Man Gets Excited And Starts Blasting Japanese, Then Regrets It For 3 Days

A man who spent his first decade in Tokyo grew fluent in Japanese along with English before his family moved first to the US and later to Ireland. Now 22 and in an official relationship with a 22-year-old woman, he had already met most of her relatives when her 19-year-old brother dropped by one evening. The brother mentioned he spoke Japanese because he had always dreamed of living there. Excited to connect over the rare shared interest, the young man began speaking Japanese to ask about his connection to the country.

The brother suddenly grew awkward, left abruptly, and later insisted on an apology, saying he had been embarrassed. His girlfriend and her parents believed the young man had done nothing wrong, yet the guilt lingered with him for days.

A man’s excited Japanese chat with his girlfriend’s brother exposed a language claim.

Man Gets Excited And Starts Blasting Japanese, Then Regrets It For 3 Days
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for speaking Japanese to a guy who said he could?'

I(22M) lived in Tokyo(Akasaka if we want to be exact) for the first 10 years of my life.

My parents aren’t from there, my dad is American and my mom is Irish but I was born there,

I didn’t go to an international school, I speak Japanese along with English.

When I was 10 we moved to the US, I liked it, then when I was 16 we moved to Ireland and we’ve been here ever since.

Now that the backstory is out of the way I’ll be quick. Recently I started seeing this girl(22F). We’ve made it all official she’s met my family I’ve met her...

Except for 1 person, her brother(19M) until 3 days ago. I was at her place and her brother comes over to drop something off for their parents and I meet...

Instantly he says “I heard you lived in Japan for a while? That’s so cool, I’ve wanted to live there since forever, I actually speak Japanese”

I instantly got really excited. I mean the only other people I’ve known outside of Japan that can speak the language are my parents and one guy in the US.

So I start speaking to him in it just asking him what interests him about the country and he kind of gets awkward and then leaves.

He says I embarrassed him and that he won’t speak to me unless I apologise to him.

My girlfriend and her parents don’t think I did anything wrong, but I don’t know I feel really bad about it.

Maybe I should have actually made sure he spoke the language, but I was just so excited.

But that’s why I’m here, I want an outside persons view, I’ve felt bad for 3 days so I want to ask: AITA?

This story features a genuine attempt at bonding over a rare shared interest flipped into discomfort faster than a bad punchline. The Redditor, genuinely excited after years without casual Japanese conversation partners, took the brother’s claim at face value. No malice, just enthusiasm. Yet the brother felt exposed, leading to demands for an apology and tension that now hangs over family interactions.

On one side, the Redditor’s actions seem straightforward: someone announces a skill, you engage them in it to build rapport. It’s a natural social move, especially for someone reconnecting with a big part of their childhood identity. Many would see this as harmless enthusiasm rather than a test. On the flip side, the brother might have felt put on the spot—perhaps his Japanese was limited to basics, anime phrases, or even an exaggeration born from genuine interest in the culture. That sudden switch could trigger a wave of self-consciousness, turning a casual drop-off into an unwanted performance. Motivations here likely mix youthful bravado with the fear of looking unprepared in front of family and a new connection.

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This situation highlights broader family dynamics around impressing others and the sting of social missteps. Claiming skills we don’t fully possess is surprisingly common, often tied to wanting to fit in or spark connection.

Research on the Dunning-Kruger effect in second language learning shows how people with lower proficiency can overestimate their abilities, only realizing gaps when tested in real conversation. A 2020 study in Learning and Individual Differences explored this in L2 speech, finding mismatches between self-perception and actual comprehensibility that can lead to awkward real-world moments.

Psychologist perspectives on embarrassment add useful context. As one APA Monitor article notes, “Embarrassment serves the function of immediately and strongly displaying, ‘Oops, I didn’t mean to do that.’” Expressing it can help repair social relations and even signal positive traits like trustworthiness, though it sometimes leads to defensive reactions.

In this case, the brother’s demand for an apology might stem from that protective embarrassment response, while the Redditor’s guilt reflects empathy for causing unintended discomfort, common in new relationship territory where everyone wants smooth sailing.

Neutral advice here? A light, sincere acknowledgment of the excitement could ease things: something like owning the enthusiasm while gently noting the claim invited the chat. It keeps peace without assigning blame. For families navigating blended backgrounds or new partners, open talks about interests and boundaries help prevent small sparks from growing.

Ultimately, this isn’t about “winning” the language game but about grace on both sides. Enthusiasm deserves room, and vulnerability deserves kindness.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Some users judge the OP as NTA because the brother lied or exaggerated about speaking Japanese.

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AbstractUnicorn − NTA

"he won’t speak to me unless I apologise to him"

Sorry, you have to apologise to him for something he did? Have you thought of apologising in Japanese?

I don't mean "sorry", I mean a good 5 minute heartfelt apology

slimedewnautica − NTA. He doesn't speak Japanese, he just watches anime

[Reddit User] − NTA. He literally offered that up. Like, it almost sounded like he WANTED to speak to someone in Japanese. So this guy is both an AH and...

rollout1423 − NTA, you didn't do anything wrong. Either her brother is a weeb or a showboat and got what he deserved. But you didn't do anything wrong.

Schulle2105 − NTA you don't speak Japanese just because you watch a couple of anime, which I believe was the foundation of his comment...

Why would he say he can speak a foreign language even at the absolute base level if he can't.

So don't feel bad that one was totally brought upon him by himself

Fibbs_and_Tales − NTA Hahahahahahahha. Ouch the embarrassment it real. He should't have lied. His fault. He got caught. What more can one do.

[Reddit User] − NTA. He told you he spoke a language and you had no reason to not believe him.

It obviously wasn't your intention to embarrass him or show him up.

Whether he's TA depends a little on if he has any knowledge of Japanese at all (watching subbed anime does not count),

or whether he was completely bluffing, but your only error here (apparently) was attempting to get along with him by finding common ground.

[Reddit User] − NTA. Why would he tell you he speaks Japanese and then not expect you to talk to him in Japanese? That’s just i__otic on his part.

Dumb to say it and dumb not to expect to get humiliated for his lie.

Some people say the brother brought the embarrassment on himself by claiming a skill he didn’t have.

TuckerCarlsonsOhface − NTA. Dude said he spoke Japanese. That’s like an invitation to speak to him in Japanese.

You shouldn’t have to double check if he’s telling the truth. He probably thinks you were testing him, and his ego got hurt.

Since you actually care, and don’t want any animosity with her brother you could offer an apology

for getting too excited to speak Japanese to another person other than your family (even though it doesn’t sound like you did).

Then just remember he’s a sensitive drama queen for future interactions.

bigpapastu − NTA. The Japanese for ‘f__k around and find out’ is ‘f__k around and find out’ only it’s in Japanese.

He f__ked around and he found out. Global edition. All in all an excellent conclusion.

Do you think the Redditor’s quick switch to Japanese was a fair response to the brother’s claim, or did it unintentionally spotlight an overstatement? How would you handle a similar family introduction where enthusiasm meets awkward silence? Share your hot takes below!

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