortable scrutiny. So, I was an obligatory line item on a spreadsheet.<\/p>\n<p>I received the summons via text message a mere three weeks prior. You\u2019re bridesmaid 8, Sloan had typed. No emojis. No warmth. Merely a designated slot.<\/p>\n<p>I should have calculated the variables right then. Eight bridesmaids. Seven lavender gowns. The arithmetic of my humiliation had been finalized long before I ever mailed back my embossed RSVP card. But I lied to myself. I told myself it was family, that I could endure one afternoon of pageantry. I drove four hours north from Raleigh without a single complaint. That is my defining characteristic, my greatest strength, and my fatal flaw: I show up. I reinforce the load-bearing walls of other people\u2019s lives. And Sloan knew exactly how to exploit that tensile strength.<\/p>\n<p>The Whitlocks represented a specific breed of archaic Virginia money. They didn\u2019t have savings accounts; they had generational endowments and buildings bearing their ancestors\u2019 names. Daniel was a genuinely decent, soft-spoken man. He opened doors, remembered the names of catering staff, and seemed perpetually bewildered by his supreme luck in securing Sloan. I liked him.<\/p>\n<p>His parents were polished and pleasant, but the true gravitational center of their dynasty was his grandmother, Margaret Whitlock.<\/p>\n<p>At seventy-nine, Margaret was petite, crowned with striking silver hair, and possessed the rigid, uncompromising posture of a steel I-beam. During the rehearsal dinner, she sat in the front row with both hands resting over the handle of a pearl-tipped cane. She didn\u2019t chat; she observed. She tracked how the florist arranged the peonies. She watched the groomsmen exchange crude jokes. She noted the exact, calculated way Sloan stroked Daniel\u2019s forearm.<\/p>\n<p>Margaret missed absolutely nothing.<\/p>\n<p>I caught her studying me during the rehearsal dinner. I was quietly refilling my own water goblet from a pitcher because the overwhelmed waitstaff had repeatedly bypassed table fourteen. Margaret held my gaze across the crowded room for three agonizing seconds. Then she looked at Sloan, and slowly back at me. A cold shiver, distinct and uninvited, walked down my spine. I assumed she was judging my off-the-rack blouse. I was too busy surviving the evening to analyze it further. I was seated between my Aunt Renee\u2014who relentlessly instructed me to \u201csmile through the pain\u201d\u2014and a groomsman who casually asked if I was \u201cthe sister with all the psychological issues.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>I retreated to my hotel early, sitting on the edge of the mattress with my heels still strapped to my feet, staring at the textured ceiling. I promised myself I would stand exactly where they ordered me, smile on command, and vanish before the bouquet toss.<\/p>\n<div class=\"code-block code-block-2\"><\/div>\n<p>That was the blueprint. But blueprints have a funny way of burning when the foundation is built on gasoline.<\/p>\n<p>Chapter 2: The Stolen Blueprint<\/p>\n<p>The morning of the wedding, I arrived at the bridal suite precisely at 8:00 AM. It was a chaotic masterpiece of champagne buckets, ring lights, and a curated playlist humming through an expensive Bluetooth speaker. Seven garment bags hung in a perfectly spaced row like lavender infantry. The other bridesmaids were already lounging in matching silk robes monogrammed with their initials.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cOh, Brooke, you\u2019re getting ready down the hall,\u201d Sloan casually dismissed me, her thumbs flying across her phone screen. \u201cYour dress is in the small room.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The small room was the linen closet. Inside hung the neon orange disaster. It smelled sharply of industrial dye and shipping containers. After failing to pin it into submission, I walked back out to the hallway and encountered my mother.<\/p>\n<p>Diane was adjusting the sash on a flower girl. At fifty-eight, she habitually dressed for the aristocratic life she believed she was owed. Today, she wore a slate-blue suit with pearl buttons.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cMom, this dress is enormous,\u201d I whispered, the synthetic fabric scratching at my bare arms. \u201cAnd it\u2019s hazard orange. I saw a spare rack inside the suite. There are at least two extra lavender gowns. Let me swap.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>She didn\u2019t even look up from the child\u2019s bow. \u201cThose are for emergencies.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThis is an emergency.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>She finally straightened, fixing me with a look of practiced, absolute closure. \u201cBrooke, do not ruin your sister\u2019s day. You know how hard she has worked for this.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>I stared at her. Hard she has worked. Sloan had never maintained employment for more than eight consecutive months. She survived on quarterly cash infusions from our parents, which she branded \u201cbridge loans.\u201d She was marrying into the Whitlock family with the strategic calculation of a corporate merger, armed with a heavily redacted resume.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cJust put the dress on,\u201d Diane hissed. \u201cNobody is looking at you anyway.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>She pivoted and walked away. I stood alone in the corridor. Ten feet away, hanging on a rolling rack, was a spare lavender gown in a size medium. I could see the tag from where I stood. It was the only one left had been a premeditated lie.<\/p>\n<p>To understand the sheer magnitude of the theft happening that day, you must first know about my grandmother, Ruth Draper.<\/p>\n<p>Gran raised five children in a claustrophobic, single-bathroom house. She baked cornbread that tasted like salvation and stitched quilts that felt like armor. When her lungs began to fail from emphysema, followed by a massive stroke that paralyzed her left side, I was the one who packed my apartment in boxes. I was twenty-eight, two years into my engineering career, and I re-architected my entire existence around her medication schedules and oxygen tanks.<\/p>\n<p>For three years, I bathed her. I read dog-eared mystery novels to her. I anchored her to reality on the terrible nights when the dementia made her forget the layout of her own bedroom. Sloan? Sloan visited exactly twice. Once for Thanksgiving, and once when she required Gran\u2019s trembling signature to co-sign a predatory auto loan.<\/p>\n<p>Gran died at eighty-four on a rainy Tuesday morning. She passed with her fragile, paper-thin hand enclosed in mine, the graduation quilt she had sewn for me draped across her motionless legs.<\/p>\n<p>I tell you this because of a fragment of conversation I caught during the rehearsal dinner. I had been carrying a stack of gift boxes when I walked past Sloan. She was leaning close to Daniel\u2019s emerald-draped aunt, adopting a tone of solemn, tragic bravery.<\/p>\n<p>\u201c\u2026nursing my grandmother through her final days,\u201d Sloan had murmured, placing a delicate hand over her heart. \u201cIt changed my entire perspective on life.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>I had frozen, the cardboard boxes digging into my ribs. I convinced myself I had misheard the context. That is the ultimate curse of being the responsible sibling: you constantly extend credit to family members who are entirely bankrupt.<\/p>\n<p>The wedding ceremony commenced at four o\u2019clock in the Whitlocks\u2019 private botanical garden. Two hundred white chairs rested on manicured grass in front of a stone archway suffocating in white roses. I was positioned at the extreme rear of the bridal line, pushed so far to the periphery that my left shoulder was obscured by the masonry. To the guests, I was nothing more than a neon smudge at the edge of a pastel painting.<\/p>\n<p>The seven lavender bridesmaids glided down the flagstone aisle in synchronized, ethereal elegance. Then came me. Tripping over the excess polyester pooled around my nude pumps, shining like a warning beacon against the muted greens of the garden.<\/p>\n<p>As I stumbled to my mark, I saw Margaret Whitlock sitting in the third row. She wasn\u2019t watching the weeping groom or the radiant bride. She was tracking me. Her eyes were sharp, analytical, tearing through the visual discrepancy of my presence. It wasn\u2019t pity. It was a forensic assessment.<\/p>\n<p>After the vows, the photographer\u2014a hyperactive man wielding a lens the size of a cannon\u2014arranged the bridal party on the terrace steps.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cLavender in front!\u201d he barked, physically moving the women like chess pieces. He glanced at me, then down at his clipboard. \u201cOrange, could you step to the back row? Actually, shift left. You\u2019re catching a weird glare. Step back again.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>I stepped back until my calves hit a boxwood topiary. I was entirely out of the frame.<\/p>\n<p>Diane materialized, whispered something into the photographer\u2019s ear, and slipped a folded bill into his palm. He nodded sharply. For the next thirty-two group portraits, not a single lens was pointed in my direction. I was officially excised from the historical record. I folded my arms over the safety-pinned waist of my clown suit, breathing in the scent of crushed boxwood leaves, telling myself I only had to endure two more hours before I could drive home.<\/p>\n<p>But as I turned toward the cocktail hour, I caught a glimpse of Margaret Whitlock. A younger cousin was whispering urgently into her ear. Margaret\u2019s gaze slowly drifted from Sloan, standing under the arch, directly over to me. A terrifying, silent calculation finalized behind her gray eyes.<\/p>\n<p>Chapter 3: The Stolen Life<\/p>\n<p>The cocktail reception occupied the east terrace. A jazz quartet bled Sinatra into the warm evening air while waitstaff circulated with silver trays of oysters. I claimed a high-top table near the stone railing, nursing a glass of sparkling water that had already lost its bite.<\/p>\n<p>From my vantage point, I possessed a clear line of sight to Sloan. She was working the wealthy Whitlock relatives with the polished efficiency of a seasoned politician. It was mesmerizing, in a grotesque sort of way. I was entirely minding my own business when the ambient noise dipped, and her voice drifted over to me. She was speaking to Daniel\u2019s great-aunt.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI actually put myself through school,\u201d Sloan said, her voice dripping with manufactured humility. \u201cCommunity college first to save money, then transferred to State. Waitressing night shifts at a steakhouse. Nobody handed me a single thing.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>My fingers clamped around my water glass so hard I thought the crystal might shatter. Those were my exact words. The precise chronology of my brutal twenties. Sloan had dropped out of a liberal arts college after three semesters of excessive partying and spent the next two years \u201cfinding her aura\u201d in Charleston, entirely subsidized by our parents\u2019 second mortgage.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cAnd the engineering work?\u201d the great-aunt inquired, visibly impressed. \u201cStructural engineering, Daniel said?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYes,\u201d Sloan replied without a microsecond of hesitation. \u201cIt\u2019s just small firm stuff, commercial inspections mostly, but it is profoundly rewarding to build something real.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The oxygen evaporated from my lungs. My firm. My twelve-hour days covered in concrete dust, crawling beneath highway overpasses with a flashlight and a laser measure. My professional license, earned through blood and absolute exhaustion. My twenty-nine-year-old sister was standing inside a five-thousand-dollar organza gown, actively looking into the eyes of old money, and wearing my skin.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cDaniel is so lucky to have found someone so thoroughly self-made,\u201d the aunt gushed.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI just believe in earning your place at the table,\u201d Sloan purred.<\/p>\n<p>I set my glass down. The math behind my ribs was calculating stress loads and identifying a catastrophic failure point. I marched across the terrace and intercepted Sloan near a towering pyramid of pastel macarons.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cCan I speak with you?\u201d I kept my voice dangerously level.<\/p>\n<p>She sighed, flicking a dismissive glance at my dress. \u201cMake it fast, Brooke.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI just heard you tell that woman you put yourself through engineering school. You claimed you\u2019re a structural engineer.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Sloan picked up a pistachio macaron, inspecting it. \u201cBrooke, you\u2019re hearing things. You\u2019re imagining slights.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI am not imagining my own resume. I heard you claim the community college transfer. That is my degree. You dropped out.\u201d<\/p>\n<h3><a href=\"https:\/\/readingtimes.online\/?p=4980\">\ud83d\udc49 Click Here For Continue Reading: Part 2 : My sister made all seven bridesmaids wear beautiful lavender gowns. She gave me a different dress. It was bright orange, size 2XL. \u201cIt was the only one left,\u201d she said, smiling. My parents told me to \u201cstop being dramatic.\u201d<\/a><\/h3>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> &hellip; <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":4981,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-4979","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-family-drama-stories"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Part 1 : My sister made all seven bridesmaids wear beautiful lavender gowns. She gave me a different dress. It was bright orange, size 2XL. \u201cIt was the only one left,\u201d she said, smiling. My parents told me to \u201cstop being dramatic.\u201d - Reading Times<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/readingtimes.online\/?p=4979\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Part 1 : My sister made all seven bridesmaids wear beautiful lavender gowns. She gave me a different dress. It was bright orange, size 2XL. \u201cIt was the only one left,\u201d she said, smiling. 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