Our Youngest Granddaughter Accused Us of Choosing a ‘Disgusting’ Hotel as a Gift for Her Honeymoon — Our Lesson to Her Was Priceless

When Connie and Jim’s granddaughter, Mae, just got married, they decided to contribute to her honeymoon. But when they reveal their choice of hotel, Mae responds with entitlement, saying that they ruined everything for her. Instead of retaliating, the couple decides to teach her a lesson.

I’ve always been the doting grandmother. It was something that I looked forward to after having my children. I didn’t think that I’d share my story here, but this was too outrageous to keep to myself. This is how my husband, Jim, and I taught our youngest granddaughter a lesson she won’t soon forget.

An elderly couple at the beach | Source: Pexels

An elderly couple at the beach | Source: Pexels

Our youngest granddaughter, Mae, is getting married. She’s always been a bit of a princess, expecting the best of everything.

“I’m high maintenance, Gran,” she would tell me, often while painting her nails or doing something of the sort.

A woman painting her nails | Source: Pexels

A woman painting her nails | Source: Pexels

But because she’s the youngest, Jim and I got to spend the most time with her after we began slowing down with our jobs. So, when her boyfriend, Nathan, proposed, we were cautiously optimistic.

“I don’t think she’s rushing into it,” Jim told me as we sat down to breakfast one morning. “But I just wish that she would wait a little longer, you know, give us time to get involved in the wedding.”

A breakfast setting on a wooden table | Source: Pexels

A breakfast setting on a wooden table | Source: Pexels

Jim loved Mae. And despite us having so many other grandchildren, she was definitely his favorite. He would move mountains for her just because she asked.

So, when her wedding rolled around, we were more than happy to oblige when she came to us asking if we could help pay for her honeymoon.

A grandfather and his granddaughter | Source: Pexels

A grandfather and his granddaughter | Source: Pexels

We wanted to give her a memorable gift, and this was the best way we could contribute, knowing that she would love it. And more than that, it would be a lovely way for her to start her new life with Nathan.

“We’ll do what we can,” I told her when she picked me up so that we could go to her final dress fitting together.

A woman driving a car | Source: Pexels

A woman driving a car | Source: Pexels

“But really, Gran,” she said enthusiastically. “It’s going to be great! And the fact that you and Grandad are doing it for me, that’s going to make it a lot more special.”

We got into the store and I watched my granddaughter change into her gown.

She looked absolutely stunning. I couldn’t believe that our youngest granddaughter was about to embark on one of the greatest adventures of her life.

A woman in her wedding gown | Source: Midjourney

A woman in her wedding gown | Source: Midjourney

Afterward, Mae came home with me.

“I’m going off all carbs from next week, Gran,” she said. “But I’d kill for your fried chicken and mashed potatoes.”

“Coming right up, honey,” I said.

Fried chicken on a tray | Source: Unsplash

Fried chicken on a tray | Source: Unsplash

As she made herself at home, I began to make my way around the kitchen. When Jim got in, Mae pulled out her phone and began scrolling.

“I’ve had some ideas about the honeymoon,” she said, showing us her phone.

“Right!” Jim exclaimed. “Show us what you have in mind.”

A woman holding a phone | Source: Unsplash

A woman holding a phone | Source: Unsplash

Of course, knowing our granddaughter, it was going to be something lavish.

Mae showed us a luxurious resort in the Caribbean. The place was stunning but incredibly expensive.

“I’m sorry, honey,” Jim told her while I tossed the chicken in the hot oil. “But we just don’t have that kind of money.”

A person eating fried chicken | Source: Pexels

A person eating fried chicken | Source: Pexels

Mae pouted, her eyes wide.

“But don’t fret!” Jim said quickly. “We’ll sort something out.”

I knew that even though Jim wanted to give Mae everything, there was no way that we could get Mae and Nathan to the Caribbean. But he just wouldn’t want to disappoint her.

A wooden deck over water | Source: Pexels

A wooden deck over water | Source: Pexels

Mae left our home after eating with us, the topic of the honeymoon long forgotten as I did the dishes.

“We can’t afford it, Connie,” Jim told me as he poured himself another glass of juice.

“Then, we have to be open and honest with Mae,” I said. “She knows that we can’t spend a ridiculous amount of money just for her honeymoon. It’s not going to work.”

A person pouring juice | Source: Pexels

A person pouring juice | Source: Pexels

“But I can’t disappoint her,” Jim said solemnly. “So, I’m going to look for something with the same aesthetic.”

My husband sat with his laptop for hours. Two cups of tea and hundreds of hotels later, we finally found one that had excellent reviews and was within our budget.

An elderly man using a laptop | Source: Pexels

An elderly man using a laptop | Source: Pexels

We booked it and surprised Mae with the news over the phone.

“It’s all sorted! Your honeymoon is all booked and ready to go!” Jim said.

“That’s great, Grandad,” she said. “Send me the links and I’ll look at it in the morning.”

An elderly man on the phone | Source: Pexels

An elderly man on the phone | Source: Pexels

I thought that she seemed grateful, but that didn’t last very long.

The next morning, as I was stirring oatmeal, Mae came over in a rage, her tone dripping with entitlement.

“Grandma, Grandpa,” she said. “I looked up the hotel you booked for Nathan and I. It’s just a joke, right?”

A bowl of oatmeal | Source: Unsplash

A bowl of oatmeal | Source: Unsplash

Jim and I looked at each other, he frowned slightly.

Mae, on the other hand, continued to speak through the silence.

“This place is a dump compared to what I showed you. Why would you choose such a disgusting hotel? Are you really trying to ruin my honeymoon?”

An elderly man covering his mouth | Source: Pexels

An elderly man covering his mouth | Source: Pexels

I was completely taken aback by Mae. Yes, she was spoiled. But she hadn’t been raised like this at all.

We had spent a lot of time finding a nice place and spent a significant amount of money on the hotel. I explained that we thought it was a beautiful hotel and that it had great reviews.

“Well, I guess it’s fine if you don’t care about making my honeymoon special. Thanks for nothing.”

An elderly woman covering her face | Source: Pexels

An elderly woman covering her face | Source: Pexels

I was furious. I felt a sense of disappointment that I had never felt before. We all knew that Mae behaved a certain way, but I was so sure that she would have changed her ways silently.

She was on the threshold of becoming a wife.

“I don’t think she meant it,” Jim said, trying to make up for Mae’s attitude.

A close-up of a woman | Source: Pexels

A close-up of a woman | Source: Pexels

“Stop, Jim,” I said. “Stop trying to make Mae seem like someone she’s not. We need to teach her a lesson.”

It took my husband some convincing, but he eventually gave in when he realized that he couldn’t change anything about Mae.

We started by calling the hotel and canceling the reservation completely. Then we moved on to the next phase of our plan.

An elderly woman on the phone | Source: Pexels

An elderly woman on the phone | Source: Pexels

“It’s an upgrade, darling,” I said to Mae on the phone while Jim made us some hot chocolate one evening, a week before the wedding.

“It’s going to be better than the hotel we showed you!”

“Thanks, Gran!” Mae said.

Two mugs of hot chocolate | Source: Unsplash

Two mugs of hot chocolate | Source: Unsplash

She said she was thrilled and couldn’t stop gushing about how grateful she was that Jim and I had finally changed the honeymoon plans for her.

On the day of the wedding, Jim handed her the envelope with the details. Inside, we included fake reservation documents for an extravagant resort that didn’t actually exist.

A white envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

A white envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

Thanks to an editing site on the internet, the documents looked professional and real. We also included a note that said:

Enjoy your dream honeymoon, Mae.

Love, Gran and Grandad.

A person using a laptop | Source: Unsplash

A person using a laptop | Source: Unsplash

The rest of their reception went well, with Mae and Nathan dancing along to three songs.

“Three, because we couldn’t decide on just one for the first dance,” Mae explained after.

Eventually, the cake was cut and the evening began to wind down with the bridal car ready and parked at the entrance of the venue.

A couple cutting their wedding cake | Source: Unsplash

A couple cutting their wedding cake | Source: Unsplash

Nathan and Mae got in, not knowing that when they got to their honeymoon destination a few hours away, there wouldn’t be a reservation.

On cue, Mae called us later, fuming.

“What did you do? There is no reservation! Just a motel that looks like it needs to be fumigated! We’re stranded. How could you do this to me?”

An angry bride | Source: Unsplash

An angry bride | Source: Unsplash

“Oh, darling,” I said. “It looks like maybe there was a mix-up. Maybe you should have appreciated the original gift.”

She was livid, but there was nothing she could do. They had to scramble for a room at the motel, and it wasn’t anything near the luxury she had expected.

They returned two days later, after Nathan had convinced her to make the most of their trip. Mae was still fuming, but we knew that she had learned a valuable lesson about gratitude and entitlement.

A rundown seaside motel | Source: Midjourney

A rundown seaside motel | Source: Midjourney

She came over and asked me to bake her some cookies while we had a long conversation about her behavior.

“I’m sorry, Gran,” she said. “I know that I’m a lot, and I didn’t mean to be ungrateful. It was a humbling experience.”

Sometimes the best way to teach someone a lesson is with a bit of creative revenge.

Cookies on a plate | Source: Unsplash

Cookies on a plate | Source: Unsplash

What would you have done?

My Parents Refused to Attend My Wedding Because My Fiancé Was Poor — We Met 10 Years Later and They Begged to Build a Relationship

When Emma fell in love with a humble teacher, her parents gave her an ultimatum: choose him or them. On her wedding day, their seats sat empty, but her grandpa stood by her side. At his funeral ten years later, her estranged parents begged for her forgiveness, but not for the reasons she thought.

Growing up in our pristine suburban home, my parents had a running joke about how we’d all live in a grand mansion someday.

A mansion with a formal garden | Source: Pexels

A mansion with a formal garden | Source: Pexels

“One day, Emma,” my father would say, adjusting his already-perfect tie in the hallway mirror, “we’ll live in a house so big you’ll need a map to find the kitchen.”

My mother would laugh, the sound like crystal glasses clinking, adding, “And you’ll marry someone who’ll help us get there, won’t you, sweetheart?”

“A prince!” I’d reply when I was a kid. “With a big castle! And lots of horses!”

An excited girl with her hands in the air | Source: Midjourney

An excited girl with her hands in the air | Source: Midjourney

I thought it was funny throughout my early childhood. I even used to daydream about my future castle. But by high school, I understood there was nothing funny about it at all.

My parents were relentless. Every decision they made, every friendship they had, and every activity we attended had to advance our social climbing somehow.

Mom vetted my friends based on their parents’ tax brackets! I don’t think I’ll ever forget how she sneered when I brought my classmate Bianca over to work on our science project.

A woman with a disapproving look | Source: Midjourney

A woman with a disapproving look | Source: Midjourney

“You aren’t friends with that girl, are you?” Mom asked at dinner that evening.

I shrugged. “Bianca’s nice, and she’s one of the top students in class.”

“She’s not good enough for you,” Mom replied sternly. “Those cheap clothes and awful haircut says it all, top student or not.”

A strange feeling churned in my gut when Mom said those words. That was when I truly realized how narrow-minded my parents were.

A teen girl seated at a dinner table | Source: Midjourney

A teen girl seated at a dinner table | Source: Midjourney

Dad was no better. He networked at my school events instead of watching my performances.

I still remember my leading role in “The Glass Menagerie” senior year. Father spent the entire show in the lobby discussing investment opportunities with the parents of my cast mates.

“Did you see me at all?” I asked him afterward, still in my costume.

“Of course, princess,” he replied, not looking up from his phone. “I heard the applause. Must have been wonderful.”

A man using his phone while his sad teen daughter stands nearby | Source: Midjourney

A man using his phone while his sad teen daughter stands nearby | Source: Midjourney

Then came college and Liam.

“A teacher?” My mother had practically choked on her champagne when I told her about him. “Emma, darling, teachers are wonderful people, but they’re not exactly… well, you know.”

She glanced around our country club as if someone might overhear this shameful secret.

I knew exactly what she meant, and for the first time in my life, I didn’t care.

A woman with a determined look on her face | Source: Midjourney

A woman with a determined look on her face | Source: Midjourney

Liam was different from anyone I’d ever met. While other guys tried to impress me with their parents’ vacation homes or luxury cars, he talked about becoming a teacher with such passion it made his whole face light up.

When he proposed, it wasn’t with an enormous diamond in a fancy restaurant. It was with his grandmother’s ring in the community garden where we’d had our first date.

The stone was small but caught the sunlight in a way that made it look like it held all the stars in the universe.

A diamond ring sparkling in sunlight | Source: Midjourney

A diamond ring sparkling in sunlight | Source: Midjourney

“I can’t give you a mansion,” he said, his voice shaking slightly, “but I promise to give you a home filled with love.”

I said yes before he could even finish asking.

My parents’ response was arctic.

“Not that teacher!” my father had spat as though he was talking about some criminal. “How will he provide for you? For us? You’ll be throwing your future in the trash if you marry him!”

A man gesturing angrily during dinner | Source: Midjourney

A man gesturing angrily during dinner | Source: Midjourney

“He already provides everything I need,” I told them. “He’s kind, he makes me laugh, and he—”

“I forbid it!” Dad interrupted. “If you go through with this, if you marry that teacher…”

“Then we’ll cut you off,” Mom finished, her voice sharp as glass. “Call him right this minute and break up with him, or we’ll disown you. We didn’t invest so much time and effort in your upbringing only for you to throw it all away.”

My jaw dropped.

A woman gasping in disbelief during dinner | Source: Midjourney

A woman gasping in disbelief during dinner | Source: Midjourney

“You can’t be serious,” I whispered.

“It’s him or us,” Dad replied, his face like stone.

I’d known my parents might have a hard time accepting Liam, but this? I couldn’t believe they’d make such an impossible demand.

But the hard look on their faces made it clear their decision was final. I knew I had to make a choice, and it broke my heart.

A sad but determined woman | Source: Midjourney

A sad but determined woman | Source: Midjourney

“I’ll send you an invitation to the wedding in case you change your minds,” I said before standing up and walking away.

The wedding was small, intimate, and perfect, except for the two empty seats in the front row. But Grandpa was there, and somehow his presence filled the whole church.

He walked me down the aisle, his steps slow but steady, and his grip on my arm was firm and reassuring.

“You picked the right kind of wealth, kid,” he whispered as he hugged me. “Love matters more than money. Always has, always will.”

A bride hugging her grandfather | Source: Midjourney

A bride hugging her grandfather | Source: Midjourney

Life wasn’t easy after that. Liam’s teaching salary and the money I made from freelancing brought in just enough to make ends meet.

We lived in a tiny apartment where the heat only worked when it felt like it, and the neighbor’s music became our constant soundtrack. But our home was full of laughter, especially after Sophie was born.

She inherited her father’s gentle heart and my stubborn streak, a combination that made me proud daily.

A child looking at a book | Source: Pexels

A child looking at a book | Source: Pexels

Grandpa was our rock through it all.

He’d show up with groceries when things were tight, though we never told him about our struggles. He’d sit for hours with Sophie, teaching her card tricks and telling her stories about his childhood.

“You know what real wealth is, sweetheart?” I overheard him telling her once. “It’s having people who love you for exactly who you are.”

An elderly man telling stories to his great-granddaughter | Source: Midjourney

An elderly man telling stories to his great-granddaughter | Source: Midjourney

“Like how Mommy and Daddy love me?” Sophie had asked.

“Exactly like that,” he’d replied, his eyes meeting mine across the room. “That’s the kind of rich that lasts forever.”

When Grandpa passed away, it felt like losing my foundation. Standing at his funeral, holding Liam’s hand while Sophie pressed against his leg, I could barely get through the eulogy.

Then I saw them — my parents. They were older but still immaculate and approached me with tears during the reception.

A mature couple at a funeral reception | Source: Midjourney

A mature couple at a funeral reception | Source: Midjourney

Mother’s pearls caught the light from the stained glass windows, and Father’s suit probably cost more than our monthly rent.

“Emma, darling,” my mother said, reaching for my hands. “We’ve been such fools. Please, can we try to rebuild our relationship?”

For a moment, my heart soared. Ten years of pain seemed ready to heal until Aunt Claire marched up and pulled me aside.

A woman with a grim look | Source: Midjourney

A woman with a grim look | Source: Midjourney

“Emma, honey, don’t fall for it,” she said, her voice low and urgent as she guided me toward a quiet corner, “your parents’ apology isn’t genuine. They’re only doing it because of the condition in your Grandpa’s will.”

“What condition?”

Aunt Claire pursed her lips. “Dad spent years trying to convince your parents to reconcile with you. They always refused, so he put it in his will. The only way your mom will get her inheritance is if they apologize and make peace with you, otherwise, her share of the money will go to charity.”

A woman whispering to someone | Source: Midjourney

A woman whispering to someone | Source: Midjourney

The truth hit me like a physical blow. Even now, after all these years, it is still about the money. The tears in their eyes weren’t for me, or Grandpa. They were for their bank account.

I thanked Aunt Claire for telling me the truth before going to the microphone to give another speech.

“Grandpa taught me what real wealth looks like,” I said, my voice carrying across the hushed room. “It looks like my husband spending extra hours helping struggling students without pay. It looks like my daughter sharing her lunch with a classmate who forgot theirs.”

A serious woman speaking into a microphone | Source: Midjourney

A serious woman speaking into a microphone | Source: Midjourney

“Real wealth is love given freely and without conditions.” I looked directly at my parents. “Some people never learn that lesson. But I’m grateful to have had someone who showed me the difference between true richness and mere wealth.”

Later that day, I learned that Grandpa had left me a separate inheritance, no strings attached. Enough to ensure Sophie’s college education and ease our constant financial juggling act.

The lawyer also confirmed that my parents would receive nothing. Every penny of their expected inheritance would go to educational charities, supporting students who couldn’t afford college.

A lawyer in an office | Source: Pexels

A lawyer in an office | Source: Pexels

I couldn’t help but smile, imagining Grandpa’s satisfied grin. He’d found a way to turn their greed into something beautiful.

That night, tucked between Liam and Sophie on our worn but comfortable couch, watching an old movie and sharing a bowl of popcorn, I felt a peace I hadn’t expected.

My parents’ betrayal still hurt, but it was a distant ache now, overshadowed by the warmth of the family I’d chosen and built.

“Mom,” Sophie asked, snuggling closer, “tell me another story about Great-Grandpa?”

A woman snuggling her daughter | Source: Midjourney

A woman snuggling her daughter | Source: Midjourney

“Well, sweetie,” I said, catching Liam’s loving glance over her head, “let me tell you about the time he taught me what real wealth means…”

Looking at my daughter’s eager face and my husband’s gentle smile, I knew I’d never regret choosing love over money. After all, I was the richest person I knew.

Here’s another story:After losing my wife, my family stopped visiting me altogether, but the neighborhood children became my comfort with their frequent visits. Once I got tired of being neglected by my own family, I decided to make them see the error of their ways.

This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

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