The user, a 24-year-old male who is deaf, describes ongoing issues with his best friend’s 23-year-old wife, starting months ago when she judged him for missing their wedding due to work commitments abroad. Despite sending a thoughtful gift, the initial negative behavior set a difficult tone for their interactions.
The situation worsened upon his return to the States when the wife apparently did not realize he was deaf and reacted inappropriately by yelling, which made communication harder. Following several awkward encounters where she refused to look at him or insisted his girlfriend act as an interpreter, the conflict reached a breaking point during a recent game night over a deliberate slight regarding dinner, leaving the user questioning if he should end the friendship.

AITAH Refuse to Acknowledge my Best Friend’s Wife
















As communication expert and author Dr. Deborah Tannen observes, “When we talk about communication problems, we are often talking about the tension between the desire to be close to others and the desire to be independent.” This situation highlights a profound breakdown in communication rooted in a failure to acknowledge and respect the user’s disability and his need for respectful interaction.
The wife’s behavior—yelling, refusing eye contact, demanding interpretation, and the final act of forgetting to order him food while remarking on his quietness—demonstrates a consistent pattern of othering and potentially passive aggression rooted in ignorance or willful disregard for his reality. This is further compounded by the best friend’s response, which minimizes the user’s valid emotional response by labeling it as being ‘butthurt.’ This invalidation shifts the focus from the wife’s offense to the user’s reaction, which is a common pattern in conflict where one party seeks to maintain the status quo.
The user’s actions of ignoring the wife’s apologies were appropriate as a temporary measure to establish a boundary against sustained poor treatment. The friend’s reaction, however, requires direct communication. A constructive recommendation would be for the user and his girlfriend to communicate clearly to the best friend that the issue is not just the one dinner incident, but a pattern of disrespect regarding his deafness. Moving forward requires the friend to acknowledge the harm caused and actively encourage his wife to adopt respectful communication practices, or the friendship must be re-evaluated based on whether the friend prioritizes his wife’s comfort over his best friend’s dignity.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.


























The user is deeply hurt and embarrassed by the wife’s consistent lack of consideration and disrespectful comments regarding his deafness, which culminated in being intentionally excluded from dinner. His current emotional state involves feeling the need to distance himself from both his best friend and his wife to protect his feelings, despite the potential cost to the long-term friendship.
The central debate revolves around whether the user’s strong reaction—ignoring both the wife’s weak apologies and his best friend’s minimizing of the offense—constitutes being overly sensitive, or if it is a necessary boundary against sustained disrespect. Should the user prioritize protecting his emotional well-being by cutting ties, or is there a path toward forgiveness and moving forward within the friendship?







