I’ve learned to be wary of people who say “family first,” especially when their actions say otherwise. My cousin claimed she understood when I missed her wedding because of my dad’s stroke. Then she sent me a bill for my “empty seat.” She wanted money but what she got was a reality check, delivered by one very fed-up guest.
About six months before Caroline’s wedding, I was genuinely excited.
She and I had grown up close, not best-friend close, but close enough that I wanted to show up for her in a big way. I RSVP’d as soon as the invite arrived, bought a gorgeous dress, helped plan the bridal shower, even booked time off work. I was all in.
Then life decided to knock the wind out of me.
A month before her big day, my father suffered a massive stroke.
It was the most terrifying moment of my life. He survived, and I thank God for that every day, but he needed full-time care during his recovery.
Rehab appointments, medications, help with eating, bathing, and everything else.
I was the only family member nearby and available, so there was no option to leave him alone, not even for a weekend. I canceled everything else in my life, work, social plans, everything, to make sure he had what he needed.
So, with a heavy heart and tears threatening to spill, I sat down to write Caroline an email I never imagined I’d have to send ever since I got her wedding invite. I took my time with it, not just because I wanted to be thoughtful, but because I genuinely cared.
I explained everything, in detail.
I told her about my dad’s stroke, how sudden and frightening it had been, how I didn’t know if he’d make it through the night at first. I explained that while he had thankfully pulled through, he wasn’t the same.
He needed round-the-clock attention, and as the only one who could step up, I had to be there for him, no questions asked.
I apologized over and over again and told her how heartbroken I was to miss her big day, how much I had been looking forward to it, not just the dress and the dancing, but celebrating her.
I reminded her of the shower I’d helped plan, the excitement I felt picking out the perfect outfit, how I’d cleared my schedule because I wanted to be present, really present, for one of the most important moments of her life.
And then I ended with a promise: that once things settled with my dad, I’d love to take her out, hear all about the wedding, see the photos, and toast to her happiness, just the two of us, if she wanted.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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