She Agreed With Her Coworker About “Thin Hair,” And Somehow That Turned Into A Workplace Feud

Some workplace conflicts start with serious issues. Others start with something so small, you’d expect it to be forgotten in minutes.

This one started with a hairstyle.

For a 25-year-old working at a tiny startup, what should have been a casual, even friendly exchange turned into days of silence, office tension, and even a threat of being reported for bullying.

And now she’s left wondering if she crossed a line… or just reflected one back.

She Agreed With Her Coworker About “Thin Hair,” and Somehow That Turned Into a Workplace Feud
Not the actual photo

Here’s the original post;

'AITA for telling my coworker she also has thin hair?'

I (25F) work at a very small start-up company. By very small, I mean there are only five employees in total, including me.

Because of the small size, getting along with my coworkers has been easy. We’ve all grown really close since we see each other every day, and we even go out...

Now, for the story. Late last week, I wore my hair in two braids to work. I wanted to try a new style and felt really cute with them!

When I arrived, my coworker Annie (27F&fake name) looked at me and said, "Wow, I never realized how thin your hair is."

When she said the comment, I wasn't hurt or offended. I've always had thin hair, it's just how I was born. I replied back smiling saying "Yeah!

You too? Twins!" Her reaction after I made the comment completely took me by surprise and shocked me because she immediately said,

"Go to hell." I was confused because Annie also has thin hair. She then proceeded to ignore me the rest of the shift.

Fast forward to today, Annie still has been completely avoiding me and seems to be trying to get the rest of the office to turn against me.

Because we're such a small team, my coworkers have been filling me in on what she's saying about me behind my back.

I even learned that once our boss returns from vacation, she plans to report me for workplace bullying.

My coworkers aren't into taking sides and I am not asking them to because this issue is between Annie and me.

However, one of them approached me today advising me to apologize, but I am not sure if I should.

I don't feel bad for anything I did so that is why I turned to this forum to see if I am the a__hole. I am looking for advice on...

FOR PEOPLE WANTING AN UPDATE: Mods denied my request for an update. So it is now posted on my profile!. To answer frequently asked questions:

Have you tried speaking to Annie? Yes, I have tried speaking to Annie one on one again to discuss the issue, but she has turned me down 5 times.

She has told me she doesn't feel comfortable talking to me without our boss present.

Did you try to contact your boss? Yes, I did contact my boss (we are a small company, so he is HR/CEO/etc).

I told him about the situation once I found out she was going to report me for workplace bullying. I only sent the one text message on Microsoft Teams.

He told us in the case of emergencies to use his personal number but to me this situation doesn't classify as an emergency and can be handled when he gets...

I know he is on vacation and bothering him multiple times while he's away isn't something I want to do.

Do you have thin hair or fine hair? Yes, I do have thin hair (idk about fine hair). I have been told by a hair stylist that I have thin...

I don't have much hair on my head but like I said it's something I have always had.

My entire mom's side of the family has it too. I always found the beauty in it because it reminds me of grandma :).

A Comment That Didn’t Feel Like a Big Deal

It was a normal workday, just with a small change.

She decided to wear her hair in two braids. Something different, something she felt good about. The kind of small personal choice that can quietly boost your mood.

When she walked in, her coworker Annie noticed immediately.

“Wow, I never realized how thin your hair is.”

It wasn’t said with a smile. But it also wasn’t overtly aggressive.

And honestly, it didn’t bother her.

She’s always had thin hair. It’s not a sore spot. It’s just… a fact.

So she responded the way a lot of people would when they don’t take offense.

Lightly.

The Response That Changed Everything

She smiled and said something along the lines of:

“Yeah! You too? Twins!”

Same observation. Same tone.

At least, that’s how she meant it.

But Annie didn’t take it that way at all.

Her reaction was immediate and sharp.

“Go to hell.”

And just like that, the mood shifted.

When Intent and Impact Don’t Match

From that moment on, things got uncomfortable.

Annie stopped talking to her. Avoided her during shifts. Refused multiple attempts to talk things out. And behind the scenes, things escalated even more.

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Apparently, Annie has been telling others about the situation. Even planning to report her for workplace bullying once their boss returns.

All over a comment that, on the surface, mirrored the one she made first.

And this is where things get complicated.

Because this isn’t really about hair anymore.

Why This Hit Harder Than It Should Have

There’s a concept in communication psychology that explains situations like this really well.

People don’t just react to what’s said.

They react to what they think was meant.

If Annie’s original comment was meant as a harmless observation, then the reply should have felt harmless too.

But if she meant it, even slightly, as a jab…

Then hearing it reflected back might have felt like an attack.

That’s why situations like this often spiral. Because:

  • One person thinks they’re joking
  • The other hears criticism
  • The original speaker then feels exposed

And instead of addressing it, it turns into defensiveness.

The Reality of Small Teams

In a bigger company, this might have faded out.

But in a team of five people?

Everything feels amplified.

You see each other every day. There’s no distance. No space to just avoid it naturally.

So even a small conflict starts to feel bigger.

More personal.

Harder to ignore.

Should She Apologize?

This is where the real question comes in.

Not whether she was technically wrong.

But whether apologizing would actually help.

Because there’s a difference between:

  • Admitting fault
  • Acknowledging impact

She may not have intended to hurt Annie.

But clearly, Annie felt hurt.

And sometimes, a simple:
“I didn’t mean it that way, but I’m sorry it came across like that”

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can de-escalate things without taking full blame.

At the same time, Annie’s reaction, ignoring her, spreading things, threatening escalation, isn’t exactly proportional either.

Which makes this less about one wrong comment…

And more about how both people handled what came after.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Most people didn’t think she did anything wrong.

KNT-cepion − Annie has thin skin to match her thin hair.

NTA

ParmReggie − When your manager gets back, get in front of it before her. Tell them,

"hey I just wanted to make you aware Annie is upset with me after (retell the story). She has acted like she's been upset with me since.

I didn't think anything of the conversation, because she initiated the comment about me having thin hair and I was agreeing with her assumed she was relating to me. "

That gets your story out there before her but demonstrates no ill-will on your part.

SleepyDeluxe − NTA. When your boss comes back tell them you didn't realise she meant it in a derogatory way until she got offended when you said you were the...

And now you're upset since you've never had a coworker try to bully you like this before, and you're upset since it was malicious.

A lot of them pointed out the obvious contradiction. If Annie was comfortable pointing out someone else’s “thin hair,” why was it suddenly offensive when the same thing was said back?

heatherjasper − Pfft, she meant the "your hair is thin" to be an insult so when you said it back, she took it as one. NTA.

KeyRevolutionary3599 − So how she took it is how she meant it, as an insult. That’s her own problem.

Dragonsbane2001 − NTA. So it’s perfectly acceptable for her to point out that you have thin hair, but not when you do the exact same?

My guess is she actually did mean it as something of a put-down even if you didn’t, and then was surprised when you didn’t react and unintentionally turned it on...

Now instead of letting it go or apologising she’s creating a hostile work environment.

I’d do what you can to flag it with your boss ASAP and get your coworkers to back you up, not to get her in trouble but to make sure...

Some even suggested that Annie’s reaction revealed her original intent. That maybe it was meant as a subtle insult, and hearing it reflected back made her uncomfortable.

iaposky − NTA she shouldn't be dishing out observations if she isn't ready to be observed.

australiantreegirl − NTA and do not apologize. This is literally hilarious because you just told her that the commented she said to you was also true for her.

So if she finds this comment offensive, why would she ever say it to you? Wouldn’t that be her who started the “workplace bullying” she’s mentioning?

If her statement was supposedly not meant to be rude when said to you, how come she got offended when you said it back?

I think if it gets brought to your boss, it’s easy to ask her what exactly was offensive about it.

And unless she’s able to give you a genuine answer that explains why your statement was harmful when hers was not, I can’t see a reason why you’d be the...

In the end, grown women should know better than to comment on other people’s appearances, so every piece of this is on her.

Cubedycubed − Annie, are you ok? Are you ok Annie?

Others focused more on the workplace side. They suggested getting ahead of the situation by calmly explaining what happened to the boss before Annie frames it differently.

amillstone − I even learned that once our boss returns from vacation, she plans to report me for workplace bullying.

(I can provide an update on whether she does report me, but my boss doesn't return until the end of this week)

Get ahead of it. Send an email to your boss now with the details. Don't mention feelings or emotions. Keep it factual.

State what happened, what was said, and the way she has been treating you since (don't mention any gossip from your coworkers, just that she has been ignoring you since).

Word it nicely, and say to your boss that you just want to flag the incident with them and make them aware.

That way, if Annie does try to go to your boss once they're back, she can't twist it and make it into something it wasn't. Also, NTA.

This situation didn’t start with a big conflict.

It started with a small comment that revealed something bigger underneath.

Sensitivity. Insecurity. Miscommunication.

And once those things get involved, even harmless words can land the wrong way.

She didn’t intend to insult her.

But intent doesn’t always control outcome.

So the real question isn’t just “who’s right?”

It’s whether fixing the relationship is worth more than being right.

 

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