The user, a 31-year-old female, has detailed a long-standing pattern of behavior with her college best friend, a 29-year-old female. The friend has a history of completely ceasing contact with the user during times of significant personal loss, specifically ghosting the user after the death of the user’s dog and also when the user’s father passed away years earlier.
After a period of silence since June, the friend recently reinitiated contact. The user addressed the past hurts, explaining that the sudden disappearances during dark times made her feel terrible. Now, the friend has announced she is pregnant and that the user will be an aunt, leading the user to question whether she would be wrong to offer only a brief acknowledgment and distance herself from the friendship going forward.

AITAH for standing up for myself after an estranged friend told me she’s pregnant?





As renowned relationship expert Dr. John Gottman explains, “The ability to repair a relationship after a rupture is the single most important predictor of long-term relationship success.” While this quote often applies to ongoing conflicts, it highlights that trust and consistent reliability are foundational. In this case, the friend has repeatedly failed to repair ruptures and has demonstrated unreliability during the user’s deepest needs, which suggests a fundamental pattern of inconsistent support.
The friend’s pattern of ghosting during bereavements indicates a significant capacity issue or an extreme avoidance mechanism when confronted with intense negative emotions, whether her own or others’. The user has done the necessary work in therapy to understand this pattern (‘people can only meet you as much as they’ve met themselves’), which is a healthy step toward self-acceptance and boundary setting. The friend’s return, timed with a major life announcement, can easily feel manipulative, as the user suggests, because it shifts the emotional dynamic from one of crisis support (which she failed to provide) to one of celebratory inclusion, perhaps attempting to re-establish a connection on safer, more positive ground.
The user’s proposed action—offering congratulations but declining further involvement—is an appropriate and healthy exercise of setting firm boundaries based on past experience. It validates the news without requiring emotional investment or reopening the door to a potentially damaging friendship cycle. Moving forward, if the user wishes to maintain any relationship, it should be strictly low-contact and focused on superficial engagement, protecting her emotional well-being from the friend’s known pattern of withdrawal during difficulty.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.











The user is in a difficult position, feeling hurt by her friend’s repeated pattern of emotional abandonment during crises, yet now being pulled back into her life by a major positive event like a pregnancy. She is struggling with the conflict between her desire to protect herself from further pain and the social expectation to engage with this news, especially given the impending role of ‘aunt.’
The central question is whether the user is justified in limiting her response to a simple congratulation and concluding the relationship, or if the significance of the pregnancy warrants a more involved response, despite the past treatment. Should she prioritize self-preservation and boundary setting, or offer grace for the sake of the future child?







