AITA Girl pretending overdose?

One Friday night turned into a total nightmare for a guy who just wanted a low-key hangout with his friend. Instead, he walked into a house packed with strangers, crashed early while everyone else went partying, and woke up to absolute chaos: a girl sprawled on the floor, sobbing hysterically, screaming she couldn’t breathe and was dying from an overdose.

He jumped up and rushed over to check on her—only to have the guys around her wave him off, insisting she was “just being dramatic.” The next morning, the friend he’d come to see unloaded on him, accused him of not understanding “the scene,” called him a sociopath, and banned him from ever coming back. All for showing basic human concern. Was he wrong for caring? Or did he just narrowly escape a seriously toxic crowd?

‘AITA Girl pretending overdose?’

Then came the wake-up call from hell:

So I went to a friends’ house on Friday. Didn’t know his roommates would bring a bunch of folks over. I went to sleep when everyone went out for the...

I woke up to a girl dramatizing an overdose, pretending that she was dying, she was crying profusely and shouting that she couldn’t breathe.

I went over to her and asked what the problem was and if she was serious? The guys all told me to leave her alone and she was just being...

The next morning, the friend he’d planned to hang with alone turned on him hard:

The day after, guy who I was supposed to hang alone with told me I “didn’t know the scene well enough” and that she was obviously faking it. I told...

That set the friend off:

He told me to never come over again and things were completely over between us. Fine with me, I don’t wanna be around drama like that. But he went on...

Did I handle this in a wrong way? AITA? Wondering if I missed something or could learn from this. But the other half of me is thinking this isn’t my...

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This whole situation revolves around one extremely disturbing behavior: someone faking a life-threatening overdose for attention. That’s not just immature—it can be a sign of a serious mental health issue, such as factitious disorder (formerly known as Munchausen syndrome), where a person deliberately exaggerates or fabricates symptoms to receive care and sympathy.

According to the Mayo Clinic, people with factitious disorder often have a history of trauma or emotional neglect, and they use these dramatic acts to fill an emotional void. Pretending to die from an overdose isn’t harmless fun; it can terrify everyone around them and even waste emergency resources if someone actually calls for help.

In real life, the safest response is always to treat it as genuine. Experts strongly recommend calling emergency services right away—even if you suspect it’s fake—because the risk of being wrong and letting someone actually die is far too high. As psychologist Dr. John Grohol, founder of PsychCentral, puts it: “When someone appears to be in medical distress, the safest approach is always to treat it as a legitimate emergency until proven otherwise. Err on the side of caution.”

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The guy in this story did exactly what a caring, empathetic person would do: he checked on her. Being called a “sociopath” for showing concern is not only wildly inaccurate—it’s the complete opposite. True sociopaths lack empathy and would have walked away without a second thought, just like the rest of the group did.

Bottom line: If you ever find yourself in a similar spot, trust your instincts, call for help if needed, and walk away from people who punish you for being a decent human being. Your compassion isn’t a flaw—it’s a strength.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

The online crowd overwhelmingly had this guy’s back—and a lot of people were furious on his behalf. From calling out the “friend” for misusing the word “sociopath” to straight-up celebrating the OP for dodging a toxic bullet, the comments poured in with support, sharp wit, and some serious warnings.

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Many readers were stunned by how backwards the insult was—and pointed out that caring is literally the opposite of sociopathy:

CoverCharacter8179 − What a weird story. And what a weird insult too. "S__iopath? " I think maybe this guy doesn't know what the word means. NTA

BipolarSolarMolar − NTA. It is quite literally the opposite of sociopathy to be concerned about someone experiencing a crisis. On the other hand, I would question the mental status of...

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A) fakes a serious medical event and their cohort who B) excommunicates a "friend" for taking it seriously. You should be very glad he wants nothing to do with you...

Others praised him for doing the sane, decent thing and urged him to call emergency services next time:

Excellent-Count4009 − NTA The reasonable way to handle that is to call an ambulance.

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Lori2345 − Info: why did you believe him, what if she was dying? I’m surprised you didn’t call 911 in case she was serious.

Consistent-Salary-35 − NTA. You did the sane, human thing.

A huge wave of commenters simply told him to run for the hills and celebrate dodging a toxic crowd:

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okpineapplez − Not at all. Probably saved yourself future nonsense by avoiding that crowd

alloisdavethere − NTA - whatever is going on in that friendship circle you are best running for the hills.

Independent_Prior612 − NTA You’re right. This isn’t your crowd. Bullet, dodged.

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AdamOnFirst − NTA. Stay the hell away from these people. You’re right: you don’t get their scene and it’s a good thing you don’t because it is absolutely fucked up.

Timestrea − Bad group to hang with. AVOID THEM

Some added extra layers—suggesting it could be even darker, like possible drugging, or that she might have been having a panic attack instead:

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averylargewolf − Even if she wasn't having an overdose, she might have been having a panic attack. Nta

Dontdrinkthecoffee − NTA It’s also possible they drugged her against her will and they didn’t want medical services or police to look into them. He’s lying to you and trying...

He doesn’t want you to talk about whatever happened to that poor girl so he’s doing his best to make you ashamed to keep you shut up It might be...

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thatonechick30 − NTA. That dude is a f*+%#£g i__ot. He used the word incorrectly, and he prefers to stay in that scene of degradation and drama. You are 100% right...

And a few felt the story had more to it than we’re seeing:

NandoDeColonoscopy − There's a ton missing from this story, it feels like.

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Even though the overdose turned out to be fake, rushing to help someone who seemed to be in serious trouble was the decent, human thing to do. Getting kicked out and insulted for it just proves he narrowly escaped a group that clearly doesn’t value real empathy.

Have you ever been in a situation where you tried to help someone, only to find out it was all an act? Or how would you handle waking up to someone pretending to overdose? Drop your thoughts in the comments—I’d love to hear them!

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