In the quiet depths of friendship, some bonds are woven so tightly they become family. They had shared everything—joy, tears, and even the most intimate moments—standing side by side through life’s milestones. But nothing could prepare them for the shattering moment when tragedy struck, a silent heartbreak too heavy to bear alone.
When the call came, shattering the fragile calm, she rushed to her friend’s side, finding her engulfed in grief and loss. The news of the baby lost in the seventh month was a cruel blow that left them both devastated, a raw wound in their shared story. In that hospital room, words failed, but their unbreakable connection became a lifeline in the darkness.

AITAH for wanting nothing to do with my friend after she lost her baby












Dr. Harriet Lerner, a famous psychologist and author of The Dance of Connection, says that the quality of our lives depends on the quality of our relationships. In this story, the friendship was not equal. The narrator gave a lot of care and support to her friend, believing they were as close as family. However, the friend’s choice to hide her pregnancy from only the narrator shows a major break in trust. This suggests that the friend did not value the narrator in the same way the narrator valued her.
The friend’s actions were very deliberate. She told others to keep the secret and lied every day to hide the truth. This is a deep betrayal of trust. While the friend was going through a hard time, the narrator’s desire to leave the friendship is a normal response to realizing the relationship was not what she thought it was. Even though her family wants her to talk it out, the narrator is likely exhausted from caring for someone who was actively dishonest with her.
The narrator’s feelings are valid because the lies lasted for seven months. It is hard to stay close to someone who treats you like an outsider while you are helping them through their worst moments. A professional recommendation would be for the narrator to have one final, direct conversation. She should explain why the secrecy was so hurtful and then set a clear boundary. This allows her to end the chapter with clarity and move on without feeling guilty.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.











The narrator feels deeply hurt and undervalued after learning she was intentionally excluded from a major life event by someone she considered family. While she fulfilled her role as a supportive friend during a crisis, she now struggles to reconcile her loyalty with the prolonged deception she uncovered.
Should a person be expected to maintain a friendship after discovering they were singled out for exclusion and lied to for months? Or is it cold to walk away from a grieving friend who might have had complex reasons for her secrecy?







