Newly Sober Woman Accused Of ‘Violating Boundaries’ After Offering Her Friend This Common Bar Drink

We all know that moment when we find a brilliant life hack that we just cannot wait to share with our closest friends. For one newly sober woman, discovering a cheap, low-calorie alternative to sugary mocktails felt like hitting the jackpot.

After 100 days of navigating social gatherings without alcohol, finding a simple mix of soda water and aromatic bitters at the local pub felt like a game-changer. Excited by her discovery, she offered her friend—who had embarked on the exact same sobriety journey—a quick sip of the drink.

What started as a small, well-meaning gesture of shared progress quickly devolved into a bitter conflict that put their entire relationship on thin ice. The friend felt betrayed, accusing her of violating sacred boundaries. Curious how a simple sip could threaten a friendship right before a big move? The full story is right below.

Newly Sober Woman Accused Of 'Violating Boundaries' After Offering Her Friend This Common Bar Drink

AITAH for giving my sober friend soda water with bitters in it?

Starting a recovery journey together builds a unique bond, making the sharing of safe milestones feel like a mutual victory. However, when individual definitions of sobriety begin to diverge, even the most well-intentioned gestures can quickly turn into a source of deep relational friction.

My friend and I decided to quit drinking on the same day. We are now about 100 days sober, and we're both really proud of it. We regularly share with...

Recently, another friend of mine who has been in active recovery for eight years introduced me to the concept of putting aromatic bitters into soda water. I am in love...

It's cheaper and lower calorie than a lot of mocktails, you can usually find it even at a bar that only has well drinks, and the taste of the bitters...

When my newly sober friend and I were hanging out the other day, I ordered this at the bar, told her it was bitters in soda water, and offered her...

A sudden text message shatters the peace, turning a casual tasting moment into an unexpected ethical conflict. What seemed like a harmless recommendation suddenly became a battleground over personal boundaries, trust, and the true meaning of support in recovery.

A few days later, she texted me saying, "Did you know bitters have alcohol? " I told her yes, I did, not even remembering that I gave her a sip...

Now I realize that some people are very strict with their sobriety and would not have bitters in soda water, do not even drink kombucha, or cook with alcohol.

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However, being newly sober, I am going off what my friends who have been sober for years tell me, and they said lots of people don't consider bitters in soda...

This makes sense to me, because when you calculate how much alcohol is in soda waters with the amount of bitters I put into it, it's something like 0.04% ABV....

It's also, fun fact, less alcohol than a ripe banana. I told my friend this when she told me she was upset with me, because I thought this might give...

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She said that this doesn't fit into her standard of sobriety and told me it's not about the alcohol amount so much as that I "violated her boundaries. " I...

I object to this because, hello, I am also in recovery and do this, and so do many other folks I know. Also, I did tell her the drink had...

I did apologize for assuming she knew what bitters were and I did apologize for assuming we had the same definition of sobriety, but I wasn't maximally conciliatory—for instance, I...

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I mean, it's fine if she's defining it that strictly, that's her prerogative, but from what I understand, that's not such a universal practice that I should have implicitly understood...

When intent and impact clash, even the most logical defense can feel like an invalidation of someone’s personal boundaries. For those navigating the fragile early stages of sobriety, a perceived slip-up can feel incredibly threatening, regardless of the actual science behind it.

She said that my apology seems disingenuous. The irony is I don't know how much more I can apologize without actually being disingenuous, because I honestly think it's mostly a...

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One even went so far as to say that in recovery you learn that ultimately the only person responsible for what you put into your body is you, so her...

But my friend who is mad at me said she ALSO talked to people in recovery and "everyone agreed what you did was completely out of line and inconsiderate.

" I have to admit I'm wondering if she told the story like "someone gave me an alcoholic drink without telling me" which is, in my opinion, different from what...

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She said she is so angry and hurt that she is going to skip my goodbye dinner I had planned for this week before I move across the country, and...

This intense disagreement over a few drops of bitters highlights how easily misunderstandings can escalate during early recovery, exposing a common phenomenon known as sobriety gatekeeping. In the fragile first few months, any perceived threat to one’s sobriety can trigger a fight-or-flight response, leading to heightened emotional reactivity.

According to Dr. Peggy L. Ferguson, a licensed marriage and family therapist specializing in addiction recovery, establishing clear personal boundaries is essential, but expecting others to intuitively guess those boundaries often leads to severe interpersonal conflict. When a person feels breached, they may project their fear outward as anger.

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Furthermore, early recovery often amplifies stress, making it difficult to differentiate between a physical relapse and a benign, non-intoxicating ingredient. For those experiencing recovery challenges, it is helpful to recognize that everyone’s comfort level with trace ingredients—like vanilla extract, kombucha, or non-alcoholic alternatives—varies wildly.

A constructive path forward involves acknowledging the friend’s fear without accepting the malicious intent she is projecting. Offering a calm, non-defensive space for the friend to express her anxieties, rather than debating the chemistry of ABV, might help heal the rift before the cross-country move.

Finding Common Ground in Recovery

Navigating a sober lifestyle often requires learning how to communicate changing boundaries with those closest to us. While one person may view trace amounts of alcohol as entirely harmless, another might see them as a direct threat. Ultimately, maintaining healthy relationships during sober living requires patience, clear communication, and a willingness to respect differing comfort levels.

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Do you think the friend overreacted to a harmless misunderstanding, or was the author wrong to offer a drink containing bitters without explaining its alcohol content first? And how would you handle this kind of boundary dispute with a close friend? Share your thoughts below!

Community Opinions

Most readers sided firmly with the author, arguing that she could not have anticipated her friend's hyper-strict interpretation of sobriety.

u/Ok-Possible-8761 The ABV would be around 0.3% tops for a soda water with a few dashes of bitters. That is less than most NA beers. NTA. For the record, though,...

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u/FickleCook3639 For me, personally, I didn’t start drinking things with minimal alcohol (kombucha, non-alcoholic beers, etc) until I had been sober for years. But I was also smoking a lot...

u/Judgy-Introvert
I’m starting to think a lot of people are unaware of all the products they consume that have minuscule amounts of alcohol in it.

u/Appropriate-Arm5800 NTA. When your friend asked what was in the drink, you told her: bitters and soda water. At that point, if she didn't know what bitters were or whether...

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u/D-ouble-D-utch
NTA there is as much alcohol in a ripe banana or vanilla ice cream.
Your friend needs to get a grip.

u/Traditional-Hat-952 As someone who's been sober for 6 years, lemme tell ya some sober people can be absolute nut jobs about even miniscule amounts of alcohol. Many AA members in particular...

u/NoscibleSauce NTA. This is just absurd. I realize everyone defines sobriety differently, but she’s being pedantic for no reason. She had a sip, not even a whole drink, and she...

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u/CleanerGuyJoe As a person approaching 10 years of sobriety, I would say you're NTA. You apologized and, given that it was a small and honest mistake, there's not much more...

u/murdersimulator I know this doesn't apply to this particular situation but my first 90 days of recovery I took antabuse. Any amount of alcohol would have sent me to the...

u/Equal_Party8086 NTA. You told her what was in it, not your fault that she didn't understand it has alcohol. Maybe she should educate herself a little better so she doesn't...

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u/youknowimright25 You told her what it was.  You didn't hide anything. She is an adult and made the decision to try it.  That's on her. Not you.   You apologized.   If...

u/PixieStone1 NTA: it was an accident. You didn't know that they didn't know. You can try to do better next time. But you can't undo the mistake. Y'all can only...

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u/Other-Conference-398 NTA - you told her what they were and if she didn't know should have asked before sipping. Also, bitters are incredibly concentrated and intensely bitter, drinking enough to...

u/Hedgehog_Capable NTA. yes, this is a common practice in many sober communities. i assume she doesn't also avoid vanilla, which is much more common than kombucha and more analogous here:...

u/NEPAmama Maybe TA… If she has no problem with kombucha (which many sober folks I know refuse to drink because .5% ABV is too much for them to risk), then...

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However, some commentators urged the author to show more empathy, noting that early recovery is a highly sensitive and terrifying period for many.

Navigating the complex landscape of early sobriety is rarely a smooth road, especially when two friends have vastly different comfort levels. While one person might see a dash of bitters as a harmless bar hack, another might view it as a direct threat to their hard-won progress.

Ultimately, maintaining relationships during life transitions requires mutual grace and a willingness to understand each other’s individual triggers.

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Do you think the friend is overreacting to a microscopic amount of alcohol, or was the author wrong to offer a drink without explaining its ingredients first? And how would you handle this friendship before moving away?

Drop your thoughts in the comments!

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