Bride's Bachelorette Party ‘Got a Bit Too Physical,' If Groom Finds Out He Might 'Call Off the Wedding’
One of the games involving the "drunk" bride and a "cheeky butler" got very "physical," according to a partygoer
A bride's bachelorette party "got a bit too physical."
The bride's best friend explained in a post on Reddit's popular "Am I the A------?" forum that she and the maid of honor recently threw the bride a bachelorette party. But the party didn't go quite as planned.
The poster said that the bride had one rule: no strippers.
"She wasn't into that and didn't want to upset her fiancé," she noted.
Alternatively, the bride's friend decided it would be "hilarious and memorable to hire a cheeky butler to serve drinks and host games."
"I didn't think it would be a problem because they are a lot more tame," the poster wrote.
She was wrong.
"For some reason it wasn't," she continued. "One of the games we all played got a bit too physical (VEERRRRY PHYSICAL)."
Now, the woman getting married soon feels "bad" and "very guilty" for her actions. She's unsure whether or not she should tell her fiancé about what happened at the party.
"She was a bit drunk, and nothing happened, but she's feeling very guilty," her friend wrote. "She wants to tell her fiancé, but he's very religious and she's worried he'll call off the wedding."
The friend wants to "help and give good advice" to the bride, but she's "not sure what to say." So, she turned to Reddit users for suggestions.
Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
The comments section was bleak, with only a few Redditors weighing in on the situation.
One person blamed the poster for hiring the cheeky butler in the first place when she knew the bride didn't want to have anything at her bachelorette party that could potentially upset her fiancé.
"A lot of lives have been destroyed over 'a little naughty fun,'" they commented in part.
Another Redditor said that having secrets is no way to start a marriage, and urged the bride to tell the groom the truth.
"Ah, relationships built on lies and deceit always work out in the long run. Her future husband deserves to make an informed decision as to whether or not he wants to stay (not whether or not she wants to deceive him into staying). She needs to talk to him," the user wrote. "The good news is that this marriage won't last long if lies build up, so there's that."
Read the original article on People