A Wedding, A Roast, And A Wake-Up Call

My DIL said their wedding menu would be 100% vegan, and I thought it was ridiculous. I arranged for the caterers to prepare a small meat section. When my DIL spotted it, her face turned white.

Then my son suddenly hugged me and said, ‘Thank you for trying, Mom. But this isn’t the time.’

I stood there, holding a cocktail shrimp on a toothpick, completely frozen. His words weren’t harsh, but they carried weight.

I looked past him and saw his bride—Tara—near tears, whispering something to her maid of honor. I’ll admit it—I didn’t understand it. The whole vegan thing felt like a phase.

I’d spent my whole life making pot roasts and chicken casseroles, and suddenly I was being told that none of that belonged at a wedding reception? Two hundred guests, all to be served lentil patties and zucchini noodles? It just didn’t seem right.

I thought I was helping by secretly adding a “meat corner” to the buffet. A little brisket, some pulled pork sliders, even cocktail sausages. I told the caterer to keep it subtle.

But subtle apparently isn’t subtle enough when Tara spotted it before the reception even officially began. I put the shrimp down on the plate like it had burned me. “I thought… I just thought some guests might want options,” I said, not really knowing if I was talking to my son, to Tara, or to the tiny judgmental voice in my own head.

“Mom,” my son said softly, “We talked about this. We agreed. Tara and I made this decision together.”

He wasn’t angry.

That made it worse. I looked at the tables. People were milling around, oblivious to the drama.

Music played low. The flowers were beautiful—white and green, minimalist. No roses, no lilies.

All sustainable. All intentional. Just like the food.

Tara came up to me, and I braced myself. But she just smiled, though her eyes were a little wet. “It’s okay,” she said.

“Let’s just take it away. No big deal.”

I opened my mouth to argue, to explain—but my son gently shook his head. And somehow, that did it.

That told me everything. I’d made this about me. I’d taken something that mattered deeply to both of them—their values, their choices—and treated it like it was just some silly theme they’d grow out of.

The caterers were quick to remove the meat trays. Most guests hadn’t even noticed. But I noticed something shift in me.

Later that night, as they danced their first dance to a soft acoustic cover of “Can’t Help Falling in Love,” I watched them closely. My son looked happier than I’d ever seen him. And Tara—well, she looked at him like he was the only person in the world.

That night, I couldn’t sleep. It wasn’t about the meat. Not really.

It was about me letting go. About me realizing that I wasn’t the center of my son’s life anymore. And that wasn’t a bad thing—it was just new.

I decided to make it up to them. A few days after the wedding, I called Tara. I asked her to meet for lunch—at a vegan café she loved, one I’d never set foot in before.

She was surprised, but agreed. I’ll be honest—I was skeptical. The menu was full of things I’d never heard of.

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