The countdown to her sister’s wedding was supposed to be all champagne toasts and dress fittings, but for one woman, it turned into a slow-burning family feud.
She had been thrilled to stand beside her sister as a bridesmaid, an honor wrapped in lace, love, and long-standing sisterly pride. But then came the gut punch: when she asked about vegan options for herself and her partner, she was told, flat-out, to pack a sandwich.
It wasn’t a joke. The menu had been decided, the caterer booked, and there was “no room” for vegan plates. The bride-to-be didn’t just shrug off the request, she doubled down, saying there would be plenty of non-vegan dishes and that her sister could “eat beforehand” if it mattered so much.
Meanwhile, their parents’ kosher dietary needs were being met without question. For the bridesmaid, it wasn’t just about food, it was about feeling sidelined on a day where she was meant to be part of the inner circle.

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A Wedding Menu with a Side of Exclusion
The wedding was set for August 2020, and the planning was already in overdrive. Dresses were being altered, vows drafted, seating charts fine-tuned. But when the bridesmaid raised the simple question – “Will there be something vegan for me and [my boyfriend]?” – the answer was a curt no. No compromise, no alternative, not even a token salad.
It wasn’t that she wanted an elaborate plant-based feast, just a single main dish so she wouldn’t have to nibble on bread rolls and olives while everyone else feasted. “You can eat before, or bring your own,” her sister had said, as if it were the most reasonable solution in the world.
The sting deepened when she learned that special kosher meals were being arranged for their parents. This wasn’t a case of “no exceptions” – it was a case of some exceptions, but not hers. She couldn’t shake the feeling that her dietary needs, which her sister had known about for years, simply didn’t matter.
From her perspective, this wasn’t a financial impossibility. As The Knot reported in its 2023 wedding trends survey, 85% of couples include vegetarian or vegan options for at least a portion of their guests.
It’s not about extravagance – it’s about thoughtfulness. “Small gestures of thoughtfulness build trust in relationships,” relationship expert Dr. John Gottman wrote in 2022. The omission here didn’t feel like an oversight; it felt like a message.
More Than Just Food – It’s About Respect
In her mind, food is a symbol at weddings, it’s how you welcome people, how you show they’re wanted at the table. When you deny someone that, you deny them a piece of the celebration.
She couldn’t help but think of a similar moment two years earlier, when a friend of hers attended a destination wedding where the bride refused to accommodate his severe nut allergy. He spent the reception eating plain fruit from the dessert table, humiliated, while the rest of the guests enjoyed a lavish multi-course meal. “It’s not the food – it’s the feeling of being left out,” he’d told her.
The bridesmaid wondered if she was facing the same fate. Maybe her sister wasn’t being cruel, maybe she was just drowning in the stress of wedding planning. But the fact remained: the effort was made for others, not for her. And as a bridesmaid, she wasn’t just a guest – she’d be there from morning till night, smiling for photos, holding flowers, ushering guests… all on an empty stomach.
Some friends told her to let it slide for the sake of keeping the peace. Others urged her to call the caterer herself, reasoning that most kitchens can adapt a single plate without much fuss. The bride, however, had already made it clear: the menu was set.
Here’s the comments of Reddit users:
Commenters agreed the OP wasn’t the AH, arguing that it’s reasonable to expect a vegan option at their own sister’s wedding.






Some commenters saw both sides, suggesting OP could ease wedding stress by arranging their own vegan meals with the caterer.



















While others firmly called the sister the asshole for expecting a bridal party member to attend without being fed.











Are these comments gold or just Reddit’s peanut gallery?
Now, the wedding day looms, and so does the decision. Does she swallow her frustration and bring her own dinner to one of the most important events in her family’s life? Or does she push the issue, risking an all-out fight before the big day?
It’s a choice between preserving harmony and standing up for herself, a choice that, like the menu itself, may leave someone feeling excluded.
So here’s the question: when family and tradition clash with personal needs, is it better to keep the peace… or to demand a seat at the table, even if it means breaking it apart?










