Am I wrong for disinviting my dad 4 days before my wedding?

Am I wrong for disinviting my dad 4 days before my wedding? I got married last month.

Growing up, I was extremely close to my dad and stepmom. Their house felt calm, structured, and \”normal.\” I didn\’t have that with my mom.

She raised me in a cramped townhouse after the divorce, and while she used to be bright and funny, something in her changed after my dad left.

She got quieter. Worn down. Unhappy. She never said it out loud, but I could sense she hated that I preferred living with my dad. And truthfully, I did. Her place felt tense.

She never dated again, while my dad remarried quickly. I used to wish we could all be in the same room—birthdays, school plays, holidays.

But my mom always declined. She wouldn\’t even sit on the same side of the auditorium as my dad. I thought she was being petty. And I resented her for it.

Anyway, the week before my wedding, I stayed at my dad and stepmom\’s to help finalize some last-minute plans.

Once, I came downstairs for water and heard them in the living room. They were drinking wine and reminiscing—laughing softly to themselves. And suddenly, I heard my mom\’s name. I froze, d*ad still… when my dad said.

“…well, we had to push her away a little. Otherwise, she’d still be clinging on.”

They laughed—quietly, like it was some long-ago inside joke. I don’t think they knew I was there. I don’t think they knew I heard the pause in my stepmom’s voice when she added, “She was never strong enough for you anyway. Not like us.”

I stood there holding my breath, my hand wrapped around a glass I never filled.

The next morning, everything felt different. I smiled through breakfast. I took notes from the planner. I even laughed when my dad made one of his usual dad-jokes. But there was this static in my chest, a tightness I couldn’t shake. All I could hear were their voices: Push her away. Not strong enough. Clinging on.

I thought about all the times I had judged my mom without knowing the full story. About the silence she wore like a coat she couldn’t take off. About how she sat alone in crowded rooms, how she shrank from joy like it wasn’t hers to claim. And how I assumed it was her fault.

The night before the wedding, I sat with my mom on the back porch of the inn where she was staying. She was quiet, sipping tea, wearing a dress I didn’t know she still owned.

“Were you ever happy with Dad?” I asked her.

She looked out at the trees for a long moment. Then: “Yes. Before I wasn’t.”

And that was all she said. But it was everything.

The next morning, I told my dad he wouldn’t be walking me down the aisle. I told him, plainly and without drama, that I was grateful for many things—but I had just learned some truths I couldn’t unhear. And I didn’t want that kind of energy standing beside me on the most honest day of my life.

He looked stunned. He got angry. My stepmom said I was overreacting. I held my ground.

I walked down the aisle with my mom.

I won’t pretend it was easy. But it was right.

So… am I wrong for disinviting my dad four days before my wedding?

I don’t think so.
For once, I chose the person who never asked to be chosen—but still showed up, anyway.

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