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AITAH for grieving my best friend?

by Emily Davis
December 16, 2025
in Aita
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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In a bond forged through shared pain and survival, two best friends found solace in each other’s brokenness. From the scars they hid to the darkest moments they faced, their friendship was a lifeline—an unyielding promise to keep each other safe, even when the weight of the world threatened to pull them apart.

But on a night meant for celebration, the fragile hope they clung to shattered. When one friend made a desperate choice to end her suffering, the other was forced to make an impossible call, only to watch helplessly as the life they fought so hard to protect slipped away, leaving behind a silence filled with grief and unanswered questions.

AITAH for grieving my best friend?

I lost my best friend in July after a long...

I frequently supported her through suicidal ideation, and she supported...

including obtaining pregnancy tests after a*saults and navigating issues related...

She threatened to take more if I called 911, but...

Her parents dismissed the firefighters, stating I was overreacting, and...

The parents confiscated her phone, put her on house arrest,...

" One month later, the parents moved over an hour...

My therapist suggested contacting her parents to confirm her death...

Upon realizing who was calling, they began screaming, calling me...

I lost control and said everything I had wanted to...

After the call, I told my only remaining friend, who...

I do not believe those people deserve an apology after...

As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation presents a profound collision of necessary boundaries—the OP’s need for validation and closure versus the parents’ desperate, albeit misplaced, need to assign blame for their child’s prolonged suffering.

The OP acted as a crucial lifeline for their friend, taking on significant emotional labor during crises, often stepping in where the parents apparently failed to provide consistent, life-affirming support. When the OP called emergency services, they prioritized immediate safety, which ultimately resulted in punitive action from the parents, who viewed the intervention as interference rather than rescue. The subsequent confrontation by the OP, though emotionally charged, was a natural reaction to having their role as a savior aggressively delegitimized by the very people they felt had failed their friend. The friend’s isolated environment and the parents’ immediate hostility suggest a dynamic of denial and control surrounding the friend’s mental health struggles.

From a psychological perspective, the OP was not an “asshole” for expressing bottled-up frustration regarding years of witnessing their friend’s pain, but the timing and intensity of the confrontation were emotionally reactive. A constructive recommendation would be for the OP to process the intense grief and anger through continued therapy, focusing on separating their responsibility for saving their friend from the responsibility for the parents’ reaction. While an apology for the delivery of the words is not necessary, a brief, neutral communication stating the OP’s intent was only to confirm the loss might offer a small measure of closure without sacrificing self-integrity.

What do you think of this story?





THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.

Unique_Basee NTAH.

Stardust_Shinah YTA you have no business putting your friends s*xual...

About the contacting the parents you and your therapists are...

to reach out to them to "confirm" their child's death...

The-slavemaster But even if they did your response was extremely...

McSnickleFritzChris Willing to bet the parents side tells a whole...

GenoAlert only the a*shole but a crazy one at that:...

cla*s="comment_author">More-Explanation9513: YTA. They lost their daughter.

maybe instead of being their to "save" her life with...

you should have suggested sobriety bc something tells me you...

& if that much holds true, I definitely could understand...

Either way, have some compa*sion and understand that they're grieving...

Beyond that, ofc you would think her life was absolutely...

You're saying she was still living with them & if...

addicted to drugs to the point of sleeping with homeless...

& again, tuning with the a*sumption that you joined in...

I would despise you for standing by her side and...

not loving her enough to stop her but just enough...

IdeaPants I'm a*suming you aren't a parent.: Grief can make...

You are allowed to grieve your friend, and they are...

There were better options to confirm her pa*sing than contacting...

The original poster (OP) is dealing with intense grief following the loss of a deeply bonded best friend, complicated by the trauma of having intervened during a suicide attempt. The central conflict arises from the OP’s protective actions (calling 911) which led to estrangement orchestrated by the friend’s parents, who subsequently blamed and verbally attacked the OP when they tried to seek confirmation of the death. The OP feels immense pain from the parents’ harsh accusations, especially given the history of supporting their deceased friend.

Was the OP justified in confronting the parents during a vulnerable moment of grief, or did their actions constitute an unacceptable outburst given the parents’ own loss? Should the OP prioritize apologizing to the grieving parents to achieve closure, or is maintaining self-respect and refusing to apologize to those they view as harmful more important?

Emily Davis

Emily writes heartfelt stories about family, parenting, and personal growth.

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