AITA for telling my friend’s girlfriend that I am not her Friend?

Running into someone from your past can feel awkward enough, but imagine it’s the person who made your middle school years miserable—and now she’s dating your close college friend. That’s exactly what happened to one young woman when she bumped into Jake and his girlfriend Katherine at the mall.

The moment turned tense fast when Katherine casually introduced her as a friend to Jake’s siblings. She immediately shut that down, sparking an explosive reaction that left everyone stunned. Stories like this spark big conversations about forgiveness, growth, and whether old wounds ever truly heal.

AITA for telling my friend's girlfriend that I am not her Friend?

The friendship with Jake started off great during her freshman year.

I know it hasn't been long since I have posted on this sub but I have another dilemma and this one has been eating at me. My (19f) friend Jake...

When The fall semester started, he told me that he got a girlfriend. I was excited for him and asked who the lucky girl was.

He told me her name was Katherine and showed me a picture of her. I instantly recognized her as my middle school bully.

The painful history came rushing back with specific memories.

A couple of things she did to me was. \-Made fun of my physical features such as my hair and skin tone (I'm black).

\-Told me several times and in front of others that I'm too ugly for anyone to like. \-Spread around the rumor that I was pregnant, resulting in me losing several...

Even when Katherine started joining their hangouts, keeping distance felt necessary.

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Afterward, Jake would sometimes bring Katherine when were playing games in the basement of the library. She seemed like she has changed for the better since middle school

but I just couldn't bring myself to be around her. We would have small talk here and there but I just avoided her because I didn't want to interact with...

I told Jake that Katherine seemed nice but I wasn't vibing with her. He was a little sad since he wanted us to be friends but he understood..

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Then came the unexpected mall encounter that changed everything.

Here is where I might be the a__hole. I'm on winter break so I decided to go to the mall. I bumped into Katherine and Jake there. They were with...

Jake saw me and waved for me to come over. He introduced them as his siblings and told me that they were with Katherine to hang out.

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Before I could introduce myself, Katherine told them my name and stated that I was the friend she was talking about. I immediately said "No we are not friends." Jake's...

Katherine’s reaction showed a familiar side.

She huffed and said that I couldn't possibly still be holding what she did in middle school over her head, that she has changed since that time and she was...

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I told her that is exactly the reason why I can't be friends with her. She sneered at me, called me a resentful b-word, and walked away. Jake apologized to...

Doubt crept in after talking to another friend.

I told my friend what happened and she told me I should have snapped like that and just pretended to be her friend because I made the whole group feel...

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After she said that I felt like an a__hole because I had already forgiven Katherine for my peace of mind. I just couldn't bring myself to ever be friends with...

Old bullying, especially when it targets someone’s race or appearance, can leave lasting emotional scars that don’t just disappear with time. In this case, Katherine’s actions in middle school—mocking the woman’s hair and skin tone, calling her ugly, and spreading a harmful pregnancy rumor—crossed into racist territory and caused real social harm, like losing friends.

Experts in trauma and bullying recovery emphasize that victims often carry insecurity and trust issues into adulthood, even if they’ve worked on forgiveness for their own mental health. Forgiving someone doesn’t mean you owe them friendship or a clean slate. True growth requires accountability, like a sincere apology that acknowledges the pain caused, without excuses like “I was just a kid.” Katherine’s response—huffing, dismissing the past, and name-calling—shows she hasn’t truly changed.

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Psychologists point out that bullies who minimize their actions often repeat patterns because they haven’t confronted their behavior. For the woman, keeping distance is a healthy boundary, not resentment. She can remain civil for Jake’s sake, but forcing closeness would invalidate her own healing process. This situation also highlights how dating a friend’s bully creates complicated dynamics. Jake, unaware at first, now faces a choice: support his girlfriend or respect his friend’s boundaries.

Relationship experts suggest open conversations where the woman calmly shares her history without demanding Jake end the relationship. If Jake pressures her to “get over it,” it could strain their friendship. Therapy, either individual or group, can help process these feelings and build confidence in setting limits. Ultimately, no one is obligated to befriend someone who hurt them deeply, no matter how much time has passed. Healing looks like protecting your peace, not pretending everything is fine. Boundaries aren’t about holding grudges—they’re about self-respect.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

Most users firmly backed her right to set boundaries and speak up.

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DDecimal − NTA She huffed and said that I couldn't possibly still be holding what she did in middle school over her head, that she has changed since that time

and she was just a kid. I told her that is exactly the reason why I can't be friends with her. She sneered at me, called me a resentful b-word,...

She hasn't changed. Sometimes discomfort is good, now they (Jake & his siblings) know who she really is.

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clovrfestt − NTA at all. Katherine never apologized for what she did and tbh her bullying sounds a lot more like racism then just regular middle school mean girl bs...

You're completely in the right for saying you're not friends and your friend who said you should have just "kept the peace" should have kept their mouth shut.

Make it clear to those around you that what Katherine did wasn't just ignoring you in the halls or not inviting you to her birthday party. Your friends need to...

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TheUtopianCat − NTA. She huffed and said that I couldn't possibly still be holding what she did in middle school over her head, that she has changed since that time

and she was just a kid. It sounds like she never attempt to make amends for the *r__ist* bullying that she did to you when you were in school together.

There is no reason for you to want to be friends with her after what she has done. If she wanted to be friends with you, the least she could...

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and acknowledge that what she did was wrong. The "just a kid" argument doesn't hold any water. Middle schoolers are old enough to know right from wrong.

She sneered at me, called me a resentful b-word, and walked away She clearly hasn't changed.

amberbethh0446 − NTA. You have every right to be upset with her for treating you like garbage. Sounds like she’s still a resentful snot, too, who hasn’t grown up much.

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theDagman − NTA That would have been a prime moment for Katherine to have apologized for her past actions. Instead, she doubled down on them. Hopefully, Jake sees this as...

Others highlighted red flags and potential fallout.

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ljn23 − NTA She is still a bully. She was trying to use you by claiming you were friends to make herself look good because she knows you are friends...

When you clarified that you aren't actually friends she verbally attacked you and tried to make you seem like the problem. This is textbook gaslighting/bullying.

TheDreadPirateJeff − NTA. She may well have fully changed since middle school. But that does not negate the damage she did to you emotionally,

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to your self confidence, and general well being. Things like that, that happen at that age, stick with you for the rest of your life.

I'm still, at 47, dealing with the insecurity caused by people like Katherine when I was elementary and middle school aged. You do not have to be her friend, nor...

You CAN be civil, which it sounds like you have, but only for the sake of your friendship with Jake, but you don't have to be friends with her at...

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MooMooInTheHouse − NTA. This bullying is bordering on r*cism territory. Katherine has not changed at all. She called you the B word because you can’t forget the bullying she put...

I-am-here-what-next − NTA and Katherine clearly hasn't changed at all or she would have sincerely apologized for the way she treated you in the past and understood why you didn't...

There are so many ways shd could have handled it differently to show you how she has changed, except she hasn't changed and is going to try bad mouthing you...

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I'd suggest you talk to him about it and explain why you can't be friends with him, what she did, and how you are happy for him

but are not able to be around someone like her who refuses to acknowledge the pain they caused someone. She could have tried to make it right, but did not...

Be prepared for him to choose her over you, initially the attraction of a new partner is powerful. Hopefully he'll figure out what kind of person she is.

Red_Cathy − NTA You are correct, bullies have no right to being forgiven, let alone claim to be your friend, and the "I have changed since then" is likely total...

A few kept it short and fierce.

Hail-Persephone − NTA - karma sucks. And honestly your friend dating your school bully is s__tty too.

[Reddit User] − INFO- Did she ever hash it out or apologize?

[Reddit User] − NTA. She doesn't seem to have changed that much, if she feels entitled enough to tell you to lie to your friend's siblings. In two words, f*ck...

AMCodaMonkey − NTA. She didn't change. She's still the same r__ist bully. She just learned to hide it better. Soon more of her true colors will show and hopefully Jake...

[Reddit User] − NTA. She's lucky you even talk to her. Lie for her? Forgive her? Yeah no. Seriously, you owe your bully nothing.

This encounter shows that time alone doesn’t erase harm, and nobody gets to rewrite history by claiming friendship without earning it. She protected her peace by speaking truth, even if it felt awkward. Growth looks like accountability, not anger when called out. Would you stay friends with Jake if he keeps defending Katherine?

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