The newly engaged woman calls her “terrible person”
Diamond is the girl’s best friend – but this bride-to-be can’t stand her new best friend.
After the marriage demand for his fiance “yes”, a miserable woman spent months saying “no” to him on a diamond ring designed “blindly” with a round rock.
Now, the disgusting social media prostitute is waving her fingers at the girl, thinking she is a “terrible person”, “toxic person” and a “red flag for a walk” to exude an ungrateful atmosphere.
“Help-I hate my ring,” the undetermined future bride whined on Facebook. “My fiancé turned my blind eye with a suggestion. I’m very grateful for the gesture, but I hate the ring.”
“I thought it would grow on me. I gave it a week. I feel sad every time I look at it. It’s not me.” She went on to share two snapshots of the jaw-dropping jewellery. “Circle, halo, paving band. I’ll choose the opposite overall.”
The disdain of the diamonds on her belly made her engagement even more bothering and not bothering to find out the ring requirements she liked.
“It upset me, he never asked me or my friend what kind of ring I like,” the woman wrote in a virtual dissatisfaction. “I changed the shape of my nails from square to fit the design, thinking that if I had round nails I would prefer a ring. It doesn’t work.”
“What now? Should I be silent?” the unfortunate honey raised. “Every time I mention the beauty of the ring, I pretend I’m happy. I’m scared and if I mention it, he’ll be angry. He said he spent three months designing the ring.”
“Any suggestions are welcome.”
But instead of showering her with words of wisdom and support, the Digital Hound chewed her to express an incredible speech.
But, when hating her stone, the picky fiancé is not alone.
In fact, according to a study by luxury jewelers, a staggering 17% of newly engaged girls described themselves as “somewhat happy” with their rings, while 7% said they were totally “dissatisfied” with their shimmering bling.
Some love loops (such as the recent virus monsters considered “chastity belt” rings) are simply ugly. Others, such as the $38 Temu Ring, another unhappy camper received from her upcoming husband, who earned $200,000 a year, which is an embarrassingly cheap.
Nevertheless, cyber monitors believe that it is the idea, not the appearance or cost.
“You’re a terrible person,” spits at critics of Facebook Fallfinder. “That man spent three months designing a ring, obviously spending a lot of money on it, and wanted to surprise you.”
“Grow up,” the commenter continued. “You should be proud to wear that ring for its representation, not only because it doesn’t fit your aesthetic.”
Similarly angry critics responded to similar views.
“Maybe he could switch it…girlfriend, not the ring,” one joked.
A separate troller advises: “I would definitely recommend giving back to it, you can live under the bridge alone.”
“Absolutely toxic,” another messy part.
“Girl, you are a red flag for a walk. Don’t let him spend the rest of his life with you.” An angry bystander. “No one deserves it.”

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