The bride sent an invitation to the wrong address, but did not regret it
The girl received an incredibly touching note in response to her invitation.
26-year-old nanny Cassandra Warren was preparing for the wedding and sent out invitations to guests. In the confusion and haste, she made a mistake in the address and sent an invitation to a stranger.
Her mistake would have gone unnoticed, but one day the letter came back …

Human kindness can make you take a break and clear your head when you’re stressed. This is exactly what happened to an ordinary young couple who were busy preparing for a wedding for 200 guests.
The bride and groom were literally swamped with planning a grand event and did not expect that a small mistake would be remembered by them for a lifetime.
Cassandra sent out invitations to her wedding, one of which she sent to her aunt and uncle in Eugene, Oregon. They lived about 20 minutes away from her.

A week later, the invitation came back. She wrote the wrong address by mistake. On the back of the envelope was handwritten:
“I wish I knew you, that would be something. Congratulations. Dine on me. I have been married for 40 years. It will only get better with age.»
A check for $20 was put inside.
Cassandra just had a hard day, she was about to pass out from the piled up worries. Complaining about all this to her future husband, Jesse Jones, she opened the envelope and read the contents.

“It was perfect,” Cassandra recalls. “I was very grateful to that woman.
But the surprises of the «magic envelope» did not end there. Cassandra took a closer look at the letter and noticed another inscription on the envelope: “Live long and prosper!” It was a reference to the movie Star Trek.
“We were both fans,” Cassandra says. This letter made me very happy on such a difficult day.

Cassandra and her 24-year-old fiancé Jesse had no idea who the sender of this mysterious letter was,
but they realized that the stranger had noticed a drawing of a lightsaber and a magic wand from Harry Potter on the corner of the invitation, so she referred to Star Trek.