Estranged Friend Announces Pregnancy, Woman Fires Back After Years Of Being Ignored

Not every reunion feels like a second chance. Sometimes, it feels like a reminder of why things ended in the first place. The original poster (OP) had already processed the loss of a friendship that faded during some of her most vulnerable moments. She did the work, found closure, and moved on without expecting that person to return.

Now, that same friend is back with a major life update, expecting a reaction that OP doesn’t feel ready to give. Instead of warmth, there’s distance, shaped by past experiences that were never addressed. OP is now questioning how much kindness she owes someone who once gave her none. Is she protecting her peace, or shutting the door too firmly? Read on to decide.

After being ghosted during grief, woman responds coldly to friend’s pregnancy news

Estranged Friend Announces Pregnancy, Woman Fires Back After Years Of Being Ignored
not the actual photo

'AITAH for standing up for myself after an estranged friend told me she’s pregnant?'

I (31F) haven’t heard from my college best friend (29F) since June.

For context, my dog died and she ghosted me, which she also did when my dad died a few years prior.

I’d made peace with it after therapy and know people can only meet you as much as they’ve met themselves.

Well, last week she reached out out of the blue.

I respectfully expressed how she hurt my feelings and how it’s shocking to hear from her and that her actions made me feel like s__t,

during the darkest moments of my life.. Well this week she’s telling me she’s pregnant, and that I’m going to be an aunt.

Would I be the ass hole if I simply said “congrats, and good luck with that” and left it at that.

Quite frankly, I’m not interested in giving this person another chance and don’t feel like being manipulated into a friendship via a child.

UPDATE: I said “congratulations, I wish your new fam the best.”

She said," Wow, really? I said: at least I didn’t ghost you! And blocked her. Thanks for the support

There’s a quiet kind of pain that comes from being left alone in your hardest moments. Not once, but repeatedly. Over time, that absence doesn’t just disappoint. It changes how safe a relationship feels.

In this situation, the OP isn’t reacting to a pregnancy announcement. She’s responding to a pattern of emotional absence. Her friend disappeared during deeply painful events, her father’s death and her dog’s loss, then reappeared with good news and an expectation of closeness.

That contrast matters. It can feel less like genuine reconnection and more like selective presence. Her response wasn’t explosive. It was brief, controlled, and consistent with the emotional distance she had already built after processing the past.

A more nuanced perspective is that not all reconnections come from the same place. Some people return because they’ve reflected and want to repair harm. Others return without addressing what happened, focusing only on the present. The missing piece here is accountability. Without acknowledging past hurt, the relationship lacks a foundation to rebuild on.

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From the OP’s side, maintaining distance isn’t about punishing her friend. It’s about protecting herself from a cycle she has already experienced.

Psychological research helps explain why this feels so final. Psychology Today explains that emotional unavailability, especially during times of grief or vulnerability, can damage trust and make it difficult to restore closeness later.

Similarly, Verywell Mind notes that setting clear boundaries after repeated hurt is a key part of maintaining emotional well-being, particularly when past behavior shows a pattern rather than a one-time mistake.

These insights highlight why the OP’s reaction is less about being distant and more about being consistent. She had already processed the relationship and adjusted her expectations. When her friend returned without addressing the past, the emotional gap remained.

What stands out is that the OP responded with restraint. She acknowledged the news politely and chose not to re-engage. That suggests her decision came from clarity rather than impulse.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These commenters believed she’s only reaching out for help or benefits, urging OP to stay no contact

ERVetSurgeon − NTA. Good for you. She is thinking of baby gifts and free babysitting which is likely why she got in touch with you.

Stay NC, she was never a real friend.

Obvious-Fans − She’s just reaching out because she wants you to give her a baby shower.

ruraljurorsacklunch − Block and ghost. She wants something from you.

This group advised setting clear boundaries, suggesting a direct message ending the friendship before blocking

Friendly-Client6242 − NTA for standing up for yourself. I’m curious as to how she responded when you told her how her actions had impacted you.

Rather than “good luck with that” be more clear.

“Congratulations on your pregnancy. Moving forward I will not be involved in your life but I wish you the best. ” And block.

Tasty-Answer-8183 − NTA. She's not a friend if she's never there when you actually need her.

It seems like she only remembered you because she knows raising a baby with a village is way easier, so suddenly you're an 'aunt'

I'd just text her something like: I stopped considering you my best friend when you ghosted me months ago when I needed you.

You don't get to show up now and call me an 'aunt'.

Congrats on your pregnancy but I won't be a part of yours or your baby's lives. Then I'd block her

Ginger630 − NTA! She ghosted you during vulnerable times in your life and wasn’t there for you.

Now she needs a friend and suddenly pops back up? Nah. Honestly I wouldn’t even respond and just block her.

These commenters supported blunt or sarcastic responses, backing OP for not welcoming her back

signol_ − "New phone, who's this?" NTA

DivineTarot − "You're going to be an aunt. " "B__ch, we're not related, and you weren't there for me when I needed you,

so why are you trying to create a baby sitting nest for yourself now? Begone, thot. " NTA

This group recommended a calmer approach, suggesting either neutral replies or only reconnecting if trust can be rebuilt

shyfidelity − I think "good luck with that" is obviously antagonistic. I'd say either leave it at "congrats" or don't respond at all

Dependent-Union4802 − If you think it’s over, you just have to tell her directly.

If you think there is a sliver of hope to rebuild, she will have to earn your trust again.

These commenters focused on past behavior, saying repeated ghosting shows she’s unreliable and not worth re-engaging

13surgeries − How did she respond when you told her how much she'd hurt you? I hope she at least apologized.

NTA. She sounds selfish and self-centered. You don't need that in your life.

NanaGeorgianna − My best friend ghosted me twice. It was so hurtful the first time. I cried for a month she was like no other friend I have ever had.

When we started talking the second time it was never the same.

Then after a couple of years she ghosted me again. She is known to ghost people so I know it is her MO.

If she ever calls me again I will block her number. I love her, but nope. Not happening again.

So what do you think? Should she have kept things brief and polite, or was closing the door completely the right move? And when someone reappears after disappearing in your hardest moments, how much of the past should still matter?

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