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Woman Thought She Was Being Thoughtful, Friend Calls Her ‘Too Clumsy To Live’ Over A Pillow

by Katy Nguyen
October 27, 2025
in Social Issues

It’s funny how something as harmless as a throw pillow can stir up a storm between friends. In the excitement of celebrating a new apartment, one accident turned into an argument that split an entire friend group.

What started as a spilled glass of wine led to a well-intentioned replacement,  one that didn’t go as planned. When the friend discovered her new “gift” came from a thrift store, appreciation turned into disgust, and soon, everyone had an opinion.

Now the woman is wondering if trying to fix her mistake actually made things worse.

Woman Thought She Was Being Thoughtful, Friend Calls Her ‘Too Clumsy To Live’ Over A Pillow
Not the actual photo

'AITA for replacing my friend’s throw pillow with a thrifted identical version?'

So my (24F) friend “Wendy” (23F) just got a new apartment.

She’s the first of our friend group to get an apartment, so everyone is really excited, and Wendy wants it to be the main place we all go to hang...

Wendy threw a party this past Friday, just a small get-together with our friend group and some of Wendy’s cousins.

After a few hours, we were all pretty drunk, including me. I accidentally spilled my wine on one of her throw pillows.

I tried to wash it out, but no luck. Of course, I offered to replace the pillow, and Wendy sent me the link to where she bought it.

It was SEVENTY DOLLARS for a tiny little carrot pillow.

I told her I would definitely replace it, but I would probably have to wait for a few weeks for my next check because that eats into my gas money.

She seemed a little pissy, and I felt bad. Yesterday, my other friends wanted to go thrifting for their Halloween costumes.

I already got mine, but wanted to tag along. I thought it was my lucky day because at one of the thrift stores was the exact pillow!

Like the very same one with the tag from the store and everything.

The thrift store was selling it for twelve dollars, so I got it because it was cheaper, and now Wendy would be able to have her complete living room quicker...

Fast forward a couple of hours, and we all go over to Wendy’s to show her the Halloween haul, and I present her with the pillow.

First, she was happy, but then she was like, “How are you gonna get to work?” I explained that I found it at a thrift store, and she threw it...

Now I’m confused because we all go thrifting all the time, including Wendy. But Wendy was like, “I don’t buy soft furnishings at the thrift store.”

I offered to wash it and bring it back, but she said no and still demanded that I buy the one from the actual store.

I said no, I would wash the thrifted pillow for her, but I’m not buying a pillow for seventy dollars.

She said it was my fault for spilling wine in the first place and said I was “too clumsy to live.”

Then I said, "For someone who wants to host parties, you’re being a big brat about a little spill."

We left it at that, but I left a few minutes later because I could tell Wendy was really annoyed at me.

Now the friend group is taking sides, and one of my friends’ girlfriends told me that now there’s a group chat that doesn’t have me or Wendy in it called...

I did wash the pillow and gave it to my friend to give it to Wendy, but apparently she refused to put it on her couch, and it now resides...

TL;DR: I spilled wine on my friend’s very expensive throw pillow. I replaced it with the identical pillow from the thrift store at a lower price.

My friend wasn’t happy and demanded that I buy it from the actual store. I refused, and insults were thrown back and forth. AITA?.

Edit: Some new info I learned from the group chat (that I’m still not a part of), Wendy took the tags off the thrifted pillow, so there’s no returning it...

It’s not the orange-carrot pillow, it’s what the pillow stood for. In this scenario, one friend left a wine-blot on the couch near-symbolically and another picked it up with thrift-store pragmatism.

What feels like “saving money” to one side registers as “downgrading the milestone” to the other. That gap in meaning often causes more damage than the original stain ever could.

Looking at gift-exchange dynamics helps clarify the tension. Research published in Frontiers in Psychology found that “gifts serve deep symbolic and emotional functions, often signalling loyalty, recognition or status rather than simply utility.”

In other words: the friend didn’t just lose a pillow, she lost part of her “new home” image that she wanted recognised. Meanwhile, the replacement friend saw a thrift find as a responsible fix, not one worth being shamed over.

The thrift versus new tension is backed by consumer-psychology research.

A study in the Journal of Consumer Behaviour highlights that second-hand items, though affordable and sustainable, still carry “social risk” due to concerns about image, hygiene, or status signalling.

That precisely mirrors Wendy’s reaction: the identical thrifted pillow triggered a visible “used goods” alarm even though functionally it matched.

In terms of practical reconciliation: an acknowledgement that this wasn’t purely about thrift or spending would help.

Expressing a sentiment like: “The intent was to replace what I damaged; I didn’t realise the original had symbolic weight for you” might open the door to repair.

From there, clarifying that future hosting or décor-based gestures will include shared expectations, “let’s decide together what counts as replaceable”-type conversation, could avoid future surprises.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

These Redditors took a balanced approach, saying both parties had valid points.

CrimsonKnight_004 − This is a hard one. On the one hand, since you are the one who ruined her pillow, the onus is on you to take responsibility and fix...

You did fix it, in a way that you and I would both deem acceptable.

Since it had the tag on it, it’s very likely that the piece wasn’t even used, or if it was, was only used lightly.

Getting a thrifted item when possible is almost always better than getting it from the major retailer, for local economies, the environment, and your wallet. I’d personally chalk it up...

On the other hand, I feel like since you were the one who ruined the pillow, it isn’t really on you to dictate the terms on how you rectify this.

It’s on her. Since you’re being accountable, you need to be accountable to that person, within reason, to fix the mistake.

Of course, what is “reasonable” can be largely subjective.

There are people who don’t thrift soft or fabric items for hygiene concerns, and if you gave her a pillow that she won’t be actually using, then it’s hard to...

Because before she had an item on her couch that was in use, and now she still doesn’t.

Is it her fault for not wanting to use the thrifted item that, for all intents and purposes, is identical to the one that was ruined?

Is it yours for not following the outline she made for how you would take responsibility for your mistake and show accountability? I really can’t say! This one is stumping...

I think I’ll go with NAH here, because at the end of the day, I completely agree with your logic, and I would accept your thrifted carrot as appropriate recompense.

But I also feel like those are terms that should be set by the offended party and honored, so while I do agree with you, she doesn’t, and she’s the...

So I think her opinion supersedes the others.

Global_Look2821 − NAH. I see both sides. While I get your reluctance to shell out $70 for a tiny pillow (srsly good grief), I also get Wendy not wanting thrifted...

Is she being kind of a pill about this? Yes, she is. But are you still responsible for getting her an acceptable (to Wendy) replacement? Also yes.

If you want to try a great stain remover on the og carrot pillow that works on wine stains, there’s this FOLEX Instant Carpet Spot Remover.

It really works and it’s only $7!! Ask Wendy first, tho, if she’d be happy to accept this solution if it takes out the stain.

Don’t want to throw more of your $$ down the drain if she won’t accept it. Or there’s always your local dry cleaners.

Most of them are pretty good at stain removal, especially if you can tell them what the stain is. It’d probably cost more than $7 tho, but not $70! Good...

This duo came in swinging for OP, mocking Wendy’s “elitist” reaction to a secondhand pillow.

Oso_the-Bear − I am also one of those people who will get a metal chair from a dumpster because it's easily washable, but “I don’t buy soft furnishings at the...

I also agree that "for someone who wants to host parties, she's being a big brat about a little spill."

And she should understand that not everyone has ever spent $70 on a pillow in their entire life, and if she is going to always be this way, then she...

Of course, I don't know the whole history of her and your clumsiness specifically, but even still, charging by the item is kind of tacky.

People have car insurance for this; they don't have pillow insurance. Based on the funny nickname "The Pillow Crisis," I'm guessing that the committee is sympathetic to the notion that...

Also s__ew her with her phony concern about "how are you going to get to work?"

Obviously, she didn't really care about you getting to work as long as she got her brand new unstained pillow.

I'm just going to say, though, to be fair, on the other hand, I get that this messes up your regular weekly budget, but are you really so broke that...

Sometimes you do just have to own your mistakes; you broke it, you bought it.

ActuatorInfinite8329 − NTA. It's not about the pillow. It's about the money.

Wendy is mad that you didn't have to pay full price and/or that you aren't suffering/punished enough for your terrible crime lol.

If the replacement pillow is visibly clean, odor-free, and in the same condition as the original pillow before the spill, she doesn't have a leg to stand on.

Further, having the store tag still attached strongly suggests the replacement is unused.

You held up your end. Her petty emotions about it aren't actually your problem.

These users leaned toward YTA, emphasizing that if you break something, you replace it exactly, not with a pre-loved version.

[Reddit User] − Eh, YTA. It’s a mistake, but it is a $70 mistake. Maintaining social relations and doing the right thing can sometimes cost you. But it’s what you...

You ruined the pillow; you should replace it. It isn’t your right to criticize how she spends money on stuff at her new place.

Urban Outfitters is also known to run all their stuff around that price point.

[Reddit User] − YTA. You ruined it, you buy a new one. The thrift store pillow is just gross, new or not.

steponme2021 − I’m going to say YTA. Not a big one, just a barely TA. I only say this because she did spend $70.

She’s upset because she bought stuff brand new to furnish her apartment.

I got you a slightly used one to replace it, but it was new, like her new apartment, and a new beginning.

I’m not going to lie, I would have the same reaction. Why should she have to forfeit her brand-new pillow for a random used one from a thrift store? Like...

lickmysackett − YTA. You break it, you buy it. Having a hard no on soft goods from thrift stores is a reasonable (and hygienic) rule.

Having tags doesn't mean it wasn't used; it just means it wasn't washed.

Littlepotatoface − Yeah, YTA. Soft furnishings from thrift stores are gross. And you’re kind of shaming her about how much the pillow cost, that’s not cool.

ExpertPaint430 − Um, no. YTA. You don't just wash thrifted items, you BOIL them. My country loves thrifting and has malls filled with thrift stores.

It's dirty to just wash things from the thrift store. Theres bacteria that laundry soap doesnt k__l and the fact that there could be bedbugs...

YUCK. And this is coming from someone who thrifts clothes on the regular. You can't just wash it, especially if it's a pillow.

[Reddit User] − YTA. You ruined her expensive throw pillow, accidentally, but still.

She has every right to expect that you will replace it with a brand-new pillow, not a used item from a thrift store.

I can understand her concern about 'soft items' because they can house pests such as bedbugs, and they are difficult to clean thoroughly.

This group landed on ESH, noting that both could have handled things better.

ComprehensiveSet927 − ESH. Spills happen, and a gracious hostess would have declined your offer to replace it.

However, since you offered to replace it, you should buy a new one. Sign up for the company’s emails, and you’ll get a discount.

Are you sure the original can’t be washed or dry cleaned? The website says it’s machine washable.

I’ve been going to thrift stores since I was a kid. Love ‘em. When out of town, I’ll drive out of my way to find one. Hard no on pillows...

SubjectBuilder3793 − ESH. You should never have told her. You replaced in good faith.

If it was in good repair, there was no reason to spend $70 on a f__king carrot pillow.

You should have realized that someone who spends that much on a weird little thing isn't going to be reasonable about your shortcut.

Some commenters simply fixated on the absurdity of the situation, $70 for a tiny carrot pillow!

Ok_Stable7501 − Now I want a carrot pillow. And they have a radish too! I’m oddly drawn to these. YTA for making me want vegetable pillows.

mangoawaynow − 70$ for that tiny ass pillow is CRAZY.

What started as a well-intentioned gesture quickly turned into a clash of pride and perception.

It’s funny how something as small as a throw pillow can reveal much deeper differences in how people value things, or people.

Do you think Wendy had a right to reject the thrifted pillow, or was the OP just being practical in her own way? Let’s hear your thoughts below!

Katy Nguyen

Katy Nguyen

Hey there! I’m Katy Nguyễn, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. I’m a woman in my 30s with a passion for storytelling and a degree in Journalism. My goal is to craft engaging, heartfelt articles that resonate with our readers, whether I’m diving into the latest lifestyle trends, exploring travel adventures, or sharing tips on personal growth. I’ve written about everything from cozy coffee shop vibes to navigating career changes with confidence. When I’m not typing away, you’ll likely find me sipping a matcha latte, strolling through local markets, or curled up with a good book under fairy lights. I love sunrises, yoga, and chasing moments of inspiration.

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