
Planning a wedding is supposed to be fun, right? Well, it wasn’t for me. Everything started off great. Mark and I agreed we wanted something small and simple. But when his mom, Linda, got involved, things took a turn.
Linda is one of those people who always knows best. She has an opinion on everything—how to cook, raise kids, and now, how to plan a wedding. Mark, my sweet, loyal husband, always says, “She’s just trying to help.” Sure, but her “help” usually means taking over.

An elderly lady | Source: Midjourney
The first major problem? The invitations.
When Mark and I picked out our wedding invitations, we were so happy. They were simple and minimalist, just like we wanted. We liked the clean design—nothing fancy, just our style. I remember showing them to Linda, hoping she’d smile and say something nice. Instead, she wrinkled her nose like she had smelled something awful.
“This is what you’re sending out?” she asked, holding up the sample like it was a piece of trash.

A wedding invitation | Source: Pexels
“Yes, we love it,” I said, forcing a smile. I could already feel the tension rising in my chest.
“It’s so… plain,” Linda replied, not even trying to hide her disapproval. “You know, people will think you didn’t put any effort into this. You should really go with something more… elegant.”
I wanted to say something sharp, but Mark gave me that look. You know the one, where his eyes plead, please don’t start anything. So, I swallowed my words and nodded, even though my stomach was turning.

A man with a side eye | Source: Pexels
A few days later, I thought things had blown over. Linda hadn’t mentioned the invitations again, so I figured we were in the clear. Boy, was I wrong.
One afternoon, Mark and I were sitting in the kitchen when he casually mentioned, “Mom said she made some changes to the invitations.”
“Wait, what?” I asked, my voice going up a notch.
“She just tweaked a few things,” Mark said, shrugging. “She’s excited. You know how she is.”

An upset woman | Source: Pexels
“What do you mean tweaked?” I demanded.
Mark scratched the back of his neck, looking uncomfortable. “She hired a calligrapher and added some flourishes. She also, uh, changed the wording a bit.”
I felt my face heat up. “She what?”
“She just wanted to make them look nicer,” Mark said, trying to stay calm. “She thought it would be a nice touch.”

A beautiful wedding invitation | Source: Pexels
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. “Mark, we didn’t ask her to do that! Those were our invitations, and now she’s completely changed them!”
He sighed. “I know, I know. But what’s done is done. It’s not a big deal.”
“Not a big deal?” I couldn’t hold back anymore. “Mark, she hijacked our wedding invitations! And you’re okay with this?”

A shouting upset woman | Source: Pexels
As if that wasn’t bad enough, Linda didn’t stop at redesigning the invitations. She went ahead and added people Mark and I didn’t even know. Old work friends, neighbors, and distant relatives we hadn’t seen in years suddenly made the cut. It was like Linda was planning a completely different wedding than the one we wanted.
“Why are we inviting people we don’t even know?” I asked Mark when I saw the list.
“She just thought it would be nice to include more people,” Mark explained, still defending her. “You know, so the wedding feels bigger.”

An apologetic man | Source: Pexels
“Bigger?” I scoffed. “We wanted a small wedding! Why is she adding people we’ve never met?”
Mark rubbed his temples, looking stressed. “She’s excited, okay? She just wants to help.”
“Help?” I was furious. “This isn’t helping, Mark. She’s taking over!”
I spent the rest of the night fuming, going over the new guest list, and thinking about how our simple wedding was spiraling out of control. Every time I tried to talk to Mark about it, he’d say the same thing: “She’s just trying to be involved.”

A couple arguing | Source: Pexels
But I didn’t want her “involvement.” I wanted our wedding, not hers.
Things reached a breaking point when Linda called to gush about the invitations. She went on and on about the gold envelopes and the elegant calligraphy, hiring a professional to do it. She even bragged about how she had included her “special friends.”
“Oh, it’s going to be such a beautiful wedding!” she exclaimed. “Everyone will be so impressed with the invitations!”

An upset woman talking to an elderly lady | Source: Midjourney
I could barely hold it together. “Linda, you didn’t even ask us before changing the invitations.”
There was a long pause on the other end of the phone. Then she said, “Well, I just thought they needed a little… improvement. You’ll thank me later.”
I hung up the phone, shaking with anger. This wasn’t her wedding. It was mine and Mark’s. But Linda had decided to take matters into her own hands.

An angry dark-haired woman | Source: Midjourney
Mark tried to calm me down later that night. “She’s just excited. Let’s not make this into a big fight.”
“Mark, she’s hijacked everything!” I snapped. “What are we supposed to do now? Just go along with it?”
Mark looked down, clearly uncomfortable. “Maybe we can just… send out her version. What’s the harm?”

A couple arguing in their living room | Source: Pexels
I stared at him in disbelief. “What’s the harm? This is our wedding. Not hers.”
I had had enough.
One night, after Mark had gone to bed, I sat down at the kitchen table with our original wedding invitations. They were simple, just the way we wanted, with clean lines and no frills. I smiled as I ran my fingers over the paper. These were the invitations we had chosen—our wedding invitations, not Linda’s over-the-top version.

A woman mailing invitations | Source: Midjourney
I went through the guest list Linda had created. There were so many names I didn’t even recognize. Her old work friends, people from her book club, distant relatives we hadn’t seen in years. I tossed that list aside and grabbed our original one with the people we actually wanted to be there.
The next day, while Linda was busy boasting about her “perfect” invitations, I quietly slipped out to the post office. I mailed our original invitations to the people we cared about. No confrontation, no drama, just a silent fix to the problem.

Mailing invitations | Source: Pexels
The big day finally arrived. The sun was shining, the sky was clear, and everything was just as we had imagined it. Mark and I stood hand in hand, feeling a sense of calm wash over us. Our closest friends and family were there, just the way we had wanted. The simple, intimate wedding we’d dreamed of was happening, and it was perfect.
Karma hit during the reception. Linda was mingling, her eyes scanning the room. I watched from across the room as her smile started to falter. She was counting heads, and I could see the confusion slowly spread across her face.

Confused elderly lady at a wedding reception | Source: Midjourney
Linda had gone all out preparing for her VIPs—seating cards, special menu items, even personalized favors. But all those seats sat empty, and she had to awkwardly explain to the people at the table why half her guests weren’t there.
She hurried over to Mark, pulling him aside.

An elderly woman talking to her son | Source: Midjourney
“Mark,” she whispered urgently, “where are the Thompsons? And Carol? And my cousin Maggie? They all said they were coming!”
Mark blinked. “I don’t know, Mom. Did they RSVP?”
“Of course they did!” Linda snapped, her voice rising. “I spoke to them myself!”

An angry woman at a table | Source: Midjourney
I couldn’t help but smirk as I eavesdropped on the conversation. Linda was getting more and more frantic as she listed off the names of her “special guests.” One by one, she started texting and calling them, trying to figure out where they were. And one by one, she got the same answer: “We never got an invitation.”
The realization hit her like a ton of bricks. Her fancy invitations had never gone out, and she was left scrambling to explain why half her guest list was missing. The look on her face was priceless.

A shocked elderly woman | Source: Pexels
I watched as she put on a brave face, trying to act like everything was fine. But every time someone asked about her missing friends, I could see her smile crack just a little more. She spent the rest of the night in damage control mode, but the truth was out—her grand plans had fallen apart, and there was nothing she could do about it.

An upset elderly lady | Source: Midjourney
When it comes to family members who overstep, especially in emotional situations like weddings, you have to protect your own space. It’s easy to let things slide to keep the peace, but sometimes, you have to take control and quietly reclaim what’s yours.
The wedding was our first real test of that, and we passed with flying colors.

My Future MIL Gave Me 10 Rules for Being the Perfect DIL, So I Followed Them in a Way She’d Never Forget — Story of the Day

My future MIL gave me a list of 10 rules to become the “perfect” wife for her son. I smiled, nodded… and decided to follow every one of them. Just not the way she expected.
I’d always been an ordinary woman with ordinary needs. Nothing extravagant. I wanted to work, have a few hobbies, maybe travel a bit, and one day build a family.
I didn’t equate life with grand happiness — I simply lived it and appreciated what I had.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels
Until I met Dylan.
My friends used to talk about him like he’d stepped straight out of a luxury shower gel commercial.
“He supports everyone, no matter what!”
“His suits are always spotless.”
“And he never forgets to open the door for a lady. Never!”

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I used to smile politely, not quite believing men like that existed outside romcoms. But the first time Dylan took my hand in his — I got it.
Dylan made my life feel cinematic. Almost too good to be true. I found myself blooming next to him, dreaming bigger, smiling more. I even started cooking with joy.
We moved in together pretty quickly, and strangely, domestic life didn’t ruin the magic. If anything, it strengthened it. The toothbrush next to mine and the grocery runs were small rituals that made me fall harder.

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Everything felt… easy. The perfection of it didn’t scare me. It reminded me how simple love could be when two people were honest.
That evening, we were having dinner at our favorite trattoria. But Dylan seemed… different. Fidgety.
“You okay?” I asked, smiling softly when we finally went outside.
He nodded and suddenly… he knelt. In the middle of the street. With a proposal ring in a tiny box.

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“I knew it from the moment you said pesto was overrated,” he began. “That’s when I realized… I want to wake up next to you, even on the days you’re mad at me for forgetting to bring home oat milk. You’re my heart. Will you be my wife?”
Something in my chest melted completely.
“Yes… Of course, yes.”

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He slipped the ring onto my finger. The tables around us erupted in applause. It was perfect.
Right up until the following day, when Dylan said,
“I think it’s time you meet my mom. You’re going to adore her…”
And that’s when I felt the tiniest tremor in our fairytale. The kind that makes you wonder… if the perfect story is about to take a turn.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
***
We didn’t wait long to plan the trip. Dylan was too excited to tell his mom the news. So the very next morning — it was Saturday — we packed an overnight bag and hit the road to his parents’ place in the countryside.
Dylan hummed along to some 80s playlist as he drove, while I tried to decide if I was overdressed.
“Just wait till you try her lemon tart. Mom’s a legend in the kitchen. And she’s so excited to meet you.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
I laughed, nervously. “Sounds… charming?”
“She’s amazing. You’ll see.”
In half an hour, the front door flew open before we even knocked.
“Diiiiilan!” a sing-song voice echoed, and there she was. Elen.
The woman wore head-to-toe baby pink — a satin blouse with a bow the size of a toddler and matching trousers.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
“And you must be the darling girl!” she squealed, pulling me into a hug.
Elen smelled of roses and baby powder. I sneezed quietly into her shoulder. As soon as she inhaled the soft trail of my perfume, she gave a tiny cough.
“Oh my,” she said with a polite little wince. “Is that… jasmine?”
I nodded, already regretting it.

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“Lovely… if one can tolerate it. Tee-hee!”
Great… Two seconds into our first hug and we already have a mutual allergy to each other’s taste in perfume. Coincidence? Unlikely.
“Look at those cheeks! You are real!” Elen giggled, giving Dylan’s arm a little slap. “She’s prettier than your last girlfriend.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
“Mom…” Dylan chuckled, clearly charmed.
We walked through the garden toward the house, and for a moment I let myself admire the rose bushes until my eyes landed on something… unexpected.
A small bronze statue, oddly placed between two ceramic bunnies. Elen noticed. Of course, she did.
“That’s my little Cupid,” she said proudly.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels
The poor thing had a chipped wing, a dented face, and an overall expression.
“I found it in a darling little antique shop upstate,” she went on. “Of course, it arrived scratched. But he has character.”
Her voice wavered just enough to give her away — she adored the odd little creature.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
We walked in. The house was a shrine to florals. Floral curtains, floral sofa cushions, even a porcelain tissue box shaped like a bouquet.
Over tea (served in rose-patterned cups, naturally), Elen asked me questions so sweetly I almost didn’t notice the blades hiding behind them.
“So, do you actually work, or is it more of a hobby?”

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“Uh… well, I have a full-time job in marketing,” I said, trying to smile. “It’s…”
“She’s really talented,” Dylan cut in proudly.
Each time, she ended with a sharp little laugh, like a kitten pawing you after unsheathing its claws.
“Tee-hee!”
Dylan, bless him, looked enchanted.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
“Isn’t she just the cutest?” he whispered to me later. “She’s always been so warm.”
Warm. Like a scented candle right before it gives you a headache.
After dinner, Dylan stepped out to the garage with his father to check on some old stereo system. Elen and I were left alone. She stood. Smoothed her pink blouse.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
“Now that it’s just us girls. I think it’s time we had a little honest talk, don’t you?”
I froze, my spoon halfway to the crème brûlée.
“You’re going to marry my son. So it’s only fair that I tell you exactly what’s expected of you as a future perfect daughter-in-law.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels
She reached into a drawer. And pulled out a pink sheet of paper with little roses printed along the edges.
“These are just a few small expectations,” she said sweetly. “I find it helps if we’re all on the same page.”
She placed it in front of me. Across the top, in pink script, I read:
“10 Rules for the Ideal Future Daughter-in-Law.”
At that moment I realized — I might be holding the contract to my horror movie.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
***
It was Sunday afternoon. My friends and I were curled up on the couch in my apartment with two open pizza boxes and three untouched oat milk lattes that had gone cold ages ago.
I didn’t need caffeine. I had rage.
“Start from the beginning,” Emma said. “I want to picture the whole pastel nightmare.”

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I took a breath and stared into the middle distance, letting the horror replay.
“Okay. So we get there, and she’s dressed like a life-sized cupcake. Baby pink from head to toe. She hugs me, coughs at my jasmine perfume, and… And…”
Sasha snorted. “I knew it. I knew she’d be a tee-hee monster.”
“And the house? Floral vomit. Everywhere. The tissue box had roses.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels
Emma leaned in.
“Did she bring out the list immediately?”
I held up a finger. “Not yet. First, she asked if I actually work or if it’s just, you know, a hobby.”
“No!” Sasha gasped. “She did not.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels
“Oh, she did. And then,” I continued, voice rising, “she pulls out a list.”
Emma’s jaw dropped.
“What kind of medieval sorcery is that?”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels
“She reached into a drawer like it was a magic hat — and pulled out my personal horror scroll. Pink. Floral. Smug.”
I reached into my bag and tossed the folded sheet on the table.
“I couldn’t sleep that night. I read it so many times, it’s burned into my brain.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
My friends leaned over to read. I watched their faces twist with each line. Here’s what it said:
1. Lose 10 pounds before the wedding. No exceptions.
2. Agree with your mother-in-law. Always.
3. Get a proper job. Hobbies are not working
4. Handle all housework. Without complaining.
5. Clean my house every weekend. Bathrooms included.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels
6. I will choose the baby’s name. No discussion.
7. Cut contact with all men except your husband. Even at work.
8. Give me a key to your home. I need full access.
9. Keep your phone’s location on at all times.
10. Do not argue with me. I am always right.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
Emma leaned back slowly.
“That woman is two pearls away from full-blown dictatorship.”
Sasha looked at me.
“So… what did you do? Did you tell Dylan?”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
“No. I didn’t want to crush him. Not yet. But I knew I had to wake him up from the syrupy-pink fog Elen’s got him in.”
“You didn’t…”
“Oh, I did. I decided to follow the rules. Every single one. With my own interpretation.”
“You’re going to play her game?”

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“Exactly. I start next weekend. With item number five.”
Sasha grabbed it and read aloud.
“Clean my house every weekend. Bathrooms included.”
“Oh, I’m going,” I said, already feeling that fire in my chest. “But the cleaning won’t be quite what she expects.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
***
It was Saturday morning. Sun shining, birds chirping, my revenge plan locked and loaded. I had Dylan’s spare key from Elen’s house.
I arrived at 10 a.m. in full cleaning mode. Rubber gloves. A tote bag filled with goodies. A fresh can of ultra-strong jasmine air freshener. And a single red sock.
Let the games begin.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels
Step one: Laundry. I found her perfectly folded white sheets — Egyptian cotton, monogrammed — and casually tossed them into the washer with the red sock I’d brought for this very mission. The cycle began. I grinned.

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Step two: Scent domination. I sprayed jasmine air freshener in every corner of every room.
Two spritzes in the bathroom.
Three in the hallway.
One on the welcome mat — because first impressions matter.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
Step three: The rearrangement. I moved her ceramic angel collection from the fireplace mantel to the kitchen counter. The TV remote went into the wardrobe. Her favorite slippers? Her “FAMILY IS FOREVER” wooden sign? Hung upside down.
And then came the Cupid. That little bronze nightmare glared at me from the garden, as if daring me.
I wrapped him gently in a towel and carried him to…I’ll tell you later.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
By noon, the house was spotless. But it no longer screamed “Elen.” It screamed “new management.”
I closed the door behind me and practically skipped home.
***
The next morning, just as I was tying my sneakers to head out, someone started pounding on my door. I opened it.
Elen stood there, wild-eyed, hair slightly askew, holding a pink bedsheet like it was a crime scene photo.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
“You turned my entire house into a scented circus!” she yelled. “Everything smells like cheap perfume! My shirts are pink! And where is my Cupid?!”
I blinked innocently.
“Oh, good morning. I think you are fond of pink.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
“Don’t ‘good morning’ me! I want everything back the way it was! Now!”
“Oh… sorry. Can’t.”
She stared at me.
“I’m late for the gym,” I said casually, tying my shoelace tighter. “Punct number one on your list, remember? Lose ten pounds before the wedding.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels
Her mouth opened. Closed. Opened again.
“And the statue?” she hissed.
“Oh, I thought It’s trash. So I hired guys to get it out.”
“How dare you?!”
Just then, Dylan appeared behind me, rubbing his eyes.

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“Mom? Why are you yelling?”
“Ask her!” Elen said, spinning toward him. “She sabotaged my home! She poisoned the air! And she… she threw out Cupid!”
Dylan blinked. “Cupid?”
“My statue! My precious little bronze guardian!”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
“Cupid’s not gone. He’s just… enjoying a quiet retirement in the garage. I thought he deserved a break from all that pollen. I just followed the rules,” I said sweetly, pulling the crumpled pink paper from my bag and handing it to Dylan.
His eyes moved line by line.
“Mom… what is this?”
“A helpful guide! To support her! To prepare her for a life with you!”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
“With me or with you?”
I grabbed my gym bag and smiled.
“Anyway, I really have to run. Zumba waits for no one.”
Elen’s nostrils flared. I looked over my shoulder with one last, sugar-sweet nod.
“Don’t worry. I’m taking your list very seriously. You might want to start your own.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
Just before I reached the door, Dylan turned to his mother.
“Mom, we really need to talk. And this time, I need you to listen.”
I stepped outside, letting the door click softly behind me, and left my future MIL standing face to face with her sin, the man I loved, finally ready to draw his own lines.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney
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If you enjoyed this story, read this one: I was working a night shift, exhausted but grateful—until I glanced in the rearview mirror and saw my husband in the back seat… with another woman. I stayed silent, already planning his downfall.
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