AITA For Ruining My Parent’s Friendship?
A 15-year-old girl has battled anorexia nervosa since she was 11. She’s made steady progress with professional help—working with a dietician, staying active in sports, and slowly gaining weight in a healthy way—but recovery is gradual, especially with growth spurts and her naturally slim, athletic build.
During a rare visit from longtime family friends Alice (60) and her husband Dave, things turned ugly at dinner. The teen stuck to her safe meal of sourdough, broccoli cheddar soup, and lemonade instead of trying new falafel. Alice unleashed cruel comments, accusing her of faking the disorder for attention, pitying her parents for “enabling” it, and ultimately declaring she couldn’t maintain the friendship. The parents cut contact, prioritizing their daughter, but the teen feels guilty for being the “cause.”

‘AITA For Ruining My Parent’s Friendship?’
The teen explains her long journey with the eating disorder and her family’s supportive approach:






The dinner quickly escalated into cruelty:








Eating disorders like anorexia are serious mental health conditions, not choices for attention or “inflexibility.” Recovery is nonlinear, often taking years, and comments minimizing it can trigger setbacks—exactly what happened when the teen couldn’t finish her meal after the attack.
Alice’s behavior was abusive: shaming a vulnerable child in her own home, criticizing parents’ handling of a medical issue, and weaponizing a long friendship. True friends support during hard times, not judge or bully.
Parents walked a fine line by inviting them despite distance, but prioritizing their daughter’s well-being was right. They might have shut it down sooner, but the friendship ended because Alice chose cruelty over empathy.
For the teen: this isn’t your fault. Focus on your progress—you’re strong for pushing through. Surround yourself with people who uplift you. If triggers like this arise again, having phrases ready (or simply leaving) protects your peace.
Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:
The online community was unanimous: the teen is NTA, with outrage directed squarely at Alice for her cruelty and ignorance.
Most stressed that Alice alone destroyed the friendship through her bullying:
















Several called Alice a bully and encouraged cutting ties:











![” Alternatively: “I’m just not in the mood for [dish] today. I’m choosing to eat something that is part of my doctor prescribed diet however, which I’m sticking to religiously...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wp-editor-1766655155421-12.webp)
![Using your diagnosis for sympathy: “Why bless your heart (do this in full on southern style). You ought to be thankful you’ve never been diagnosed with an [technically] incurable condition...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wp-editor-1766655156418-13.webp)









Everyone agrees: the teen did nothing wrong—Alice’s ignorance and cruelty torpedoed the friendship all by herself. Parents are right to protect their child above all.
Have you dealt with insensitive comments about health issues? How do you handle “friends” who cross lines like this?
