Bride demands divorce just 24 hours after wedding—the shocking reason will leave you speechless!

When we say ‘I do,’ it's with the hope that our partner will respect our wishes and boundaries.

But what happens when they don't?

For one bride, her husband's disregard for her one ‘unbreakable’ rule was enough to call it quits on their marriage—just 24 hours after saying their vows.


The bride said, ‘We each took on about half the responsibility for organising the wedding, but I think I was pretty reasonable about compromise when he really wanted something.’

‘My only hard-and-fast rule was that he would not rub cake in my face at the reception.’

It's a tradition that some find amusing, but for her, it was a hard no, especially given her history of claustrophobia stemming from a traumatic car accident.

She communicated this to her partner, who agreed to her terms. Or so she thought.


compressed-pexels-jibarofoto-17026788.jpeg
While cake smashing is a tradition that many find amusing, the bride did not want cake rubbed on her face at the reception. Image Source: Pexels / Luis Quintero


On the day that was meant to be the happiest of her life, her husband broke that one 'unbreakable' rule.

‘He grabbed me by the back of the head and shoved my head down into it,’ she recounted.

The act seemed premeditated to the bride as he had a ‘bunch of cupcakes as backup’.

This act, which some might dismiss as a harmless prank, was a clear violation of her trust and a blatant disregard for her well-being.


The bride's reaction was swift and decisive. She wanted a divorce.

While friends urged her to reconsider, she stood her ground, knowing that this breach of trust was a red flag she couldn't ignore.

She wrote to a magazine’s advice column asking for advice, and they supported her decision, reminding her—and all of us—that it's essential to surround ourselves with people who value our happiness.

The magazine said, ‘Continue with your divorce.’ And persuaded her against following her friend’s advice when they said they weren’t the ones ‘who have to wake up every day with a man whose behaviour massively turns them off.’

‘Make a mental note about which of your loved ones don’t seem to value your happiness, and continue with your divorce.’


The broader community also rallied behind her, recognising that her husband's actions were not just a breach of a wedding day agreement but a sign of deeper disrespect.

One person commented saying, ‘I feel like if you set a hard line with your partner, especially about something physical, and they flagrantly and deliberately violate it in front of a crowd of people, that is what is known as a red flag.’

‘It seems to me like him stating from the start that he doesn't care about how she feels or what she asks for, so I'm team divorce for sure!’ another added.


For those wondering about the legal side of things, in Australia, you can't just snap your fingers and be divorced.

There's a process to follow, which includes a mandatory 12-month separation period before you can file for divorce.

This means that this bride has a long wait ahead of her before she can legally dissolve her marriage.

On the other hand, an annulment is a different ordeal.

It's a declaration that the marriage was never valid, and there are specific grounds for pursuing one. Unlike divorce, there's no set waiting period, but it's a more complex legal process.

While this bride set clear boundaries and acted decisively when those boundaries weren't respected, many struggle to set clear boundaries and resolve conflict when it arises.

Fortunately, one of our members, a retired psychologist @Joy Straw, wrote an informative article on conflict resolution.

You can read the article here.
Key Takeaways
  • A bride called off her marriage and demanded a divorce just 24 hours after her wedding after her husband broke their 'one rule' involving the wedding cake.
  • Despite friends urging her to reconsider, the bride was adamant about the divorce and sought advice from a magazine’s opinion column.
  • The magazine’s opinion column stated that the husband crossed boundaries by not respecting the bride's request not to have cake smashed in her face, an act exaggerated due to the bride's claustrophobia from a past car accident.
  • In Australia, the bride must wait at least 12 months of separation before she can apply for a divorce, meaning she has a considerable wait before legally ending her marriage.
Have you ever had a partner disrespect a boundary you set? How did you handle it? Let us know in the comments below!
 
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Her whole face in the cake - WOW. I have seen weddings on TV when a slice of cake is sort of mushed around the lip area - but face first into the cake WOW what a waste of a cake and what a A***hole I would've been out of there in a flash. It took me 5 years to have the courage to leave my violent, wanker first husband - best thing I have ever done.
 
So much "for better or worse".
Knee jerk reactions can lead to a whole lot of pain.
The husband was an idiot, but there are a lot of people in the world who don't get other peoples' phobias. For her, cake on the face is washable. For him, drain on the brain is worth a go at treatment.
Maybe he needed to be told that one sign of cake in the face would mean divorce ... but who knows, he may just be a right twit.
Having said that, I don't agree with the practice, however, if someone was to food face me, they would get the same back from me, with ferocity.
 
this isn't even about boundaries but her past trauma. Unless you have experienced that and especially her accident and her face, he has no concern or understanding and obviously dismisses it as being of no concern. Trauma never goes, we learn how to deal with it. But when a loved one does a deliberate act and triggers the fears/traumas /hypersenitivity, end of relationship !
 
What a jerk to love someone and to respect some one are two different things to this looser.What joy does he get out of spoiling your day face and dress this jerk needs to stop acting like no one else matters but him go for annulment on mental grounds and move on with life . You will find a gentleman one day.
 
My aunt's marriage was over just a few hours after the wedding. While the bride's family paid for the wedding she had left the honeymoon details to her groom who had constantly teased her with keeping those details secret.
Everything went well, the day was perfect in every way. The sun was shining, the bride was on time, the food was amazing and the families behaved themselves.
The bride had the best time, she danced with her father, her groom and her brothers, but soon the time came to leave the celebrations and begin the honeymoon.
The bride and groom said their goodbyes and the party continued until the early hours as weddings do. No-one expected to hear from the couple for the next 2 weeks... but, as midnight neared the bride's parents were called to the phone to hear a very tearful bride sobbing. Fearing the worst they jumped in their car and rushed to her aid. They pulled up in front of a seedy looking hotel in the equally seedy Rocks area in Sydney (a very bad area in those days).
The bride was an emotional mess and the marriage in tatters. The groom's idea of a honeymoon and the bride's were a major difference of opinion. He was all about saving the dollars, she was expecting a tropical beach.
And that was enough for her to demand an immediate annulment just five hours after the wedding. He stayed at the hotel, she went home to her parent's home and never spoke to him again nor forgave him for destroying her dreams.
I do believe it to be the briefest marriage on record.
 
this isn't even about boundaries but her past trauma. Unless you have experienced that and especially her accident and her face, he has no concern or understanding and obviously dismisses it as being of no concern. Trauma never goes, we learn how to deal with it. But when a loved one does a deliberate act and triggers the fears/traumas /hypersenitivity, end of relationship !
Bullshit, she set. A boundary by warning him, he crossed it and deserves the loss. Troll.
 

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