‘Rage’: Groom’s text immediately divides
A young woman has gone viral for sharing the text her fiance sent her in the lead-up to their wedding day.
A young woman has gone viral for sharing the text her fiance sent her in the lead-up to their wedding day.
Avery Beverley, 22, who resides in Florida, shared the text on the platform, amassing over 900,000 views. Her partner, Aiden, fired off a wild but innocent text just two months before they tied the knot.
“What time is our wedding?” He asked.
Avery posted the text, including her amused expression, and captioned it, “Come on now.”
If there’s one thing that is going to get people chatting. It is always a groom’s behaviour before the big day.
Some people found the text amusing. It’s the classic case of a man just literally having to show up on his wedding day while the bride has been meticulously planning it for months.
There were also numerous people commenting with laughing emojis and expressing their amusement at the text via slang.
“Should have sent him an invitation,” one joked.
“Too funny,” someone else wrote.
The text immediately became a talking point and revealed that isn’t uncommon for men to have no idea what time their wedding is.
“My husband also asked this,” one admitted, and the incredibly similar comments followed.
“My husband asked this every single day the week of our wedding.”
“Mine asked me to send the location the day of.”
“My husband asked the day off. It was at 2pm and he thought it was 4pm. We planned the wedding for 13 months.”
“So we all have the same husband.”
Despite the text revealing how this is quite a common groom act, some who took issue with the text and took it as a sign that the fiance was not an equal partner.
While Avery clearly knew every detail of the wedding and had taken on the mental load, the groom didn’t even know when he was meant to appear.
“Trust me, if he’s like this for something this important, it’ll be like that forever. Run,” one advised.
“I hope I never find a love like this,” another said.
“This is just the beginning,” one warned.
“This would send me in a rage,” another said.
“I’m begging you all to stop normalising and excusing this. Unless your partner has actual memory loss. It is a bright red flag,” someone else advised.
Not everyone was convinced the groom’s question was a red flag, though. Someone said there was no need for anyone to be “negative” about the text.
“The man just asked a question, and his fiance thought it was funny,” she wrote.
“The comments are wild! Let’s normalise double-checking and asking for advice,” someone else said.
“Everyone being so dramatic in the comments. He could’ve just forgot. It is not that deep,” one claimed.