Nick’s world was unraveling in a way he never anticipated. What began as his insistence on an open relationship—framed as a condition for proposing to Sophie—had spiraled into a nightmarish betrayal, leaving him furious and broken. The very arrangement he demanded to satisfy his own desires had opened a door to a pain he wasn’t prepared to face.
In the quiet chaos of that weekend, Nick found himself at a friend’s doorstep, suitcase in hand, consumed by rage and confusion. Sophie’s secret rendezvous with another man shattered the fragile balance they tried to maintain, raising haunting questions about trust, love, and the price of selfishness in relationships.

AITA for telling my friend that he got exactly what he wanted and he needs to stop being selfish?












As renowned relationship therapist Esther Perel explains, ‘When we agree to something under duress, we are not really agreeing at all; we are complying.’ This situation perfectly illustrates the danger of coercing consent in non-monogamous agreements. Nick essentially blackmailed Sophie into agreeing to an open relationship by tying the proposal to the condition, which fundamentally undermines the trust required for such arrangements to function.
Nick’s subsequent reaction—becoming ‘livid’ and feeling ‘cheated’ when Sophie exercised the freedom he demanded she accept—reveals a profound double standard rooted in insecurity and entitlement. He viewed the agreement as a mechanism for his own fulfillment (seeing Anna) while simultaneously expecting Sophie to refrain from exercising her newfound freedom, particularly with someone he perceived as more attractive. The OP’s reaction, while emotionally understandable given Nick’s earlier selfishness, exacerbated the situation by refusing to offer any emotional cushioning during Nick’s breakdown.
The OP’s actions were ethically consistent with calling out Nick’s initial bad behavior but socially detrimental by failing to separate friendship support from validating Nick’s flawed logic. To handle this better, the OP could have acknowledged Nick’s pain (‘I see you are hurting’) while firmly reiterating the cause-and-effect (‘This pain stems directly from the coercive agreement you forced upon Sophie’). Moving forward, friends should focus on supporting vulnerability rather than validating destructive relationship structures.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.














![[deleted] Do you really want to be friends with someone...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/ef6975af656d1617dd29212e87863a42.png)
























The original poster (OP) finds himself in a difficult position, having initially condemned his friend Nick’s coercive actions regarding the open relationship agreement. When Nick’s arrangement predictably backfired, leading to emotional distress for Nick, the OP reacted with blunt dismissal rather than support, escalating the conflict within their social circle.
Given that Nick forced an agreement on his fiancée and then felt entitled to dictate the attractiveness level of her partners, was the OP’s lack of support justified as a consequence of Nick’s flawed premise, or did he fail in his duty as a friend by not offering empathy when Nick was clearly suffering, regardless of who was ‘right’?







