When my sister Beth got engaged after attending a wellness retreat, I was overjoyed—but also a little surprised.
Beth had always been a romantic, the type to believe in fairy tale endings. After a devastating breakup a few years earlier, she’d lost that spark.
So when she returned from Arizona talking about a man named Nathaniel who had “healed her heart,” we were hopeful—even if it all seemed to be happening too fast.
Beth had always been beautifully intense—creative, emotional, and quick to fall in love.
Her breakup with Marcus, who cheated on her and mocked her for being “too dreamy,” left her shattered. After months of isolation, she went away to find herself again.
When she came back, she seemed lighter, happier. And suddenly, she was engaged. Nathaniel, she said, was from overseas.
Due to visa issues, they needed to marry quickly. But no one had met him. She had reasons—he was shy, he hated photos, he wanted their first meeting with us to be special.
We questioned it, but gently. Beth seemed genuinely happy for the first time in years. The wedding day arrived, and everything looked beautiful—except Beth. She was glowing, yes, but there was a frantic edge to her energy.
She wouldn’t let anyone stay with her in the bridal suite and insisted she needed to “soak in the moment.”
Then came the ceremony. Beth walked down the aisle, radiant. But she stood at the altar alone. The music changed for the groom’s entrance… but no one came.
That’s when our father stood up, holding a small pink leather journal. He gently told everyone the wedding was off. Nathaniel, he said, didn’t exist.
The journal was filled with pages of imagined love letters and detailed moments with someone entirely fictional.
Beth had created him—built a full relationship in her mind to cope with her pain. Beth broke down at the altar.
“He felt so real to me,” she sobbed. I held her as the guests quietly left, hearts broken in their own way.
Beth was later diagnosed with a dissociative coping disorder rooted in trauma. Recovery wasn’t easy, but she faced it with courage. With therapy, family support, and time, she slowly began to heal and reconnect with the world. Four years later, Beth met Jordan in an art therapy class.
Kind, grounded, and patient, he loved Beth exactly as she was—without needing her to escape into fantasy. Their wedding was small and beautiful, held in our parents’ backyard. This time, the groom was real.
And when Beth walked down the aisle, she didn’t have to imagine the love waiting for her—because he was already there.