When my son Brandon got engaged to Alice, I was thrilled. She seemed smart, polite, and a great match for him. As a jewelry maker,
I designed a custom sapphire-and-diamond ring to celebrate. At a family dinner, I presented it to Alice in a velvet box. She barely looked
at it before pointing to my emerald ring. “That should be the engagement ring. It’s perfect and should be an heirloom,” she said.
I was stunned. That emerald ring was one of the first pieces I ever made—deeply personal and not up for sale, trade, or gifting. I calmly told her so.
She rolled her eyes and stormed out. The next day, Brandon called, angry, saying I could’ve just given it to her since I had “so many.”
I explained it wasn’t about the jewelry—it was about respect. Rejecting a handmade gift and making demands crossed a line. Days later,
Alice returned, teary-eyed, apologizing and admitting she’d acted like “a spoiled brat.”
I accepted her apology but was firm: “In this family, special things are given with love, not taken.”
Whether she truly understood or not, my emerald ring remained on my hand—a symbol of love, respect, and boundaries.