ChatGPT said:
Wendy made it clear my grandson Alex wasn’t welcome—not at her wedding, not in her life. My son Matthew went along with it, but I didn’t. I played the kind mother-in-law, all smiles and compliments, but inside, I waited. Wendy didn’t just exclude Alex from the wedding. She excluded his existence. He was five, gentle, and quiet—my heart. And Matthew’s son from his first marriage.
When I asked Wendy what role Alex would play at the wedding, she said, “It’s not really a kid-friendly event.” Then she added, “He’s Matthew’s son, not mine.” That told me everything. She wanted a curated life—no stepchildren, no reminders. And Matthew? He stayed silent.
So I dressed Alex in a tiny gray suit and brought him anyway. He clutched flowers, whispering he wanted to give them to “Miss Wendy.” At the venue, Wendy’s smile cracked. “He’s not supposed to be here,” she hissed. “This is my day.” I smiled. “And he’s Matthew’s son. That makes it his day too.”
What she didn’t know was that I’d hired a second photographer. He captured the real moments—Matthew holding Alex’s hand, Wendy’s cold shoulder, her wiping away his kiss like it stung. Later, she refused to let him in any photos. “He’s not my child,” she said loudly.
At the toast, I raised my glass. “To Wendy, may she learn families aren’t curated—they come with love, history, and children who need a place to belong.” A week later, I gave Matthew the photo album. He cried.
By month’s end, they were divorced.