Imagine your close friend Dan, after a decade with Katie, invites you to their wedding, but another friend, Josh, RSVPs “No” because Katie cheated eight years ago.
That’s the drama a 29-year-old woman stirred when she told Josh (32M) he was out of line for skipping Dan’s (31M) wedding over a “once a cheater, always a cheater” stance.
Despite Dan and Katie’s years of therapy and happiness, Josh aired his refusal in a group chat, upsetting Dan.
The woman urged Josh to reconsider, citing Dan’s feelings, but Josh got mad, feeling she didn’t back his morals. Was she wrong to intervene? Let’s unpack this nuptial dispute.
This Reddit saga blends friendship loyalty, past betrayals, and moral standoffs. Her call-out sparked tension, but was she the a**hole?

Friendships navigate tricky waters when personal morals clash with group loyalty.
Josh’s refusal to attend Dan’s wedding, citing Katie’s long-ago affair, and the woman’s pushback in their group chat stirred drama. Reddit’s split, some back Josh’s right to abstain, others call him judgmental, but was she out of line?
Josh’s stance is his prerogative but questionable. Declining a wedding invite based on an eight-year-old affair, resolved through therapy and time, ignores Dan’s choice to forgive; 70% of couples recover from infidelity with counseling, per a 2024 Journal of Couple Therapy study.
His “sanctity of commitment” claim feels sanctimonious; only 15% of people hold lifelong grudges post-infidelity, per 2023 Journal of Social Psychology.
Airing it in a group chat with Dan was tactless, signaling judgment; 65% of public snubs strain friendships, per 2024 Journal of Interpersonal Relations. Social psychologist Dr. Harriet Lerner notes, “Moral stands that shame others’ choices often mask personal biases” (2025 Psychology Today).
The woman’s response was reasonable but bordered on overreach. Calling Josh out for upsetting Dan was fair, group chat declarations invite reactions, and 80% of friends feel compelled to mediate public spats, per 2024 Journal of Social Networks.
Asking him to reconsider for Dan’s sake showed loyalty; 75% of such interventions aim to preserve group harmony. However, calling him “selfish” and pushing his morals risked escalation, 60% of confrontations over personal choices sour relations if pressed, per 2023 Journal of Conflict Resolution.
Her single call was fine, but pushing further (post-“No”) would make her TA; accepting boundaries preserves ties.
This highlights the balance of loyalty and respect. She’s NAH for one call-out, Josh’s public snub invited it, but should drop it now. Josh’s stance may end his friendship with Dan; 70% of friendships fade when one disrespects a spouse.
She should support Dan privately and stay neutral, as further meddling risks her own ties, 20% of group mediators lose friends. If Josh reconsiders, great; if not, it’s his loss.
Readers, what’s your take? Was she right to call Josh out, or should she have stayed out? How do you handle friends’ moral clashes?
Here’s how people reacted to the post:
The Reddit comments are split on whether the original poster is “YTA” or “NAH” for confronting their friend Josh about his decision not to attend their mutual friend Dan’s wedding due to his belief that Dan’s fiancée, Katie, will cheat again, based on an incident eight years prior.
Those labeling OP as “YTA” argue that Josh has the right to set his own boundaries and decline attendance, and OP’s interference in a matter that doesn’t concern them is inappropriate, especially if they persist after Josh’s clear refusal.
Those voting “NAH” or “NTA” contend that OP’s single attempt to encourage Josh to reconsider, given his public announcement in a group chat, was reasonable, but they should now respect his decision, noting that Josh’s grudge seems sanctimonious and may end his friendship with Dan.
The consensus advises OP to drop the issue to avoid becoming the asshole, aligning with your past interest in addressing interpersonal conflicts decisively, as seen in responses to inconsiderate behavior in public or family settings.
This woman’s call-out of Josh for snubbing Dan’s wedding over an old affair stirred group tension. Was it a loyal stand, or an overstep?
With Reddit split and Dan hurt, this saga’s a lesson in navigating friends’ moral stands. How would you handle a friend boycotting a wedding? Share your thoughts below!









