AITA for not forgiving a girl for what she said while in mourning?
An 18-year-old young man suffered three devastating blows in less than 48 hours: his girlfriend confessed to cheating, then died in a car crash the very next day. While still reeling from betrayal and sudden loss, the deceased girl’s 17-year-old sister publicly accused him of cutting her brake lines and causing the accident.
A week later, the sister—through her parents—wants to apologize. He refuses to hear it. His own parents insist he should be the bigger person and show sympathy to someone who just lost a sister. He, however, feels the accusation was unforgivable and wonders if he’s wrong for shutting the door on any apology.

‘AITA for not forgiving a girl for what she said while in mourning?’
The tragedy struck with brutal timing and complexity.


The accusation was immediate and vicious.

Now pressure mounts for him to accept an apology he doesn’t want.

Grief can make people say irrational, cruel things, but accusing someone of murder—especially so quickly and publicly—crosses a line that reasonable sympathy cannot automatically erase. What makes the story more complicated is that both teenagers are mourning the same person, yet one lashed out in a way that inflicted fresh trauma on someone already shattered by infidelity and sudden death.
Forgiveness cannot be demanded on a schedule, and certainly not within days of being labeled a killer. The sister’s youth and pain explain her outburst but do not obligate the poster to expose himself to further hurt just to make adults (or the grieving family) feel better. His parents’ insistence that he “can afford to be sympathetic” ignores that he, too, is an 18-year-old processing betrayal, loss, and now a criminal accusation.
In the broader view, protecting one’s peace after such compounded trauma is not callous—it’s survival. He is allowed to decide when—or if—he ever wants contact again. No one gets to dictate the timeline of healing from being accused of murder.
See what others had to share with OP:
The overwhelming majority declare the poster firmly NTA, stressing that accusing someone of murder is unforgivable so soon and that grief does not erase the damage done.






Many emphasize self-protection and warn against forced reconciliation for the sake of appearances.









A couple of voices show limited sympathy for the sister’s grief while still fully supporting the poster’s right to distance.





This heartbreaking situation shows how grief can turn people against each other in the cruelest ways, and how quickly bystanders (even parents) can demand forgiveness that serves everyone except the person most wounded. The community is unanimous: being accused of murder is not something you simply “get over” because the accuser was sad.
Would you ever be able to face someone who accused you of killing their sibling—even if they later apologized? How long is “long enough” to wait before expecting the accused to offer comfort to their accuser? Have you ever been pressured to forgive something unforgivable for the sake of keeping the peace? Let us know below.
