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Couple Agrees To Host Old Friend, Regrets It After Wild Requests Start Flowing In
Couple hosting old friend, woman on phone gesturing, man frustrated with wild requests in dim light background.

Couple Agrees To Host Old Friend, Regrets It After Wild Requests Start Flowing In

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Helping out a friend in need can be very, very rewarding, even if it technically “costs” you something. However it can at times be hard to actually say no when the requests for assistance from your friends keep adding up. After all, some folks just don’t know when enough is enough.

A man shared his story of how hosting a friend turned into a nightmare when she kept making new demands. We reached out to him via private message and will update the article when he gets back to us.

RELATED:

    Hosing a friend who needs it is a normal, nice thing to do

    Image credits: SHVETS production / Pexels (not the actual photo)

    But one couple ended up stuck with a friend who moved in then started making new demands

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    Image credits: Mikhail Nilov / Pexels (not the actual photo)

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    Image credits: Hanna Saad / Pexels (not the actual photo)

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    Image credits:

    Image credits: Thomas Boehi / Pexels (not the actual photo)

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    A friend in need is a friend indeed

    Friendship thrives on kindness, trust, and support, but those same attributes can also make it easy for friends to overextend when asking for favors. Unlike professional or more superficial relationships, where expectations and roles are clearly defined, friendship has a tendency to blur the division between kindness and duty. That blurring can lead to a dynamic in which one person feels obligated to give more than they can possibly manage, all for the purpose of being a “good friend.”

    Part of the problem is that friends often assume a level of informality that bypasses the usual politeness filters. Instead of carefully weighing whether their request is fair, they might think, “We’re close, so it’s fine to ask.” Borrowing money, asking for a ride, needing last-minute help with moving, or leaning heavily on emotional support, all of these are normal things friends do for one another. But when the demands are piling up or one-way, what had begun as an act of friendship can begin to feel like an imposition.

    There is also the implicit threat of spoiling the friendship. When a friend asks something of you, it’s easy to feel that “no” weighs heavily, even if there is good reason to refuse. People are afraid of being labeled as selfish or uncooperative, so they do too much for fear of creating tension. That makes it easy for the dynamic to tip into an imbalance where one of the friends is over depending on the other without a sense of the weight they are placing upon them.

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    Image credits: Antoni Shkraba Studio / Pexels (not the actual photo)

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    Sometimes people assume

    Then, of course, there’s the shared priorities presumption. Because friends think they’re close, they presume their needs should be priority to the other person. But everyone has different schedules, obligations, and limits. Something that’s a trivial request to one can be a monumental disruption to another. Without open communication, that mismatch can easily build resentment in no time.

    The hard part is that most overstepping is not malicious. It simply comes from complacency, friends feel so at ease with each other that they forget to ask if their requests cross a line. That’s why boundaries are necessary, even in friendships with affection. Clear boundaries don’t equal distance, they equal respect. They ensure that if someone agrees to something, it’s genuine and not a grudging compromise out of obligation.

    Mutuality and perception are the foundations of healthy friendship. Favor-doing can solidify bonds, but only when each recognizes the exchange as voluntary and on a quid-pro-quo basis. When one friend starts taking without giving, or assumes access to time, resources, or emotional energy without asking, it dismantles the very foundation upon which the relationship is constructed.

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    Fundamentally, overstepping happens because friendship is built on just trust, but mutual trust. Just as you trust a friend to be there when you call, you trust them too to honor your boundaries. When that balance remains, favors become acts of love. When it’s forgotten, they become burdens that destroy the closeness that made the friendship valuable in the first place.

    He gave some more details in the comments

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    Readers were surprised he sort of agreed to everything

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    Justin Sandberg

    Justin Sandberg

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

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    I am a writer at Bored Panda. Despite being born in the US, I ended up spending most of my life in Europe, from Latvia, Austria, and Georgia to finally settling in Lithuania. At Bored Panda, you’ll find me covering topics ranging from the cat meme of the day to red flags in the workplace and really anything else. In my free time, I enjoy hiking, beating other people at board games, cooking, good books, and bad films.

    Read less »
    Justin Sandberg

    Justin Sandberg

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    I am a writer at Bored Panda. Despite being born in the US, I ended up spending most of my life in Europe, from Latvia, Austria, and Georgia to finally settling in Lithuania. At Bored Panda, you’ll find me covering topics ranging from the cat meme of the day to red flags in the workplace and really anything else. In my free time, I enjoy hiking, beating other people at board games, cooking, good books, and bad films.

    What do you think ?
    R Dennis
    Community Member
    7 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    OP's mistake was, as soon as she said she was bringing a stranger to live with them, not saying no.

    Ava Scott
    Community Member
    7 months ago (edited)

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

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    ॐBoyGanesh
    Community Member
    7 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    There’s a very real chance I know these people. I live on the Big Island in an area of a district that has less than 10,000 people and we are *the* spot that is 60 miles from the only real Medical Center. (Not a hospital in the most thought of sense). We’re personally lucky enough to have enough acreage and space to host multiple guests, but we also have very firm boundaries and zero issues with saying “absolutely not”. Still, it’s a pretty common thing to hear people speak of entitled guests with crazy demands. We “Punatics” are mostly off-grid folks living in the east rift zone of an active volcano and very near active lava flows. We’re rather isolated & have limited nearby resources. But somehow, when some guests come to visit, they think they’re traveling to a five star resort. It’s bewildering how common the entitlement is.

    8Pillows
    Community Member
    7 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    They asked where they could get pot in Hawaii. lol

    Load More Comments
    R Dennis
    Community Member
    7 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    OP's mistake was, as soon as she said she was bringing a stranger to live with them, not saying no.

    Ava Scott
    Community Member
    7 months ago (edited)

    This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

    Everybody can earn 250$+ daily… You can earn from 10000-15000 a month or even more if you work as a full time job…It’s easy, just follow instructions on this page, read it carefully from start to finish… It’s a flexible job but a good earning opportunity.. go to this site home tab for more detail thank you…......................… ­ C­a­s­h­H­i­v­e­1.C­o­m

    Load More Replies...
    ॐBoyGanesh
    Community Member
    7 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    There’s a very real chance I know these people. I live on the Big Island in an area of a district that has less than 10,000 people and we are *the* spot that is 60 miles from the only real Medical Center. (Not a hospital in the most thought of sense). We’re personally lucky enough to have enough acreage and space to host multiple guests, but we also have very firm boundaries and zero issues with saying “absolutely not”. Still, it’s a pretty common thing to hear people speak of entitled guests with crazy demands. We “Punatics” are mostly off-grid folks living in the east rift zone of an active volcano and very near active lava flows. We’re rather isolated & have limited nearby resources. But somehow, when some guests come to visit, they think they’re traveling to a five star resort. It’s bewildering how common the entitlement is.

    8Pillows
    Community Member
    7 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    They asked where they could get pot in Hawaii. lol

    Load More Comments
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