#1

We were getting ready to leave a crowded bar one night and my friend went to use the restroom. When he came back he was supporting a woman who was so drunk she could barely walk. He said that she had lost her friends and we should take her back to our hotel room.
I told him that we should help her find her friends and asked her for her name. My friend looked pissed and said that we should just go. She managed to slur that her name was Amy. I then went to the DJ and asked him to announce to the bar that Amy had lost her friends, needed their help, and to come find her at the bar.
During this my friend tried to walk Amy out of the bar, but security stopped him at the door. Luckily Amy’s fiends immediately came to the bar to get her and got her away from my friend.
Afterwards my friend was pissed, because “I had ruined his good time.” I told him that he was disgusting, that taking that girl back to our hotel would have been abduction, and that what he had tried to do made him no better than a r*pist.
I stopped hanging out with him after that.
kazuwacky:
Power to you for getting that girl back to her friends.
I got drunk around a male friend and he took me back to his flat instead of mine. He tried stuff and got sulky when I drunkenly said no. I'm sure he thinks he's a good guy for that... Somehow.
I never spent a second alone with him again, never went anywhere with him again. I viewed it as a frightening betrayal that I didn't expect.
#2

As a side note, we are no longer friends and, about 2 weeks later, we (me, my wife, and daughter) had the same server at the same Texas Roadhouse.
crogers2009:
As a former restaurant manager, I can say that the majority of the time we'll tell the customer that we will "reprimand" the employee, and we'll just go in the back and laugh about it, if it wasn't something too serious.
GPLeChuck00:
My old boss (construction supply delivery company) used to agree completely with the customers, "Oh yeah. He's just dumb. I'll fire him when he gets back." Most of the time we never even heard about it unless he wanted to laugh about how stupid they were. Even if it was serious.
#3

Anon:
This person sounds like they belong in a prison cell.
If you’ve had the same best friend since you were in kindergarten, you probably know that person better than their own family does. Favorite ice cream flavor? Strawberry cheesecake. Favorite holiday? Halloween. Biggest fear? Heights. At this point, your relationship feels so natural that you never have to think about what to say or worry about how to behave around them.
But have you ever stopped to consider what actually makes a good friend? According to BetterUp, there are some key characteristics that any great friend should have. First, they should be someone with integrity who stands up for their values. It’s also crucial for a good friend to be trustworthy and honest.
#4

Anon:
So if she accepts, he gets free s*x. If she rejects, he's the "hero" for testing her virtue.
Brilliant plan. What could possibly go wrong?
Shixhat:
Punch.
#5

Snoo_26884:
He was testing the waters with her, seeing if she was happy in her marriage.
#6

A wonderful friend should be dependable as well. While it’s not always possible to drop everything for your best friend when they’re in a crisis, they should know that you’ll always be there to support them as much as you can.
If you want a friendship to be successful, both parties also need to be loyal. It’s perfectly normal to have a variety of friends, but you shouldn’t be dropping one for another. Stand by the people you care about, in good times and bad, and show them that you plan to stick around.
#7

seigneur101:
What was it?
whatnamedoyoulike (OP):
A lot of it was that she is a master at justifying her own bad decisions. Nothing is ever a big deal to her. When her electricity got shut off, it was because "stuff happens." When she got fired from her fourth job in a year, it was "ok, I'm going to cruise on unemployment and give myself time to focus on art." When she forgot someone's birthday, it was because birthdays triggered her anxiety. And when she was served with divorce papers after refusing to attend marriage counseling, she insisted she had done everything in her power to save her marriage.
She is never wrong in her eyes and is the only adult I've seen consistently regress in life because of it. In the end, a 12 year friendship devolved into an absolute nightmare for me.
#8

shame_on_meStupid:
Classic projection.
#9

As we all know, a great friend is empathetic as well. They might need to deliver some bad news from time to time, but they should always consider your feelings when doing so. They should show compassion and sympathize with your situation, even if it’s different from their own, and you should never have to worry about them being intentionally unkind.
#10

1 - it was during Covid, so I couldn’t go in the shop with her. I would’ve had to sit in the car in the parking lot for approximately 4 hours, alone.
2 - it was in a REALLY sketchy part of town. And again, waiting in the car, alone, for 4 hours.
3 - it was on my birthday. She asked me if I could reschedule my birthday plans and move them to the week after, because she couldn’t reschedule her tattoo appt. So again, 4 hours, alone, sketchy part of town, on MY birthday.
There had been small things before this, but I couldn’t believe she felt justified in asking all this of me. It was such a selfish request, I broke the friendship off a month later.
TheTrollys:
Did you go with her for the tattoo?
EconomySpot3018 (OP):
Nope. I initially said yes because I felt bad for her having to go alone, but changed my mind pretty quickly. Plus, to make it even more stupid, she was married and could’ve just brought her husband. He just didn’t feel like going either.
#11

#12

ian9921:
This is why I have anxiety. A lot of my friends b***h about their other friends to me.
dragonfly-1001 (OP):
Take note of how the other friends treat you. If they are cautious & look at you as though they are judging, then you can bet your bottom dollar that you are being spoken about.
Next time you are on the receiving end of a b**ch session, I would casually make a comment along the lines of "I hope you don't b**ch about me like this" and take note of the response.
Or you can do what I did and tell the other friends what is being said about them. It started an avalanche of discussion about what she was telling everyone about everyone and it was at that point we realised that our middle friend was an outright [jerk].
ItsTtreasonThen:
It's also good to note there is a difference between venting and trashing. Like, some friends can be great but you if had a friction point you might just need to vent and figure out how to address it. But if it's never about fixing it, or growing your understandings... Then it's probably more about trashing.
dragonfly-1001 (OP):
Absolutely there is a difference. Nobody is perfect & it is natural that your talking points are about common people you know. However, my so called friend was bitching on purpose to cause problems. She purposely wanted to keep us all seperate so she would be the central contact between us all. There was a constant feeling of unease when we were together as a group. We all had an edge of arrogance about us because we knew something nasty about the others. It was uncomfortable. She lost her s**t once she realised that we were talking to each other without her present to control the narrative.
Another trait that makes someone an excellent friend is being a good listener. Sometimes, you may need to vent about your relationship or your boss for 30 minutes, and they should let you get it out without interrupting or brushing you off. Now, it’s important that both friends are happy to listen to one another, as friendships can quickly deteriorate if they become one-sided. But if both friends care about what the other is saying, listening should come naturally.
#13

She said she'd added up all the dates and it just didn't work.
Then when I asked her to stop talking about it (because it wasn't true!) She told me I didn't have enough friends to cut contact with her.
Wrong.
See ya.
I_FP_TO_TURKEYS:
No friends is better than toxic friends, being able to be alone is awesome!
#14

He also liked to talk about who ever wasn't in the room. Once he started getting passive aggressive with my wife I blew up at him. Now he's got a girl he barely knows pregnant and they're both unemployed. F**k em.
EnsignMJS:
Did you remain friends with his ex-girlfriends?
Humanaut93 (OP):
My wife kept in touch with one, there were a few though. There was a really bad blow up with one girl, we'll call her "A" who he was with for like 5 years.
A lived about 3 hours away and he wasn't even a little subtle about his infidelity. My wife (gf at the time) always said if she asks I'm telling her, because he would bring multiple girls around when A was at home. After one of his mistresses spilled the beans my wife confirmed it to A when she broke down. They still didn't break up but he wouldn't talk to my wife for like 2 years after. In that time he moved in with A 3 hours away, then got ratted out by his neighbors and had to move back here.
The night he came back was so weird, he called me up to meet him at a gas station and a bunch of our friends were there and the girl he cheated with too. One day he said to my wife "I forgive you" and she was to polite to say "I'm not sorry" he put me in a lot of s**tty situations and I don't regret one bit not talking to him, I just hate to think of the lies he's spreading about me.
#15

He pouted when I got a new girlfriend. When I got a good job. Even if I had a small pleasure like buying an album that I liked. He'd get a hurt look on his face and barely talk.
I never understood how he could think of me as a friend and absolutely hate for me to have any happiness at the same time.
Oberon_Swanson:
Try thinking of your friend's success as your success. Being part of a more successful social circle has its benefits, right? If they get a promotion, your "I know a guy who might be able to help with this" factor becomes stronger. Your friend gets a cool girlfriend? Maybe she has some single friends with similar interests and values.
I know it's still kind of a shallow way of looking at it but it helped me past the "jealous of friends' success" tipping point into just being genuinely happy for them even for things that don't help me. Learning to be happy with what you have is also important, and not being competitive with your friends. If you don't see them as being on the "same team" as you, you don't see them as friends, they're really just The Joneses you're trying to keep up with and have d**k measuring contests with.
At the end of the day, a great friend will make you feel good when you spend time with them. If any of the stories on this list are reminding you of your own friendships, you might want to seriously evaluate whether or not those relationships are serving you. Keep upvoting the stories that hit home for you, and if you’d like to check out another list from Bored Panda featuring similar experiences, look no further than right here.
#16

This was a $50 buy-in game that had been going on regularly for several years, so not high stakes but not exactly playing for peanuts either.
ian9921:
$50 buy-in game? That's even worse than if it had been high stakes! At least then he'd have a decent reason, this way he's essentially just cheating for the sake of screwing you over.
#17

#18

I'm still waiting...
Dances_With_Demons:
This is why I no longer talk to my mother. I realized I was always the one reaching out to her. I made it a point to call and text every couple of weeks and would get a three word reply two days later, if that (and she rarely answered a call), so I decided to see how long it would take for her to reach out to me.
Six years and counting.
#19

#20

Like at game nights, we would do stuff like have a marshmallow fight or toss nerf balls around, and at some point I realized I wasn't really part of that. No one threw a marshmallow at me. I would be laughing and zinging them around, they would all be play-chasing each other with them, but no one ever threw one at me. I wasn't sure what that meant. It was super weird once I noticed it.
Other things became obvious once I paid attention. I had couches and chairs in my place, but if I sat on a couch, people would all crowd onto the other couch while I had one to myself. I just sat in chairs instead, and suddenly the couch was fine once I wasn't on it. I tried to figure out why. Didn't think it was hygiene, I knew I wasn't bothering anyone or being creepy. I don't know, just a vibe I give off I guess.
Eventually I realized no one initiated anything with me. Lots of texting, lots of hanging out going on, but if I didn't initiate it, it didn't happen. I didn't want to see any of this stuff but I couldn't help knowing it once I knew it.
So I eventually stopped initiating. Figured I would give it a week or two, see what happened. It's been a few years now, haven't done anything with those people (or anyone else) since. I just went back to my accustomed isolation, changed jobs, and never heard a word. I still have the same phone and such.
I guess this isn't a good answer because I don't think they were a******s. The problem had to be me, I just don't know what it was.


