logo
Woman Thinks It's ‘Weird' Her Best Friend Is Getting Married on Her Birthday — and Didn't Tell Her First

Woman Thinks It's ‘Weird' Her Best Friend Is Getting Married on Her Birthday — and Didn't Tell Her First

Yahoo2 days ago
"I know she knows it's my birthday, but she hasn't mentioned it at all — like no acknowledging that it's the same day," the woman wrote on RedditNEED TO KNOW
A woman shared on Reddit that she found out her best friend plans to get married on her birthday — and she's questioning the choice
"Every time it's brought up, I just kinda nod along and do my best to be supportive, but I think it's really weird," she wrote of her friend's wedding plans
Reacting to the post, one reader argued, "Lots of things happen on our birthdays, and because we are adults we deal with it"A woman is puzzled by her best friend's wedding plans.
In a post on Reddit, the 26-year-old woman shared that her best friend is set to marry her longtime partner. "This is something we both have been talking about for years now, and it's something she's always wanted. I'm so excited and I'm going to be part of the wedding as well," the OP (original poster) noted.
However, the OP recently received her invitation and was surprised to discover that her best friend has planned a destination wedding in Las Vegas that will take place on her birthday.
"I know she knows it's my birthday, but she hasn't mentioned it at all — like no acknowledging that it's the same day. Every time it's brought up, I just kinda nod along and do my best to be supportive, but I think it's really weird," the OP wrote.
Now, she is not sure how to handle the situation.
"I feel like I need to say something, obviously, but I also know they already booked the chapel for that day and a couple others going to the wedding have already started buying hotel rooms and flights. I have no idea how I should even bring this up," she concluded her post, asking for advice.
In the comments section, many readers shared the opinion that this should be a non-issue for the OP.
"Your friend is getting married, and you're taking their choice of date far more personally than you should be," one person wrote. "A lot of different factors usually go into choosing wedding dates, from price to venue availability to when you know you can get your family and friends in one place. For destination weddings, hotel availability and flight prices come into play too."
They continued, "If you can't attend or don't want to attend because of your birthday, you can absolutely voice that, but there doesn't seem to be an a------ issue here."
Someone else chimed in: "Lots of things happen on our birthdays, and because we are adults we deal with it. Don't say anything. Don't pout like a little kid. Your birthday is only a priority for you."
The general consensus was that the OP should refrain from saying anything to the bride-to-be about her choice of wedding date.
Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
"Don't make her planning her wedding even more stressful than it already is. I'm sure when the date was picked, other factors played a more important role than the birthday of a friend falling on the same day," one commenter said, offering some simple advice: "Enjoy your friend's wedding!"
https://people-app.onelink.me/HNIa/kz7l4cuf
Another reader suggested that the OP find another time to celebrate her birthday with her friend, and yet another encouraged her to see the chosen wedding date as a positive.
"I would thank her — she's giving you two reasons to celebrate on your birthday!" they pointed out.
Read the original article on People
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Video: Paul Wesley Calls This Week's Shatner-Esque Performance ‘A Wink to the True Fans' — Watch
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Video: Paul Wesley Calls This Week's Shatner-Esque Performance ‘A Wink to the True Fans' — Watch

Yahoo

time13 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Video: Paul Wesley Calls This Week's Shatner-Esque Performance ‘A Wink to the True Fans' — Watch

Warning: This post contains spoilers for Thursday's . This week's Star Trek: Strange New Worlds introduced us to the cast of a fictional 1960s sci-fi TV show… and the star of that show sounded very familiar. More from TVLine The Challenge Premiere: Cara Maria Sorbello Breaks Down That 'Wild' First Challenge, Why [Spoiler] Was Eliminated Leanne Morgan Tees Up Her Netflix Comedy From EP Chuck Lorre, Reveals How Her Real-Life Husband Feels About TV Hubby Ryan Stiles The Challenge 41's Cara Maria Sorbello Names the One 'New Threat' Who Was 'Built for Destruction' Paul Wesley — who plays James T. Kirk on Strange New Worlds — played frustrated actor Maxwell Saint, the star of the very Trek-like TV show The Last Frontier, and Saint's preening, halting delivery was quite reminiscent of William Shatner's infamous acting style on the original Star Trek series. (Any Trekkie would recognize that cadence anywhere.) Wesley's Kirk is generally a different, more grounded take than Shatner's was, but when Wesley read this week's script, 'I realized immediately what an opportunity it was to give the viewers a satirical, more humorous version of what I could have done,' Wesley tells TVLine in the video above. He lists 'the pause in the cadence,' 'the gesturing' and the 'Shakespearean elements' as hallmarks of the 'James T. Kirk that we all know from the '60s. And I thought, 'Well, here it is. Let me do it for you now.' And I had an absolute blast doing it… I didn't want to overdo it, but I also wanted to do enough where it was a wink to the true fans.' Speaking of overdoing it, Wesley admits with a laugh that he had to dial back the Shatner-isms at times: 'We did, obviously, a bunch of takes. And so there were variations in the pauses, where the pause is like, 'Is he gonna say his next line?' And then we settled on sort of the moderate one.' The Last Frontier's flimsy sets and rubber-masked aliens were a tribute to the analog glories of the original Trek, too, Wesley adds: 'If you watch [the original Star Trek], the Gorn episode, for example [Season 1's 'Arena'], they're throwing Styrofoam rocks at each other, right?… Obviously, in the '60s, they didn't have special effects or VFX, and they couldn't digitize things, and so we wanted to have fun with making the sets so clearly a set, and just sort of like that absurdity, yet imagination and beauty, of something that is a 1960s futuristic set for television.' So Trekkies, what'd you think of Wesley's… … … performance? Beam down to the comments to give us your thoughts on this week's episode. Best of TVLine Yellowjackets' Tawny Cypress Talks Episode 4's Tai/Van Reunion: 'We're All Worried About Taissa' Vampire Diaries Turns 10: How Real-Life Plot Twists Shaped Everything From the Love Triangle to the Final Death Vampire Diaries' Biggest Twists Revisited (and Explained)

29 Hilarious Signs From July That Will Make You Laugh So Hard You'll Forget Fall Is Almost Here
29 Hilarious Signs From July That Will Make You Laugh So Hard You'll Forget Fall Is Almost Here

Yahoo

time13 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

29 Hilarious Signs From July That Will Make You Laugh So Hard You'll Forget Fall Is Almost Here

July is ending, and I can hardly believe it! Every week, we scour the funniest signs from Reddit to bring you a little pause in the day for some top-tier comedy. And, now, we've decided to round up all the ones you couldn't get enough of from the entire month for some extra laughs. So, here are 29 signs you loved in July, and what our BuzzFeed readers had to say about them: 1."The Raccoon was the best. All are funny, but that raccoon was genius.💜" —angelicchicken782 2."If I may add: A cockroach can shit 💩 a better president!" —radpotato85 3."TBF, speaking as a lactose-intolerant person, ice cream makes *us* happy too.... while we are eating it. It's only LATER that it makes us unhappy," —etconner Related: 4."My high school had a smoking area 😂" —missmissymaria143 5."Short, sweet and simple to the point." —MissMiddleEarthling 6."Yet ANOTHER reason the English language is SO stupid. I say this as a native English speaker. We have so many dumb rules and contradictions that make no sense. Countries should be pronounced like Count - trees because ou sounds like OW like house or out, right? Or maybe it's one of the times it's pronounced like Oooh like soup or youth. Or maybe it's only of the times it's pronounced like Uhh like trouble or cousin. Or maybe its one of the times it sounds like uhhh like would or could. Or maybe it's one of the times it's pronounced like shawa like anxious or nervous. Or maybe it's one of the times it's pronounced like Oh like shoulder or though. THE LIST GOES ON! WHY?!? Make it make sense! No wonder English is so hard to learn!" —Lalalace1640 7."Funny and clever!" —hiddencupcake431 8."The mythical double male adapter cord. It's too much power for us humans. Seriously though. ⚡️⚡️" —voiceofdecent 9."Please do NOT experience driving on shrooms and coke lol" —pennypiper 10."Seemed pretty obvious to me. Boobs and balls. Granted they should have just put women/men, but some places like to get cute." —flyerboy6 Related: 11."Is Lowkey something I would put bahahaggagaahgagha" —Katieisthebaddest69 12."'Shit & Split'! That little TP doodle complete with a heart! Lemme get a cross stitch of that sign! 😂" —thisisnothappening 13."Revving your engine… I want to make one for speeding. The offenders are mostly teenage boys who speed down my street. I'd love to see their reaction!" —slysword775 14."It's one of those papers you hand back facedown." —@deliciousgoose90 15."Eastern NC has a community named Jackass Flats. Oregon has a community named Nimrod. Those are a couple of the more entertaining communities I've personally visited." —savorycookie506 Related: 16."I have worked on washing machines that were used for horse blankets and a couple that had human shit in them. I would rather work on the ones with human shit. A 1,500 pound animal sweating heavily for hours into a blanket, and shedding pounds of hair too. No thanks." —nathaniel 17."Out of seven kids, my youngest sister (20 years younger) and I (second oldest) were the only accidental kids. My second daughter was an accident. Her daughter was an accident. Thank you for our lives. The three of us have a house together." —smartwitch66 18."I'm curious how many folks will pee on the floor because they saw it on the sign." —keathome2010 19."Do they realise instructions are updated as things need to be accounted for. Do not drink the contents of the battery is there BECAUSE the previous generation drank it." —artisticelf953 20."I love the mask one" —kimw28 21."We just going to ignore the other sign saying not to feed the cute chickens because they will get aggressive and steal your lunch? Lol." —artisticcaptain33 22."Super funny" —Theatre kid 23."😄" —magicalcupcake737 Related: 24."Whoever wrote this sign missed two gigantic loopholes: high school students under 17 are banned from the store (but dropouts can come in?); banned 6am - 6pm (but ya'll come hang out late at night?)" —cuteasteroid638 25."Makes me miss Austin. I drove by that El Arroyo on West Fifth when I worked downtown. The signs always made me smile, so I was in a good mood when I arrived at work." —shabooshabah 26."When God speaks, people listen. Absolutely BRILLIANT." —angelicpepper541 one commented, but this and the next one were thumbnail images that people loved... finally, just for anyone who resonates with this: We're going to continue to share great signs from Reddit, but we also want to see what YOU find as well! So, if you see a sign that makes you LOL, snap a pic, and share the photo in the comments below. You could be featured in our next roundup! Also in Nifty: Also in Nifty: Also in Nifty:

How did the Sydney Sweeney 'good jeans' American Eagle ad controversy reach the point where the White House is now involved?
How did the Sydney Sweeney 'good jeans' American Eagle ad controversy reach the point where the White House is now involved?

Yahoo

time13 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

How did the Sydney Sweeney 'good jeans' American Eagle ad controversy reach the point where the White House is now involved?

A top White House communications official responded to critics of American Eagle's ad starring actress Sydney Sweeney, calling their critiques of the campaign 'warped' and 'moronic' in a post on social media this week. White House communications director Steven Cheung wrote on X that claims that the ad contains harmful racial subtext are a sign of 'cancel culture run amok' and an example of why voters chose to reelect President Trump in last year's election. What started out as a buzzy commercial starring one of Hollywood's most in-demand actresses has quickly spiraled into a sprawling debate over sex, race, politics and American culture as a whole. How did a single 30-second advertisement create such a stir? Here's how we got here. What is the ad? The ad, or more accurately series of ads, are built around the tagline 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans' — a play on words that conflates American Eagle denim with the genetic traits that gave Sweeney her famously voluptuous figure. Some of the spots are more direct, specifically talking about her genetic background. 'Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality, and even eye color,' Sweeney says in one clip. 'My jeans are blue.' Sweeney has been a very successful partner for a variety of brands since she became one of the breakout stars of HBO's teen drama Euphoria in 2019. For example, earlier this year, the 27-year-old actress drew huge attention to a little-known soap company called Dr. Squatch by selling bars of soap that had been mixed with her personal bathwater. Depending on who you ask, the American Eagle ads are just another example of a brand capitalizing on Sweeney's star power to connect with consumers — or they're a modern-day example of offensive race-based messaging. What were the criticisms? Criticism of the ads from online commentators started to pour in almost immediately after American Eagle posted the first video online last week. The nature of the comments varies, but in general, the primary complaint is that the ad — which celebrates the genes/jeans of a white, blonde, blue-eyed actress — sends a message that certain types of heritage are better than others. 'It's saying that Sydney Sweeney has a great body, and therefore great genes and is therefore a product of genetic superiority,' content creator Jess Britvich said in a video on TikTok that has been viewed nearly 3 million times. Other social media users have gone so far as to call the ad Nazi propaganda or a means of promoting white supremacy. As the debate gained steam, cultural commentators at some of America's biggest news outlets started to weigh in with their own more nuanced takes. 'She embodies the near mythological girl-next-door beautiful but low-maintenance sexy femininity that dominated media in the 1990s and the early 2000s,' MSNBC producer Hannah Holland wrote. 'Together, the campaign feels regressive and not retro, offensive and not cheeky.' And what is the criticism to the criticism? Cheung isn't the only figure on the political right to condemn the ad's critics. Republican Sen. Ted Cruz reacted on X, writing 'Now the crazy Left has come out against beautiful women. I'm sure that will poll well….' In the eyes of many conservatives, the response to Sweeney's ad is a quintessential example of what they see as the left's extreme hypersensitivity on even the most anodyne subjects. 'A blond, blue-eyed actress talking about jeans — or even genes — is just a pun, not a secret salute to white supremacy,' New York Times opinion writer John McWhorter wrote on Tuesday. Popular conservative commentator Charlie Kirk blasted what he called the 'ridiculous overreaction' to an ad that, he believes, is 'nowhere close to offensive.' Why is this even an issue? The American Eagle ad controversy has sparked the deeper question about whether this is the sort of thing we, as a culture, should be fighting about at all. In the eyes of some commentators, the entire episode is a troubling symptom of how even largely unimportant things like a commercial for jeans get drawn into a never-ending cycle of outrage in which the opportunity for substantive discussion becomes impossible. 'What ends up happening in these scenarios is that everyone gets very mad, in a way that allows for a touch of moral superiority and is also good for creating online content,' Charlie Warzel, a staff writer for the Atlantic, wrote on Tuesday. 'The Sweeney ad, like any good piece of discourse, allows everyone to exploit a political and cultural moment for different ends.' Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store