At a wedding in San Diego, California, a four-year-old girl made a prediction that would take 20 years to come true.

Jordan Rosenberg and Max Creamer met at a Halloween party in college about ten years ago at San Diego State University. They got engaged on a California beach and were married this past May. But before any of that happened, a four-year-old named Jordan had already picked out her future husband's name — and she was right.

At the wedding reception, Jordan was in the middle of her father-daughter dance with her dad, Lou Rosenberg, swaying to "God Only Knows" by the Beach Boys. Then the audio shifted.

A recording from 25 years earlier began to play — young Jordan's voice filling the room. In the video, her father had asked her about her future wedding, and the tiny preschooler answered with surprising confidence. "My wedding is going to have clowns dancing with the children and a moon bounce and face painting," she said.

Then came the part nobody expected.

"Who will be your husband?" her father asked in the recording.

"Max!" four-year-old Jordan declared.

The room went silent. Max Creamer stood frozen. Jordan burst into tears.

"No way!" someone yelled in the background, capturing what everyone felt.

The crowd at the reception had no idea that Jordan's parents, Lou and Jill Rosenberg, had dug up the old recording weeks earlier. They edited it into the father-daughter dance and surprised everyone — including Jordan herself.

"I was already emotional from the surprise of hearing my tiny 4-year-old voice," Jordan told PEOPLE magazine. "I couldn't believe what was going on! I immediately started crying and laughing at the same time."

It turns out Jordan did have a friend named Max growing up, but she hadn't thought of him or the video in years. The newlyweds hadn't met until college — a decade after the recording was made.

The wedding video spread quickly on TikTok, gathering more than 22 million views and 3.5 million likes as people around the world shared in the moment. Comments poured in calling it "the most beautiful invisible string story."

Sometimes fate doesn't work in a straight line. It takes 20 years, a Halloween party, and a childhood video to connect two people — but when it happens, even the skeptics take notice.