The Ridiculous Request Of A Former College Love Who Ghosted For A Decade But Back For A Nap

Sometimes the past has a way of showing up when you least expect it, and not always at a convenient time.

This original poster found himself in that exact situation when an ex-girlfriend he hadn’t spoken to in over a decade suddenly reached out with a favor.

What made it more complicated was how their relationship had ended, leaving behind unresolved feelings and a sense of being discarded.

Now, years later, she needed help, but he wasn’t sure he owed her anything at all. Keep reading to see how this unexpected request turned into a family disagreement!

Man refuses to host ex during layover, sparking conflict with sister

The Ridiculous Request Of A Former College Love Who Ghosted For A Decade But Back For A Nap
not the actual photo

'Married Ex Girlfriend’s Stranded…?'

My ex girlfriend from college had an 8 hour layover in NYC

and needed a place to crash over night.

She called me to ask if she could come by freshen up and take a nap.

I hadn’t spoken to her for over 10 years, after she chose a guy over me

whom she eventually married. She stopped returning my calls

and I eventually found out she got married by her name change on FB.

When she called me for the favor I said no, call your husband.

She responded that he didn’t have the money for a hotel, blah, blah, blah..

Not my problem.

She and my older sister are sorority sisters and she called my sister to complain.

My sister says I should have helped her out,

since I lived 10 minutes away from the airport and we had a “past”. AITA???

Sometimes the real conflict isn’t about helping someone, it’s about whether that person still has access to you after the way things ended.

In this situation, OP wasn’t just refusing a place to stay. He was responding to a past where he felt dismissed, cut off, and left without closure.

His ex didn’t fade out gradually, she chose someone else, stopped communicating, and moved on with her life. Years later, she reappeared not to reconnect or acknowledge the past, but to ask for a favor.

That context matters. What might look like a simple act of kindness on the surface carries emotional weight underneath. For OP, saying no wasn’t about being unhelpful, it was about protecting a boundary that had already been crossed long ago.

From another perspective, his sister views the situation through a different lens. Time has passed, the relationship is over, and the request seems small and practical.

To her, helping someone in a temporary bind feels like basic decency, especially given proximity and shared history.

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This difference highlights how people interpret obligation differently. Some believe past relationships create a lingering sense of responsibility.

Others believe that once someone leaves, that access ends.

Psychologically, this ties into how people process relational closure and boundaries. According to expert insights, when a relationship ends without proper closure, individuals often create internal boundaries to protect themselves from reopening emotional wounds.

These boundaries aren’t about holding grudges, they’re about maintaining emotional stability. Re-engaging, even in small ways, can sometimes feel like undoing that progress.

That perspective helps explain OP’s reaction. The request didn’t feel neutral, it felt like being asked to extend care to someone who once withdrew it completely.

Meanwhile, the ex’s expectation may come from seeing the situation as purely logistical, not emotional. That mismatch is where the tension sits.

Looking at it more broadly, OP isn’t obligated to provide support simply because of a shared past. Time doesn’t automatically erase how something ended, especially when there was no acknowledgment or repair.

At the same time, declining the request doesn’t necessarily make him unkind, it reflects a choice about who is allowed back into his personal space.

In situations like this, the real question isn’t “Was it a small favor?” It’s “Does this person still belong in my life in any capacity?” And sometimes, the answer is simply no, and that’s enough.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

This group focused on the utilitarian nature of her call

FelixTook − The only reason she’s contacted you in 10 years is she needs something

and you’re convenient. That’s not a friend. That’s a stranger.

You’re not the a__hole. She is. And she’s overflowing with gall.

dryadduinath − Your sister is right about one thing; you had a past.

This is the present, where she is a rando who calls you up asking for favors

and then complains to your sister when she doesn’t get her way.

You are not friends. You do not speak.

She does not get access to your apartment for a cup of coffee,

she certainly doesn’t get the use of your bed and shower.

My advice? Block her. NTA.

virtualchoirboy − NTA. Of course we had a past

a past where she left me for another guy that she eventually married.

Why would I want to relive any of that? At least,

that's where my head went as a reply to your sister.

Once again, the ex was just looking to use you.

These Redditors were particularly baffled by the sister’s involvement

Visual-Lobster6625 − NTA - your sister can send her money for a hotel

if she's so invested in helping your Ex.

facinationstreet − She.... called your sister? NTA

This group looked at hidden motives

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Ashamed_Subject6870 − NTA wtf… she was trying to get some.

You don’t spend the night at your EX’s house wtf!

Charming-Vacation-26 − NTA She's probably having troubles in her marriage,

and is looking for a landing spot. As her options diminish, guys,

he wouldn't talk to when she was younger, look a lot better to her now.

Women! Good move, you're the man.

These users took a practical stance

winter_blues22 − Why cant she stay at the airport? Like regular people.

Chubbygirlcontent − 8 hours is not “stranded” give me a break

This group focused on the lapse in time

Sleipnir82 − NTA. You were together, you aren't anymore,

you haven't spoken to her in 10 years. I don't care if you do live close to the airport,

you don't owe her anything. Sure, you could have let her stay,

but just because you didn't, does not make you an AH,

especially because you haven't spoken to her in 10 years.

That fact alone makes the whole thing super weird, and I wouldn't have done it either.

RJack151 − NTA. Tell your sister that your ex is not your sorority sister.

You owe her nothing.

Academic_Code_2065 − Nta there is no current or even recent relationship.

Why should you welcome her to your home?

OP was suddenly asked for a favor by someone who disappeared from his life years ago, and the history clearly still carries weight.

From OP’s perspective, that connection ended long ago, so the request felt misplaced. Others might see it as a simple act of kindness with no strings attached. The divide here is between obligation and closure.

Was OP justified in drawing a firm line, or was this a moment where compassion should’ve outweighed the past? How much do old relationships still matter in situations like this? Share your thoughts below!

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