She Couldn’t Afford Her Friend’s Birthday Wishlist, So She Gave What She Had, And It Still Wasn’t Enough

Friendships are supposed to feel mutual. Not perfectly equal all the time, but balanced enough that effort and care go both ways. For one 24-year-old woman, that balance started to feel off during what should have been a simple birthday exchange.

After losing her job, she was already navigating a tough financial situation. Her close friend Lena knew this. So when her own birthday came and went with nothing more than a text message from Lena, she didn’t take it personally. She understood.

But just days later, Lena sent something that completely shifted the tone of the friendship. A detailed birthday wishlist, filled with specific, expensive items.

She Couldn’t Afford Her Friend’s Birthday Wishlist, So She Gave What She Had, and It Still Wasn’t Enough
Not the actual photo

And that’s when things started to unravel.

'AITAH for not accomplishing the birthday wish list of my Friend because I’m not in good financial position?'

I am 24F and I have been friends with Lena for about three years. Our birthdays are one week apart and mine comes first.

This year has been really hard for me financially after losing my job. I have been trying to manage my basic needs and Lena knows I am not in a...

When my birthday came she just sent me a happy birthday message. I did not mind and I was not expecting anything.

A few days later she sent me a detailed birthday wish list for her own birthday.

It included specific shoes perfumes and other items that were honestly too expensive for me.

She was very particular about what she wanted.. I told her I would try but I already knew I could not afford those things.

On my birthday someone gave me a tablet phone device that I did not really need because I already had something similar.

I decided to give it to her for her birthday. I wrapped it nicely and gave it to her without mentioning where it came from.

She seemed happy at first but later started saying she expected me to get at least one thing from her list and that she was looking forward to those items.

I explained my situation and said I still wanted to give her something meaningful. She said it was not about money but about effort and listening.

Since then she has been distant and a few friends think I should have gotten something small from her list instead.

I feel like I did what I could especially since she did not get me anything. Now I am wondering if I handled it wrong.. AITAH

The timing alone felt strange. She had just celebrated her own birthday quietly, without gifts or expectations. A simple message from Lena had been enough, given the circumstances.

So when Lena followed up with a carefully curated list of shoes, perfumes, and other pricey items, it felt disconnected from reality. Not just financially, but emotionally.

Still, she didn’t want to be a bad friend. She told Lena she would “try,” even though she already knew it wasn’t possible. Covering basic needs was her priority right now. Spending on luxury gifts simply wasn’t an option.

Then something unexpected happened.

She received a tablet device as a birthday gift from someone else. It was thoughtful, but unnecessary, since she already owned something similar. After thinking it over, she decided to give it to Lena instead. It felt like a meaningful compromise. She couldn’t afford the wishlist, but she could still give something valuable, something real.

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She wrapped it nicely and gave it to her without mentioning where it came from.

At first, Lena seemed happy.

But that didn’t last.

Later, Lena brought up her disappointment. She said she had expected at least one item from her list. That she had been looking forward to those specific things.

That’s when the situation turned uncomfortable.

She explained her financial struggles again, gently but clearly. She reminded Lena that she still made an effort to give her something thoughtful. But Lena pushed back. According to her, it wasn’t about money, it was about effort and “listening.”

That argument didn’t quite land.

Because from her perspective, effort was exactly what she had shown. She had taken what she had, made a decision, and given something meaningful despite her circumstances.

And there was another layer that made it harder to ignore.

Lena hadn’t given her anything at all.

Not even something small.

From a psychological standpoint, this taps into what researchers call reciprocity norms, the unspoken expectation that kindness and generosity should flow both ways in a relationship. When that balance is off, even unintentionally, it can create tension, resentment, or confusion.

In healthy friendships, especially during financially difficult periods, expectations usually adjust. People become more flexible, more understanding. Gift-giving shifts from material value to emotional meaning.

But in this case, Lena’s expectations didn’t shift at all.

There’s also something known as entitlement bias, where a person overestimates what they deserve from others while minimizing what they themselves contribute. Lena’s reaction reflects that imbalance. She focused on what she didn’t receive, rather than what was actually given, or what she hadn’t given in return.

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And that’s where the emotional disconnect becomes clear.

For the woman telling this story, the gift wasn’t just an object. It was an attempt to show care despite limitations. For Lena, it seems the value was tied to control, to getting exactly what she asked for.

Since then, the distance between them has grown. Some mutual friends have suggested she could have at least bought something small from the list, just to show effort.

But that raises a bigger question.

Is effort measured by meeting someone’s exact demands, or by doing what you reasonably can?

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Most people didn’t hesitate to call out the imbalance. Many pointed out the obvious contradiction, Lena gave nothing, yet expected something specific and expensive in return.

teresajs − NTA Don't give gifts to people who don't give you gifts.

HorseygirlWH − Did you flat out ask her why she expects you to buy her a present when she did not buy you one? Of course you're NTA, and she...

extinct_diplodocus − Huh? She makes a wish list and expects you to be her fairy godmother? NTA. She got you nothing but a card. All you need to do is...

Additional_Day949 − Why would you get her a gift if she didn’t get you one? ? What is wrong with ppl? YTA: to yourself mostly

Others described her behavior as entitled, even suggesting that giving her any gift at all was more generosity than she deserved.

Aggressive_Mood214 − NTA. She didn’t get you a gift at all. You gave her a (relatively expensive) gift.

And she’s mad because it wasn’t what she wanted? ! I’m sorry, but your friend is incredibly entitled and probably someone you don’t want in your life.

She will continue to expect you to give to her without giving you anything in return. Friendship is a two-way street.

A real friend would care about you, your financial situation, and your feelings.

Chargednotconvicted − NTA. So she sends you a card, but expects you to get her specific gifts. She shouldn't have gotten anything except a card. She's not your friend. Lose...

Purpleninja1132 − NTA. She knows you’re having trouble right now and still has the audacity to demand a gift and not any gift. A gift from her list only then...

A few comments hit harder, saying the real issue wasn’t the gift, but the friendship itself. When expectations only go one way, it stops being mutual.

DaisyRedado − Is this rage bait. I legitimately can't comprehend your post if it isn't.

How would you be an AH for not buying someone an expensive gift that you can't afford, especially considering they got you absolutely nothing for your birthday the week prior.

You're TA for giving her a present that was intended for you when she deserved nothing. NTA overall.

You need a new friend because this girl is NOT your friend

SaltMarshGoblin − She gave you nothing. Why are you **obligated** to give her something?

Cal-Augustus − Lena is an obtuse, entitled brat.

At the heart of this story isn’t a birthday gift. It’s a quiet realization about what a friendship is supposed to feel like.

Support isn’t just about being there when it’s easy. It’s about adjusting expectations when someone you care about is struggling. It’s about understanding, not demanding.

She gave what she could. The question is whether that was ever going to be enough for someone who only saw what was missing.

So what do you think, was this a misunderstanding about effort, or a clear sign of a one-sided friendship?

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