“My friend is planning a ‘free’ wedding by asking everyone for favors. She knows I’m not a baker, but she still asked me to make a multi-tier cake – even with gold leaf. I confronted her about it, but her reaction left me shaken”
Her nameโs Natasha, and sheโs been my friend since we were fifteen. We met in drama class, bonding over our shared hatred of Shakespeare and love of vending machine snacks. I stood by her through some really rough patchesโher dadโs drinking, her first heartbreak, and that time she shaved her eyebrows trying to follow a makeup tutorial.
So, when she got engaged to her boyfriend of two years, I was genuinely happy for her. She called me that night, screaming into the phone, and I could hear her fiancรฉ laughing in the background. I remember thinking, “She deserves this. Finally, something good.”
Then came the wedding planning.
From the start, she made it clear she wanted a “community wedding,” where everyone pitched in to make the day special. No fancy venues or big budgetsโjust love, friends, and DIY everything. I was on board. I even helped her glue together over fifty centerpieces using thrift store jars and dried lavender.
But then she started assigning roles.
Her cousin, who’s barely out of cosmetology school, was tapped to do everyoneโs hair and makeup. Her neighbor, a college student with a decent camera, was somehow declared the wedding photographer. Her brother was DJing using just Spotify and a rented speaker. And me? The cake.
The cake.
I work in HR. I bake sometimesโfor fun. Banana bread. Box mix brownies. Maybe the occasional pumpkin loaf in autumn if Iโm feeling festive. But a wedding cake? Multi-tiered? With fondant and edible gold leaf? She might as well have asked me to fly the honeymoon plane.
When she texted me the Pinterest image of what she wanted, I laughed. I thought she was joking. It was one of those cakes you see in bridal magazinesโperfectly sculpted, with delicate sugar flowers and cascading gold trim.
So I called her.
“Tash,” I said. “This cake… it’s beautiful, but you know Iโm not a baker, right?”
She giggled. “Youโll figure it out! Youโre so crafty. And there are tons of YouTube tutorials! Just start practicing now. You have, like, three months.”
I was stunned. “You seriously want me to make your wedding cake?”
“Iโm asking as a friend,” she said sweetly. “You know we donโt have the money to pay someone.”
I paused. “Then maybe… get a smaller cake? Or just do cupcakes?”
Her voice changed. “Why are you being negative? I thought you were excited about this. Everyone else is helping. Why are you acting like itโs such a burden?”
That stung. But I stayed calm.
“I love you, and I want your wedding to be amazing. But asking me to do something Iโm completely unqualified forโsomething as important as the cakeโitโs just not fair. What if I mess it up? What if it collapses?”
There was a long silence on the other end.
Then, in the coldest tone Iโve ever heard from her, she said, “If you canโt support me during the most important time of my life, maybe you’re not the friend I thought you were.”
And she hung up.
I sat there with the phone pressed to my ear, blinking. I felt like Iโd been slapped.
The next few days were quiet. I didnโt hear from her. I saw her post on Instagram about how some people will show their “true colors” when they canโt benefit from your joy. A couple of her friends commented, offering hugs and heart emojis. One of them even tagged me, passive-aggressively.
I didnโt respond. I couldnโt. I was too hurt.
Two weeks later, I got a group email with wedding updates. My name was still on the list as the cake maker. No apology. No acknowledgment of the phone call. Just a note that read: “Cake: handled by [My Name] โ three tiers, gold leaf, lemon and raspberry.”
It felt like a trap. Or worse, a test.
I thought about backing out of the wedding entirely. But I didnโt want to be that person. And a small part of me still cared about her, even if I didnโt recognize who she was becoming.
So, I did what I thought was fairโI replied to the email, CCโd everyone, and simply wrote:
“Hey Natasha, I just want to clarify that I wonโt be making the wedding cake. I love you and Iโm happy to support you in other ways, but Iโm not comfortable being responsible for something so crucial on your big day. Hope you understand.”
No reply.
Three hours later, I got a text from her mother.
“You broke Natashaโs heart. Sheโs been crying all afternoon. I thought you were her best friend.”
I didnโt reply to that, either.
I figured that was it. Friendship over.
But then something weird happened.
A week before the wedding, I got a call from her fiancรฉ, Ben. I hesitated before answering, but curiosity got the better of me.
“Hey,” he said. “Can we meet up? Just for a coffee?”
I met him at a cafรฉ near my office. He looked tired. Stressed. He thanked me for coming.
“I just… I wanted to say sorry,” he said.
I blinked. “For what?”
“For how Natashaโs treated you. And for dragging you into this circus.”
I didnโt know what to say.
He continued. “Sheโs under so much pressure right now, and sheโs been trying to make this dream wedding happen without thinking about what itโs costing everyone else. Including you. I told her she was being unreasonable, but she wouldnโt listen.”
I stared at him. This man was supposed to marry her in six days.
“Youโre really telling me all this now?”
He sighed. “To be honest, Iโm having second thoughts.”
That made my stomach turn.
“Donโt say that to me,” I said, more sharply than I intended. “If youโre going to call off a wedding, you donโt tell the guests first.”
He nodded quickly. “Sorry. Youโre right. Iโm just… lost. And I guess I needed to talk to someone whoโs known her longer than I have.”
I told him to talk to her. Not me. And I left.
But I couldnโt stop thinking about it.
The night before the wedding, I got another call. This time, from Natasha.
I considered ignoring it. But I answered.
“Hey,” she said, her voice small.
“Hi.”
“Iโm sorry.”
I didnโt say anything.
“I was so caught up in this idea of the perfect wedding that I stopped being a decent friend. You didnโt deserve that.”
I exhaled. Finally.
“You really hurt me,” I said.
“I know,” she said. “Ben and I had a huge fight after he told me he saw you. He said I was turning into someone Iโd promised never to be. And he was right.”
I softened. A little.
“So, what now?”
“I called a local bakery. Theyโre doing a small cake. Itโs not gold leaf, but itโs real.”
I laughed. “Probably for the best. I wouldโve hot glued the tiers together.”
She giggled. For the first time in months, it felt like us again.
“Are you still coming tomorrow?”
I hesitated. But I said yes.
The wedding was beautiful in its own weird way. The flowers were a bit wilted, the DJ kept cutting out, and the food arrived 45 minutes late. But Natasha looked genuinely happy, and so did Ben.
After the ceremony, she hugged me tight.
“Thank you for coming,” she whispered. “Thank you for forgiving me.”
“Still mad you didnโt go with cupcakes,” I whispered back.
We both laughed.
Two weeks later, she sent me a photo. It was the wedding cakeโsmall, simple, buttercream with a few fresh flowers. Underneath was a caption: “Perfect, because it was made with love, not pressure.”
Hereโs the thing I learned: boundaries are love too. Just because someoneโs your friend doesnโt mean you should do things that break you just to make them happy. A real friend wonโt ask you to.
And if they do? Itโs okay to say no.
If this story hit home, share it with someone who needs the reminder. And hey, maybe donโt ask your dentist friend to build your wedding arch out of driftwood. Just saying.




