WIBTA if I distance myself from a friend who keeps saying she won’t date me?

Friendships that last more than a decade usually come with trust, mutual respect, and an unspoken understanding of boundaries. That’s why this situation hit so hard for one woman who thought she had exactly that. After 15 years of friendship, she found herself repeatedly embarrassed in public by someone she once considered close. Every night out seemed to follow the same pattern. Her friend would announce, unprompted, that she would never date her, often framing it as a necessary clarification.

The problem was simple and deeply uncomfortable: there had never been romantic interest to begin with. As the comments piled up and the narrative grew more exaggerated, the friendship started to feel less supportive and more humiliating. When she finally chose to leave a night out early, the backlash made her question whether stepping back made her the problem, or whether it was long overdue.

WIBTA if I distance myself from a friend who keeps saying she won't date me?

What started as a solid friendship slowly became uncomfortable in public settings

I (40F) have a friend of 15 years. I'm a lesbian and she's bi and married to a guy and has a girlfriend (he's ok with this). I've never hit...

The awkward pattern showed up every time they went out together

However, when we hang out, and especially when we're chatting with others at the bar or club, she's got to make a point to whomever that we're not together and...

Despite laughing it off, the emotional toll kept growing

It's always awkward and the people we're talking to often look at me with pity like I'm going to be heartbroken.

I usually laugh it off with a "you're not my type and married" joke, but it's getting old and my feelings are hurt even though I don't have feelings for...

Attempts to talk it through only made things worse

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When I try to talk about it, she just says my feelings wouldn't be hurt if I didn't want it to happen so she's just making it clear every time...

The breaking point came when the narrative escalated publicly

Last night were were out again and as I was taking a vid of the dancing, I happened to catch her in the background again telling another stranger that she'd...

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Leaving early triggered yet another accusation

Shortly after that I ended up taking an Uber home (other friends were there) and today she's pissed that I left and again thinks it's because of "unrequited" feelings.

At this point I'm just over it and want distance. But does that make me an a__hole, sensitive, upset for the wrong reason?

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This situation centers on repeated public humiliation disguised as clarification. The poster isn’t upset because of rejection, but because her identity and intentions are being rewritten without her consent. When someone repeatedly insists on a false narrative, especially in social settings, it can erode dignity and trust quickly.

From the friend’s side, this behavior often points to insecurity or ego reinforcement. Publicly rejecting someone who never expressed interest can become a way to center attention or reassure oneself of desirability. Still, that explanation doesn’t excuse the impact. According to psychologist Dr. Harriet Lerner, author of The Dance of Connection, respect in relationships depends on listening and responding to what the other person is actually saying, not what feels convenient or flattering.

The poster clearly communicated that the comments were hurtful. Being told her feelings “prove” hidden romantic interest dismisses her reality entirely. That kind of deflection avoids accountability and shifts blame back onto the person being hurt. Over time, this dynamic can feel gaslighting, especially when the false story is repeated to strangers.

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Healthy friendships don’t require one person to absorb discomfort so the other can feel validated. Practical steps include stating boundaries once, clearly, and then acting on them. Distancing doesn’t need to be dramatic or cruel. It can simply mean choosing not to spend time with someone who consistently misrepresents you. Ending or pausing a friendship in this context isn’t punishment; it’s self-protection.

Check out how the community responded:

Many users firmly supported creating distance, calling the behavior disrespectful

DesperateToNotDream − “You seem obsessed with thinking that I have feelings for you. I do not, and never have. I don’t know if it’s an ego thing for you.

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It’s rude to keep telling random people that you’d never hook up with me- It feels like you’re putting me down in order to boost your self esteem. It’s not...

I no longer want to spend time with someone who makes it a point to constantly put me down to others. I wish you the best but I don’t need...

TaylorMade2566 − She's no friend. Friends don't go out of their way to hurt their friend's feelings. No idea why she feels a need to insult you to everyone you...

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NTA if you separate yourself from any friend that treats you so poorly. I'm sure she'll tell others that it's because you're SOOO in love with her, you just couldn't...

If someone asks, you can say you were tired of being the b__t of her "joke" and realized she's not really your friend.

luluzinhacs − cut her out, let her think what she wants to boost her ego, you deserve better

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PassengerOk5155 − She's not a good friend if she feels this is OK to do constantly

fyrelyte11 − There's nothing normal, healthy, or ok in her behavior. She sounds entirely cracked, and she's not your friend. I would've gone no contact years ago.

Others highlighted how damaging and humiliating the pattern really was

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Upstairs_Internal295 − Even if it were true, what a s__tty way to deal with it, humiliating another person repeatedly, to strangers even! F__k that noise. What an awful person.

tomowudi − I would tell her that you are dumping her as a friend because not only are you tired of being painted as some sort of love-sick hanger-on,

but she's also such a s__tty friend that she doesn't bother to listen to the words coming out of your mouth in order to preserve her ego so that

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she can keep telling people this made up story about the two of you. You thought you were fellow queer women enjoying a platonic relationship with each other.

She has made it abundantly clear that her fantasy world where you are some unrequited crush she would never be with is more important than why you actually tolerate her...

Isabella_Bee − She doesn't sound like a very good friend. She's using you to make herself feel better on some level. That's not what friends do. Sometimes relationships run their...

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You're allowed to tell your mutual friends that you don't care for how she treats you and that you no longer want to expose yourself to her toxicity.

Intrepid-Method-2575 − Your friend is very much giving the “all my lesbian friends must want me” thing that you see on shows a lot when the lesbian friend comes out...

(I realize she’s bi but it’s giving the same “all people who are attracted to women MUST be attracted to ME” thought process) ETA: forgot to leave a verdict. YWNBTA....

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NormalLifeInVegas − How can you hang out with her when her ego takes up all the space? There’s nowhere to sit.

A few responses used humor or blunt honesty to make their point

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dragonrider1965 − I think you should beat her to it at the next outing . Loudly state at the next gathering that even though she is bi you wouldn’t date...

and have never been remotely interested in her in that way even though she constantly remarks about you two dating .

TX_Farmer − Announce loudly that you’re not interested in dating married women. 👀 What is she looking for when she walks up to strangers and announces that? She’s not your...

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MajLeague − Yeah. .. End the friendship. Or do it first. Make sure to say it every time. ..The same way she says it. Just before she can do it.

Then wait. ... She will suddenly have an issue with it. I had a lesbian friend do this a few times and I had to ask her why also. I'm...

"Why do you keep saying that? You know I'm not at all interested in you either right? " I didn't get a weird ass answer like you did but She...

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Express_Time7242 − yeah, she seems like kind of an a__hole

kn0wvuh − I think you used the word friend wrong

What stands out most is how often the poster tried to clarify her feelings, only to be ignored. This wasn’t about rejection or unspoken attraction, but about respect and dignity. Most readers agreed that stepping back from someone who repeatedly humiliates you is reasonable, not cruel. Friendships should feel safe, not defensive. When a bond becomes a stage for someone else’s ego, distance can be an act of self-respect. What would you do if a longtime friend kept telling a story about you that simply wasn’t true?

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