A high school pride fair ended with an unexpected act of theft when a teen’s friend walked off with her borrowed pride flag and never gave it back.
The 15-year-old OP was shocked when she saw the flag—a gift from her supportive parents—hanging on her friend’s bedroom wall in an Instagram story.
When asked to return it, the friend became furious, claiming the OP was “gatekeeping a piece of fabric” and arguing that the flag “belongs to the community.”
The conflict ripped a hole in their friendship and left the OP wondering if asking for her property back makes her the [bad guy].
Now, read the full story:

























This is peak high school drama wrapped in a philosophical debate about ownership. The friend’s argument—that a specific, physical, gifted item “belongs to the community”—is logically absurd. It’s a classic smokescreen designed to justify bad behavior.
The flag isn’t just fabric; it’s a tangible symbol of the OP’s acceptance by her family, which gives it sentimental value. The moment the friend saw the flag, hung it up, and started dodging accountability, this stopped being about community solidarity and became simple theft.
It also raises questions about the friend’s home environment. Why did she suddenly need a flag to hang on her wall, and why did she feel she couldn’t ask for one or buy her own?
There could be a deeper, sadder reason for her actions, perhaps unsupportive parents. But that does not excuse the lying, avoiding, and public gaslighting she inflicted on the OP.
When people feel shame or are caught in a lie, they often resort to projection or deflection to escape accountability. The friend’s outburst—claiming the OP was “unreasonable” and trying to “embarrass her”—is a classic case of projection. She is trying to make the OP feel guilty for being the victim of her own actions.
Psychology expert Dr. Gail Saltz explained in Healthline that when people manipulate others, they often use language that makes the victim feel crazy or selfish. The friend’s attempt to paint the OP as a “gatekeeper” is manipulative language designed to silence her rightful claim to her property.
The logic that the symbol belongs to everyone, therefore the physical object belongs to no one, simply does not hold up, even among teens. As one Redditor pointed out, “Try and steal a pride flag from a gay bar and claim it belongs to the community.”
A 2018 study on adolescent conflict published in the Journal of Youth and Adolescence found that conflicts over possessions are frequently intertwined with issues of status and loyalty in high school friendships.
Stealing the flag and using it for bedroom decor shows the friend’s priority was self-image (status) over the friendship (loyalty).
Check out how the community responded:
The entire community rallied behind the OP, condemning the friend’s absurd logic and clear act of theft.





![Friend Refuses to Give Back Borrowed Pride Flag, Calls Owner a Gatekeeper Aside from that, it's something your parents gave you as an symbol of support so it's [lousy] she wants to keep it.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/wp-editor-1761565699993-6.webp)
Many users focused specifically on the sentimental value of the flag, which her friend completely ignored to gaslight her.
![Friend Refuses to Give Back Borrowed Pride Flag, Calls Owner a Gatekeeper ForzaA84 - NTA. "[OP] didn't own the flag because it belongs to the community" Wow, that's an impressive way to misconstrue that statement on friends' part.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/wp-editor-1761565679401-1.webp)

![Friend Refuses to Give Back Borrowed Pride Flag, Calls Owner a Gatekeeper [Reddit User] - NTA. But if you ever want to see the flag back you gotta talk to her more reasonably. Let her know that it’s the flag your parents...](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/wp-editor-1761565681630-3.webp)

Several commenters suggested escalating the issue to parents or school administration to retrieve the stolen item, noting the friend’s behavior was a major red flag.







The bottom line is simple: borrowing something means returning it. The friend’s choice to keep the flag, hang it up, and then emotionally manipulate the OP to avoid accountability confirms that this friendship is likely not worth saving. The OP should definitely involve her supportive parents to retrieve her property.
What do you think? Should the OP escalate this to her parents, or should she let the issue drop to save the friendship?






