IT'S a day she'dbeen waiting for her whole life.
So when it came to planning her wedding, Emily Chriscoli insisted on two rules to make her nuptials as perfect as possible.
But, in a video on TikTok, Emily explained that guests ended up breaking BOTH of her rules.
"Two things that our wedding guests paid no attention to in our July 2022 wedding," she began.
"We made it very clear that our wedding was child free, with the exception of immediate family members.
"By that I mean our nieces, nephews and our children were part of our wedding party.
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"Other than that, our invitations made it very very clear that if you had children, they weren’t welcome at our wedding.
"Despite that, we still had people that brought them to the evening wedding reception.
"That was a bit of a turn up for the books – we weren’t expecting that.
"And annoyingly, even the guests that brought children – because there was more than one – they actually came in a couple, so mum, dad and child.
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"So why couldn’t one person come and bring a friend as their plus one?
"Which was fine, it was clearly stipulated in the invites."
The next rule that was broken by four guests at the wedding was that they didn't want any pictures of their nuptials to be uploaded to social media until they had done so.
"I don’t think that that is a particularly unreasonable request," Emily insisted.
"I think it’s quite similar to when someone’s had a baby – that they get to be the one to have the privilege of being able to announce that baby’s birth.
"It’s no different because it’s your wedding.
"You want to be the one to share the photographs of your day – you in your wedding dress and your partner in their suit – and I don’t think that that was unreasonable."
They even put an extra insert in their wedding invitations stating as much.
But that didn't stop four guests from breaking that rule – with one even tagging Emily in her pictures.
"Four people still uploaded pictures of me, in my dress, on Facebook," she said.
"One person tagged me!
"So unbeknownst to me, because as a bride you’re generally not on your phone for any of your wedding day, my phone was in my handbag, my handbag was on a table god knows where, and I’m up on the dance floor.
"And I had people that were not invited to the wedding – people I just sort of generally know – that were messaging me saying ‘Someone’s just tagged you in this’.
"I just think it’s the height of rudeness.
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"If you’re going to a wedding, really don’t do that, especially if the bride and groom have made it explicitly clear that they want to be the first ones to do it.
"But even if they don’t, it’s common courtesy. Don’t do it."
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