ChatGPT said:
When Linda and I received the wedding invitation, everything looked normal—until we read the RSVP card. In dramatic script, it said: “Ladies — PLEASE WEAR WHITE, WEDDING DRESSES WELCOME!” Confused, we called David, the groom and my old Coast Guard buddy. Turns out, his fiancée Emily’s mother, Dorothy, planned to wear her old wedding gown to steal the spotlight. Emily, tired of her mom’s antics, had come up with a genius counter: invite every woman to wear white.
The idea spread like wildfire. Group chats buzzed with excitement. Women pulled out old gowns, borrowed dresses, and shared photos of tiaras and lace. Linda beamed, thrilled to wear her wedding dress again. The morning of the ceremony, our hotel buzzed with women zipping up satin and tulle, laughing like co-conspirators.
At the chapel, everything was white—bridesmaids, guests, gloves, veils. It looked like a couture bridal runway. When Dorothy arrived in her glittering white gown and rhinestone tiara, she walked in expecting gasps of admiration. Instead, she was met with twenty other women dressed exactly like her.
Furious, Dorothy shouted, “What is WRONG with all of you?!” Her husband, Alan, gently replied, “But… you’re wearing white too.” The room held its breath. Dorothy realized she’d been outmaneuvered.
Then Emily entered—not in white, but in a stunning red and gold gown. She radiated power, grace, and brilliance. The room erupted in awe. Dorothy stayed silent, her spotlight completely eclipsed.
Later, with champagne in hand, Emily smiled. “Sometimes,” she said, “you beat drama with unity—and just a splash of red.”