On the first night of our wedding, my father-in-law told me to lie down between him and my husband because of a “lucky boy” tradition — and at exactly three in the morning, I felt something that made my whole body go cold.

Our wedding day had been perfect from the outside — flowers, music, smiling relatives, and a future that looked bright. But behind my smile was exhaustion. I just wanted to reach our room, take off the heavy dress, and finally breathe.
When my husband and I entered the bridal room, the soft glow of the bedside lamps made everything feel warm and intimate. I thought we would finally have a moment to ourselves.
But the doorknob clicked.
And before I could turn around, the door swung open.
My father-in-law stepped inside, carrying a pillow tucked under one arm and a rolled-up blanket under the other. He looked completely calm. Too calm.
“Move over,” he said casually. “Tonight I’ll sleep with you two.”

For illustrative purpose only
My breath caught in my chest.
I looked at my husband for an explanation, but he didn’t look shocked — he looked… prepared.
“Dad…” he said gently, “it’s okay. It’s tradition. A lucky elder sleeps between the newlyweds on the first night to bless them with a son. My grandfather did it. It’s normal.”
Normal.
The word stabbed me like a needle.
I forced a smile — the kind a bride is expected to give — but on the inside, something cracked.
My father-in-law settled himself between us, lying stiffly like a guard. I stayed at the very edge of the mattress, my back barely touching the bed. The blanket didn’t even reach my shoulders.
The room felt suffocating.
Each breath felt stolen.
Minutes passed like hours.
Then he began adjusting my sleeping position — pulling the blanket over me, straightening my pillow, nudging my arm and hips as if I were a piece of furniture that needed aligning for the ritual.
I froze, terrified to move but unable to stay still.
His fingers brushed my shoulder again.
I jolted upright.
“Dad, what are you doing?!” I blurted out, voice shaking.
My husband sat up quickly.
But instead of taking my side, he turned on the light and gave me a forced smile that made my stomach twist.
“Babe, relax. He’s old. This is just tradition. Don’t ruin our first night over something so small…”
Something so small.
My eyes burned. My throat tightened.
I felt like a child trapped in someone else’s house, someone else’s rules, someone else’s version of “normal.”
I realized in that moment that if I stayed in this marriage, my body, my privacy, my dignity — none of it would ever truly belong to me again.
At exactly three in the morning, after hours of lying stiff and sleepless, my skin suddenly felt unbearably itchy — not on the surface, but beneath it, the crawling sensation of anxiety turning into panic.
My heart pounded. My body trembled.
It was like every nerve in me was screaming:
Get out.
Now.
Before you disappear inside this family forever.
I waited until dawn.

For illustrative purpose only
While the family was eating breakfast, laughing and discussing the wedding, I quietly walked into the bridal room, packed my suitcase, removed my wedding ring, and placed it on the table.
The metallic clink felt like freedom.
I walked past the dining room.
My husband stood up in shock.
“What are you doing?” he whispered.
I only said one sentence:
“I’m choosing myself.”
That afternoon, my mother took me directly to a lawyer.
We filed for an annulment — and attached the recording from the hidden camera that had been placed in the room for “wedding night blessings.”
It captured everything:
his hands adjusting me, the comments about tradition, my husband telling me not to “overreact.”
When the lawyer finished listening, he took off his glasses and said quietly:
“This isn’t tradition. This is disrespect.”
I didn’t cry. Not anymore.
Three months later, the annulment was finalized. I moved to another city, changed my number, and started building a life that finally felt like my own.
Some asked why I didn’t hide what happened. People fear gossip. They fear judgment.
But I only said:
“Silence protects the wrong people.
I will never protect what tried to break me.”
I didn’t have the wedding night I dreamed of —
but I did have something far more important:
A first step toward freedom,
and the courage to end a generational curse disguised as tradition.