He Barely Knew His Coworker, So Why Did His Death Hit Him So Hard?

The first time you encounter death up close, it rarely feels logical. It doesn’t matter if the person was family, a close friend, or just someone you passed in the hallway every morning. Sometimes the impact sneaks up on you anyway.

For one recent graduate settling into his first office job, that moment came without warning. A coworker he barely knew, someone he exchanged the occasional nod and quick chat about video games with, suddenly died over the weekend. No buildup, no illness, just gone.

What followed wasn’t a dramatic scene or a loud outburst, but something quieter and, in its own way, more uncomfortable. A panic attack, right there at his desk, in a room full of people who were grieving in their own ways.

He Barely Knew His Coworker, So Why Did His Death Hit Him So Hard?
Not the actual photo

Now he’s left wondering if his reaction crossed a line. Here’s what happened.

'AITA for seemingly making my colleague's death about myself?'

I am working in an office as my first job after college, but I intend to make it a temporary gig.

I had to pass the desk of this fellow graduate to get to my own. It became a part of my daily routine to nod and occasionally chat about video...

Though we haven't talked more than a dozen times.

Out of nowhere, we received an email over the weekend that he had collapsed and died.

It was so sudden as he seemed perfectly healthy. That Monday morning felt so surreal to me.

I didn’t know him well, but I had never experienced a young peer having their life cut short like that before. At that point, I only went through my grandparents'...

But I told myself to remain quiet and respectful, as he had actual friends in the office who would be affected. As I walked my usual route, I saw his...

It struck me that the smile I saw every morning was nothing more than a flat image, and that would never be reserved. For some reason, that ended up triggering...

I thought I had no right to have such a visceral reaction compared to the real grievers.

So I bunkered down at my desk, put my head down and hoped it would go away. I kind of tucked behind a stone pillar, so I thought that would...

Despite my best efforts, people did notice my quiet tears and hyperventilating. Finally, I was forced to clean myself in the bathroom.

Afterwards, my manager pulled me aside and gave me the option to have the day off. I took her up on the offer.

During my hours off, I realised I was generally stressed and should finally use some of my holiday time.

I took two extra days off and returned on Thursday. When I came back to the office, I realised a few co-workers were icy towards me.

I approached a girl known for her honesty, and she explained it to me. Others felt I was posing as a "grieving widow" for a virtual stranger and making my...

She said it was a bit strange that I took the three days off when I could have simply chosen to keep working Monday after my panic attack ceased. AITA?

He had only been working there a short time. Fresh out of college, still adjusting to routines and office culture, still figuring out where he fit. One small constant in his day was passing by another graduate’s desk. They weren’t close, but there was familiarity. A nod, a quick comment about a game, the kind of small interaction that quietly becomes part of your routine.

Then came the email.

Over the weekend, that coworker had collapsed and died. Just like that.

Walking into the office that Monday felt surreal. The kind of quiet that doesn’t feel normal. His desk was covered in flowers and photos, turning a once ordinary workspace into something final. Something that made the reality sink in.

For the writer, it wasn’t just sadness. It was the realization that someone his own age, someone he saw regularly, could disappear without warning. That thought didn’t sit gently. It hit all at once.

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And his body reacted before his mind could catch up.

He tried to stay composed. He told himself he didn’t have the right to feel this strongly. Other coworkers had real friendships with the person who passed. He was just someone who said hello in the mornings.

So he stayed quiet. Head down. Trying to ride it out.

But panic doesn’t really negotiate like that.

The breathing got heavier. The tears came anyway. Even tucked partially out of sight behind a pillar, people noticed. Eventually, he had to step away and clean himself up in the bathroom.

His manager, seeing what was going on, gently offered him the day off. He accepted.

Once he got home, something clicked. The reaction hadn’t come out of nowhere. He’d been stressed already, and this just tipped things over. So he took a couple more days to reset before returning later in the week.

That’s when things shifted again.

The office felt colder. Not openly hostile, but different. Conversations shorter. Eye contact avoided. Something had clearly changed.

When he finally asked one coworker directly, she didn’t sugarcoat it. Some people thought his reaction had been excessive. That he was acting like a “grieving widow” over someone he barely knew. Taking three days off only reinforced that impression.

To them, it looked like he had made someone else’s tragedy about himself.

REFLECTION

This is one of those situations where emotion and perception collide in an uncomfortable way.

From the outside, his reaction may have seemed disproportionate. In a professional setting, visible distress, especially intense distress, can make others uneasy.

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Workplaces tend to favor control, composure, and predictability. When those break, people don’t always respond with empathy. Sometimes they just pull back.

But internally, his experience makes more sense. Sudden death, especially of someone your own age, can trigger something deeper than grief. It can force a confrontation with vulnerability, with mortality, with the idea that life isn’t as stable as it feels.

That kind of realization doesn’t care how well you knew the person.

Still, there’s a quiet lesson here about timing and environment. Feeling something deeply is one thing. Processing it in a shared workspace, surrounded by people who are navigating their own grief, can unintentionally shift attention in a way that feels uncomfortable to others.

It doesn’t make the reaction wrong. But it does explain the distance that followed.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Many people leaned toward empathy, pointing out that grief and shock don’t follow neat rules. 

Silent_Eggplant_380 − Not sure I’d go that far as to say you’re an AH, however I can see why It’s very weird behaviour in everyone else’s eyes but I guess...

No-Sink-505 − You said you're just out of college. So you're probably young, with that in mind I'm going to say NTA for now.

But what happened here was a reflection of a shortcoming: you were unable to self sooth

or maintain reasonable emotional boundaries and because of that you took someone else's hardship  and made it yours.

You made the people actually close with the deceased man uncomfortable because you stuck around for your breakdown in front of them.

This is an inconsiderate thing to make a habit of. You will be the a__hole if you just keep doing that like it's normal,

get some therapy if you can or use online therapy resources for learning emotional processing if you can't.

There's tons of free options online to look into. ETA: the "someone else" is the coworkers actually close with the deceased.

My criticism is that OP is apparently driven to panic attacks by any reminder of mortality. This doesn't make them the a__hole (which I say, explicitly).

But it is not a good thing and they need to figure out how to process something like hearing about a death

without a panic attack or how to get themselves somewhere safe and appropriate, because doing so at the office is one thing.

But making it a habit means one day OP will be that guy who ends up being consoled by the bereaved due to their own lack of self soothing.

Stress and breakdowns happen. It does not make someone an a__hole to have them.

But that does not mean every action that happens because of them is automatically ok.

OP needed to recognize their reaction was not appropriate for the place and people around them and excused themselves or sought help from someone.

As is, they stayed at their desk and had a breakdown in view of people closer to the dead person than they were* untill *asked* to leave. And that's not...

Others were more measured. They didn’t call him wrong, but suggested he could have stepped away sooner once the panic set in, both for his own sake and for the people around him.

StuffOld1191 − NTA - It sounds like other stuff was affecting you, and this was just the catalyst that made you lose it.

That said, I recall being in a huge workspace (300 or so people, mostly in their 20s) and we lost a couple of people over the years,

and some of the reactions from people were grotesquely maladjusted and selfish which infuriated me.

That said, I let it go as not everyone deals with things in the same way.

Jazzlike_Ad_1207 − NTA, grief hits unpredictably and panic attacks aren't something you can just control.

NewinLA2026 − Did you use AI to write this because it just sounds so insincere to me.

BrewertonFats − NTA. Your coworkers are the sorts who cannot grasp that others cope differently than themselves.

If someone dying is just another day for them, then why should it be different for you. Ignore them. Grieve as you see fit.

A few took a harsher stance, focusing on workplace expectations and emotional boundaries. Still, even among critics, there was a sense that this was more about inexperience than selfishness.

ParsleyChops − NTA. Your co-workers are AH. For all they know you could have been friends with this person outside of work,

you could be suffering with your MH, you could have other things going on and this had tipped you over the edge. You never know what is going on in...

I fell to pieces after I found out that an ex coworker I didn’t even like had passed, the human mind can be so unpredictable!

Asleep_Garage_146 − NTA grief hits every one different. And just because you weren’t ‘close friends’ doesn’t mean you can’t be affected by their passing.

As you said this is your first peer death, and it does hit different to grandparents etc.

You didn’t make it about you, you had a reaction to the reality that you won’t see that person again and that death can come to anyone.

That’s quite a double whammy! You tried to be quiet and stay out the way, and so what that you took some holiday days?

For all your colleagues know something else came up that you needed the days for.

WarfarterNeed − For some reason, a panic attack began setting in. I thought I had no right to have such a visceral reaction compared to the real grievers

Bunkering down at my desk, putting my head down and hoping it would go away. I kind of tucked behind a stone pillar, so I thought that would hide me.

Despite my best efforts, people did notice my quiet tears and hyperventilating. I wouldn't call you an a__hole, but you REALLY should've taken the day off

if you're sobbing and hyperventilating at your desk. It might not sound very kind to say, but that behavior is very disruptive for your coworkers.

Afterwards, my manager pulled me aside and gave me the option to have the day off. I took her up on the offer.

It would've looked much better on you if you took the day off before your manager pushed it on you.

Staying at your desk unable to work because of how upset you are does not make you look like a good worker.

When I came back to the office, I realised a few co-workers were icy towards me. I am guessing that they noticed your extreme emotional reaction towards the death of...

and are trying to make sure things stay professional. Showing extreme emotion in the workplace has a distancing effect where people are much more cautious around you.

Others felt I was posing as a "grieving widow" for a virtual stranger and making my recent death about me.

She said it was a bit strange that I took the three days off when I could have simply chosen to keep working Monday after my panic attack ceased.

AITA? There's nothing wrong with taking time off when you're upset.

There's nothing wrong about being upset by death, even if you didn't know the decreased well.

There is something wrong with staying at work when you're having a panic attack.

Your coworkers are not your friends or your family. They want to avoid problems and get paid.

Bringing extreme emotions into a workplace is a terrible idea for most people and they will avoid emotional people.

Ok_Yard149 − NTA, unexpected deaths can hit hard even without a close relationship.

Not every emotional reaction fits neatly into what others expect. Sometimes something small on the surface opens a door to something much bigger underneath.

This wasn’t about pretending to grieve more than others. It was about being caught off guard by a reality that felt too close, too sudden, too real.

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Could it have been handled differently? Probably.

But that doesn’t make it wrong. It just makes it human.

So the real question is, where do we draw the line between feeling deeply and showing it?

 

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