There was a "Lifelines" article in a recent Mishpacha magazine about a kalla, aged 30, whose wedding was scheduled for the blizzard-that-never-happened a year ago in New York. The kalla writes about how miserable she was about the weather forecast, about her grandmother crying nonstop, how people told them to postpone the wedding by two days, and how the rav said no, you get married with a minyan if that's all you've got, and you don't postpone a wedding because of the weather.
The kalla, who was finally getting married after years of shidduchim, even expressed the thought that the situation with the forecasted blizzard was harder, in a way, to deal with than her years of singlehood. It was at that point that she really lost me. I can sympathize with someone whose planned-for event is ruined, or looks like it will be ruined, but when she makes that comparison and explains how it was harder (which didn't make much sense to me), I'm not impressed.
Interestingly, she writes that her chasan didn't care one way or the other. If the wedding would be with a minyan of people, that didn't bother him.
Which goes to show that this, and many other events in life, are not objectively bad or good. If the kalla and her grandmother would have had the same attitude as the chasan, they wouldn't have suffered. The suffering was caused by their "awfulizing" the hall's cancellation of the wedding if there would be a blizzard.
And the end of the story was, the forecasters were wrong (as they often are, no matter how authoritative they sounds) and the amount of snow that fell was nowhere close to what they predicted and the hall was open.
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