AITAH for suggesting my friend should learn to self-soothe?

What happens when a friend’s anxiety turns your casual hangouts into constant reassurance requests? Many people with close friendships face this challenge when one person leans heavily on the other for emotional regulation. One woman felt overwhelmed after her friend sent a lengthy text questioning every detail of their four-hour lunch, asking if she had been judgmental, boring, or oversharing.

She responded by gently setting boundaries and encouraging therapy instead of ongoing reassurance. The exchange left things quiet for days, and now she wonders if suggesting her friend learn to self-soothe made her the asshole. Readers have strong opinions on friendship limits and mental health support.

‘AITAH for suggesting my friend should learn to self-soothe?’

The post introduces the friendship and the friend’s anxiety patterns that lead to frequent reassurance-seeking.

I have a friend from work. We interact with each other every day, and often hang out outside of work - sometimes on a weekly basis, sometimes less frequently. She...

When she has opened up to me about some struggles in the past, I have suggested therapy. She recently started seeing a therapist.

She will overthink things to the point where she gets so consumed by anxiety that she cannot do anything else and will spiral out of control. She'll cry, starve, or...

Often times after we hang out or even interact, she will text me and ask things like, "I'm spiraling. When I said ..., did you think I meant ...?" Or...

I have never thought about our conversations as intensely as she has. My response is usually something like, "I'm fine. I had fun. If something was wrong, I'd tell you."

The situation escalated after a long, enjoyable lunch when the friend sent an overwhelming message seeking validation.

We went out to lunch one day, and we were at the restaurant for almost 4 hours. We were just talking and it was nice.

When I got home, she sent a text saying, "I am having massive anxiety at the moment and I’m unsure exactly what sparked it but alas here we are. Did...

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Did I over share at any point? Did I bore you with my talking? Those questions are spiraling in my brain. I think I’m just looking for a bit of...

She has shared with me that in the past, people have told her that she is "too much", and that's a sensitive subject. But in this moment, I felt it....

But I also wanted to communicate some boundaries because I felt like something inside me snapped. I felt that she kept using me to ease her mind. I struggle with...

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Sometimes I share things with her, but I would never put it all on her to solve it like I felt she had just done to me. I have learned...

The woman responded by setting a boundary and encouraging her friend to work on the issue in therapy.

I replied, "I'm all good. I had fun. I'm sorry you're having a hard time. I care about our relationship, but you checking in after we hang out is not...

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My reassurance can help the momentary spiraling, but I think that talking about it with your therapist would help get to the root of that issue better than I can....

Just know that if something comes up that bothers me, I'd 100% let you know!" She said, "Thanks for communicating all of that. Those are things I am actively working...

Addressing the anxiety was one of them. I understand where you’re coming from and will make note of that for the future.". I didn't know how to reply, so I...

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Edit: And now it's been a few days since any interaction. The alone time and space is kinda nice though...

The core issue involves a friend who frequently seeks reassurance after social interactions due to intense anxiety. These check-ins often arrive as long texts questioning the friend’s behavior, tone, or impact. The woman providing reassurance felt increasingly burdened, recognizing a pattern where her responses temporarily eased the spiral but did not address the root cause.

The friend appears motivated by fear of rejection and self-doubt, likely rooted in past experiences of being called “too much.” The woman struggles with her own anxiety but has developed self-soothing skills and wants her friend to build similar independence. Communication succeeded when she expressed boundaries kindly, focusing on care rather than criticism.

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Clinical psychologist Dr. Julie Smith explains that “Constant reassurance-seeking can reinforce anxiety rather than reduce it, creating a cycle where the person depends on external validation instead of internal coping.” (From her book Why Has Nobody Told Me This Before?, 2022). This dynamic fits here, as repeated reassurance may maintain the spiral instead of breaking it.

Practical steps include maintaining clear boundaries while showing support. Suggest professional help for deeper work, as therapy targets root causes. Use a simple preemptive phrase after hangouts, such as “I had fun, everything’s good.” If patterns persist, consider space or reevaluating the friendship’s balance. Healthy relationships allow both people to manage their emotions without one becoming the sole regulator.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

The online community largely supported the woman’s approach, viewing her response as kind, clear, and necessary. Most agreed she was not wrong and praised her for setting boundaries thoughtfully.

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Many readers appreciated the gentle communication and encouraged continuing the friendship with limits:

Beginning-Poet-2991 − It sounds like you had a healthy chat about it. Don't give up on her.

MentalMaker-420 − No reply was necessary, but you should be the first one to reach out and make plans next!

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because her anxiety will keep her from doing so She might’ve even been grateful that you didn’t carry the conversation on -Someone with everything going on that you’ve just described...

Relevant_Ad_4121 − As someone that struggles to self soothe and sometimes needs to coregulate, it can be a really difficult skill to learn for many reasons.

It sounds like you both did a good job communicating and I'm sure it's something that will improve overall with time. NAH

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kalixanthippe − NTA Therapy takes time, and it sounds like there is a lot for her to unpack. It is difficult to understand,

but it isn't about you, its about a number of others, likely family who have made her feel negatively about herself and to second guess everything. You get to decide...

Several commenters suggested possible underlying conditions like OCD or ADHD and emphasized that reassurance is not the long-term solution:

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Potential_Cupcake_48 − As a therapist, It sounds like she has OCD and not anxiety. Your response was totally appropriate and NTA. By providing her reassurances all the time, you’re getting...

She has a therapist, it’s not you. OCD often goes undiagnosed for almost 7 years if people aren’t catching it and incorrectly see it as just anxiety.

OppositePin1582 − They should get checked for ocd and see an ocd therapist. OCD can just be those ruminating anxious spiral thoughts and compulsions to ask for validation/reassurance and so...

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Ocd can be all sorts of things and is not always the ocd of germs or touching things 10x that people always assume it is.

BabyyHandz − One therapist’s thoughts, seeking reassurance from others to alleviate worries/fears can be unhelpful in that a person may not be actually learning how to have a better relationship...

A few offered practical ideas for managing future interactions while supporting the friend’s progress:

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iesharael − How would you feel about reassuring her as a goodbye? Like before parting ways when hanging out state that you had a good time and had no issues...

When I was in a funk my boyfriend would do that for me sometimes. He also made sure to reassure me that if he had a problem he’d say something...

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DogsOnMyCouches − Well, she ISN’T addressing her anxiety. She is badgering you about it. Her checking in, should be, “hey! I hope you enjoyed our meet up.

Please let me know if I did anything off, as I always worry. I won’t be offended, I APPRECIATE knowing if I behaved weird. Thanks”.

This story highlights the delicate balance of supporting a friend with anxiety without becoming their primary emotional regulator. Boundaries protect both people—allowing the anxious friend space to build self-soothing skills and preventing burnout for the listener. Clear, compassionate communication often strengthens relationships rather than damaging them.

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The quiet days afterward show that space can feel healthy. Friendships thrive when both parties manage their emotions responsibly and respect limits. Would you keep reassuring a friend after hangouts if it became frequent? How do you set boundaries when someone’s anxiety starts to feel overwhelming?

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