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I Refuse to Pay for My Sister’s Honeymoon After She Publicly Humiliated Me

I’m thirty-five, and my younger sister, twenty-nine, got married last weekend. Our relationship has always been uneasy — she thrives on attention, perfection, and appearances, while I’m quieter, more practical, and prefer to stay out of the spotlight. Still, I’ve always tried to support her when she needed me.

When she got engaged last year, I told her I’d help however I could.

About four months ago, she asked if I could cover her honeymoon expenses. Her fiancé had just lost his job, and money was tight. I’m financially stable, so I decided to gift her $3,000 for the trip — but I was clear about one thing: I wanted it to stay between us.

I’m not someone who enjoys being the center of attention, and I didn’t want the gesture to turn into a family spectacle. She agreed, promising it would remain private.

For illustrative purposes only

Fast forward to the wedding reception, everything’s perfect until my sister grabs the mic. She starts thanking people, and then, out of nowhere, I freeze when she makes a “joke” about how I’m “finally useful for something” and had “bought my way into the wedding party by funding the honeymoon.”

The guests laughed, but I was stunned and humiliated. I could feel everyone staring at me. She tried to brush it off as humor, but I was so embarrassed that I had to step outside for a while.

Later that evening, I pulled her aside and told her how hurt I was, reminding her that I’d asked her to keep the gift private. She dismissed my feelings, told me I was overreacting, and that I should “learn to take a joke.” I stayed calm but told her that after what she did, I no longer felt comfortable giving them the honeymoon money and that I’d be canceling the scheduled transfer.

For illustrative purposes only

Now, she’s calling me petty, saying I’m ruining the happiest time of her life over one silly comment. My mother agrees with her and thinks I should have just waited until after the honeymoon to talk to her, saying it’s wrong to take back a wedding gift.

Now I feel like I’m being guilt-tripped for setting a boundary after being publicly humiliated. Am I wrong for backing out of the gift after what happened?

Source: brightside.me

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