After losing her job, a young woman in her late twenties found a beacon of hope in a local coffee shop manager position—close to home, well-paying, and a chance to lead. Despite her friend’s ominous warnings about the job’s toll on mental health and the risk of being fired, she chose to trust her own instincts and embrace the opportunity.
Their friendship, marred by toxicity and manipulation, haunted her past with hurtful memories and emotional entanglements. Yet, as she steps into this new role, the woman begins to reclaim her strength and joy, proving that sometimes, breaking free from the shadows of toxic ties is the first step toward genuine happiness.

AITA for taking a job that my friend was fired from?









According to Dr. Ramani Durvasula, a clinical psychologist specializing in narcissistic abuse and toxic relationships, when individuals involved in codependent or people-pleasing dynamics encounter a situation that solidifies their independence, it often triggers backlash from the controlling party. The friend’s vehement warnings about the job being detrimental to mental health and predicting failure may function as an attempt to maintain relational control by keeping the person dependent or close by, especially given the history of toxic interactions and the ceremonial importance of the maid of honor role.
The self-identified autistic people-pleasing tendency makes the subject particularly vulnerable to ‘love-bombing’ and pressure, leading to acceptance of roles (like maid of honor) that serve others’ needs over their own. The subject’s current success in the new management position contrasts sharply with the friend’s documented history of poor performance and job loss, suggesting the friend’s warnings were projections of her own failures rather than objective assessments of the workplace. The core motivation for taking the job—financial stability, proximity (essential due to not driving), and career progression—is entirely rational and self-serving.
The subject’s action of accepting the job despite the warnings was appropriate because it prioritized their verifiable well-being and career goals over toxic interference. To handle this pattern moving forward, the subject should practice setting firm, non-negotiable personal and professional boundaries. When the friend raises the issue, a constructive response would involve brief, non-defensive acknowledgment of the friend’s past experience without validating the current prediction (e.g., “I understand your experience was difficult, but this job is working well for me right now”), followed by immediately redirecting the conversation.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.

Time to cut her off. Tell her you heard her warnings and considered them but will continue the job as you’re different people with different outlooks. Period, no need to continue the conversation. Congratulations on the job! Good luck 👍








The individual is currently finding satisfaction and stability in a new management role that meets critical needs, directly contradicting the severe negative predictions made by their friend. This situation highlights a clear conflict between the individual’s pursuit of personal benefit and the intense, cautionary advice rooted in a toxic friendship dynamic.
Given the immediate positive experience versus the friend’s strong, repeated warnings based on her own negative history, is the person justified in prioritizing their career needs over the expressed emotional and professional anxieties of a difficult friend?







