Getting ditched on your wedding day. It hurts to think about.
But it’s also a blessing in disguise.
Cyndi Maisonneuve, from Toronto, Canada, woke up on the day of her dream wedding in Hawaii. Everything was perfect. She and her lovely fiancée had spent months planning it together. She wasn’t nervous as she went for a morning jog, telling herself to savour every second of the day. She was just excited for the sunset beach ceremony she’d always dreamed of.
Her sister helped her get ready. Cyndi was in her hotel room, veil on, tingling with excitement – when her dream man, her best friend, her fiancée, broke up with her.
“He came into the room and said we needed to talk alone. He was crying. I assumed he was letting the emotion of the day get to him. Then he said it. “I don’t think I can do this.” I couldn’t understand. I asked: “Are you joking?” Cyndi told The Guardian.
Ouch. Allllll the ouch.
He had already packed his suitcase and passport. Cyndi’s older sister stepped in and yelled at him until he fled the room. (Um, WHAT A LEGEND.)
So what did Cyndi do? Well, first, she watched from her hotel window as her big sister told the guests gathered on the beach that the wedding was cancelled.
But after that? Cyndi had the best damn Hawaiian holiday she could muster. She stayed with her family and girlfriends and kept busy doing all the Hawaii things – snorkelling, surfing, sight-seeing, petting monkeys and drinking out of a coconut (do they actually do any of that? Anyway…).
Top Comments
I know I am being a spelling Nazi here, but I confess I was distracted by the references to her male "fiancée" throughout the article (it should be "fiancé" for a man). Now I have that off my chest, she sounds like an extremely resilient person and I am glad she was able to turn things around so quickly and enjoy her holiday. I know I would not be able to do that so quickly, so well done!
My brother's fiancé broke up their engagement a couple days before the wedding. But due to culture and all sorts of other reasons, they decided to go ahead with the 'wedding' reception to avoid embarrassment. 2 days after that, she left him. My brother had to live for the next one year getting questions like "where is your wife?" , "are you guys expecting yet?" etc.. the whole family had to live in lies for one whole year. They eventually got back together and had a proper 'church ceremony' to make it legal. But I have never been able to get over that one year of lies we had to go live with. I wish they had not gone through with the reception and just advise the guests that it is cancelled. The embarrassment was nothing compare to the deceit, lies, bitterness, hatred and secrets we had to kept afterwards. And they would also have a clean break. But because they never had the clean break and she lingered around in his life even though she was the one who left... finally my backboneless brother took her back and now they are married and unhappy... and the rest of the family still grief about this unnecessary reunion.