Do not re-open negotiations when a deal is already too good?
What happens when a buyer tries to squeeze extra savings from an already rock-bottom deal? Many sellers clearing out items for moves price low for quick sales, only to encounter hagglers pushing for even less.
This man listed his heavy weight set at a steep discount to empty his home fast. The first buyer arrived ready to lowball after loading, prompting a clever counter that turned the tables and delivered instant karma.

‘Do not re-open negotiations when a deal is already too good?’
The cross-country move prompted rapid sales of bulky items.


One listing in particular drew massive interest and a bold lowball attempt.






The seller enforced the new terms without extra courtesy.

The scheduling mix-up highlights venue errors compounded by one party’s entitlement and indirect pressure. The couple secured and confirmed their slot legitimately, expecting exclusive use. Yet a booking oversight allowed overlap claims, with the opposing bride leveraging family connections aggressively rather than resolving collaboratively.
Both experience frustration amid excitement. The couple defends hard-earned plans against perceived bullying and guilt from relatives urging concession. The MOH asserts perceived priority without direct dialogue, escalating anxiety. The priest navigates delicately but unfairly shifts compromise burden onto the confirmed party.
Wedding industry standards hold that double bookings remain the venue’s responsibility—the first verified reservation prevails without mandated shortening. Etiquette expert Kristen Maxwell emphasizes “Couples owe no accommodation to errors not of their making; gracious decline preserves dignity” (industry guidelines). Yielding rewards poor communication.
Protect your day decisively: Reaffirm confirmation in writing to the priest, requesting formal resolution favoring your booking. Prepare contingency timing or backup venue quietly. Decline politely but firmly, framing as venue policy adherence. Limit family discussions to facts, redirecting “bigger person” pleas to the MOH’s need for flexibility. Celebrate with supporters amplifying joy over drama.
Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:
Social media users reacted with near-unanimous outrage toward the maid of honor in this church booking clash. They praised the couple’s resolve while dissecting family pressure.
The vast majority condemned the MOH’s entitlement and supported refusing compromise.

![[Reddit User] − NTA. If the MOH had approached the situation with any amount of humility or kindness, then you could consider cutting your time short. But given her attitude?...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wp-editor-1766045487778-2.webp)






Several blamed the venue primarily while still backing the couple’s stance.








One shared a real-world double-booking anecdote.



This Craigslist standoff proves that greed on killer deals often backfires spectacularly. Accepting generous offers gracefully avoids the “idiot tax”—while firm boundaries reward patience and punish games.
Have you turned the tables on a last-minute haggler? When does walking away beat compromising on your price?
