AITA for not making it clear that i’m a girl?
A woman active in a large international group chat has openly identified as a lesbian multiple times. When another female member slid into her private messages with compliments and friendly conversation, she assumed it was platonic interest in friendship. After several days of chatting, she casually mentioned having a crush on a girl—prompting confusion from the other woman, who revealed she had assumed the poster was a man.
The messenger now feels misled and is angry, claiming the poster “led her on.” Hurt and surprised, the lesbian woman questions whether she should have explicitly restated her gender in private chats, despite having shared it publicly in the group.

‘AITA for not making it clear that i’m a girl?’
The poster openly shared her identity in the group chat from the start.

A private conversation began innocently but took an unexpected turn.


The misunderstanding surfaced, leading to accusations.

Online interactions often lack visual or vocal cues, making assumptions about gender common—yet the responsibility for those assumptions lies with the person making them. The poster repeatedly identified as a woman in the shared group space, providing clear context for anyone paying attention. Private compliments do not inherently signal romantic intent, especially between women in a queer-friendly chat.
What heightens the frustration is the accuser’s refusal to take accountability for her misreading. Feeling embarrassed after a crush on the “wrong” gender does not justify blaming the other party for “leading on.” Healthy communication involves clarifying doubts early rather than building expectations silently.
Broader digital etiquette supports not owing strangers repeated personal disclosures. Gender is personal; assuming wrongly and reacting with anger shifts fault unfairly. The poster’s casual mention of a crush aligned perfectly with her stated identity—highlighting how the misunderstanding stemmed purely from the other woman’s oversight.
Take a look at the comments from fellow users:
Most users firmly supported the poster, stressing that she had already been clear and assumptions are the assumers’ responsibility.






Several shared relatable experiences or highlighted the irony.
![[Reddit User] − NTA, she shouldn't have assumed your gender, and could've at the very least done some work place recon and asked coworkers before pursuing](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wp-editor-1767000862322-1.webp)

A couple added humor or a softer no-assholes judgment.

![[Reddit User] − NAH. It's on the other person to know your gender if they're going to act on assumptions. You did nothing to explicitly state otherwise so nothing wrong...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wp-editor-1767000871817-2.webp)
The community overwhelmingly agreed the poster did nothing wrong—her gender was already public in the group, and friendly chat doesn’t equal flirtation. The other woman’s anger reflects embarrassment over her own assumption rather than any deception.
Have you ever been misunderstood online because of missing cues about gender or orientation? How do you handle private messages turning unexpectedly romantic? Drop your stories below!
