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Woman Refuses to Vacation With Disabled Friend After Public Meltdown at Train Station

by Marry Anna
November 25, 2025
in Social Issues

A vacation is supposed to be a recharge, not a test of your patience.

Traveling with friends is the ultimate compatibility test. You learn their sleeping habits, their budgeting style, and how they handle stress.

But for one Redditor, a city break revealed a much harder truth: sometimes, your oldest friends make the absolute worst travel companions, especially when they refuse to plan for their own medical needs and take it out on innocent service workers.

Now, read the full story:

Woman Refuses to Vacation With Disabled Friend After Public Meltdown at Train Station
Not the actual photo

AITA for refusing to vacation with my disabled friend anymore?

I (F30s) have a friend "Ashley" (F30s). Ashley and I have been friends since we were 13.

We drifted apart after high school but stayed in touch.. Ashley is disabled. She has fibromyalgia.

We planned to go on a short vacation together to the city which was Ashley's idea, we planned this over a year in advance to stay for 3 nights.

The actual vacation was okay but I found being around Ashley stressful.

She extremely overpacked (she brought 7 outfits, different types of hair dryers, and a bunch of other stuff that just wasn't needed)

and was always complaining about how heavy her bags are. She insisted on going for long walks through the city

but then would get tired and say we need to get a taxi home as she can't walk back.

The last straw for me was that Ashley had a full-on meltdown at the station. I walked her to the station

(I wasn't getting the train back, we live in completely different areas). We got to the desk and she asked the staff

if there was a wheelchair available she could use as she was struggling to walk any further to get to her platform.

They said they were all being used and asked if she booked assistance and she hadn't, and they told her a chair should be available in around an hour.

Ashley lost her cool and yelled at them and said that she's going to miss her train, and she sat on the floor.

I tried to calm her down but there was just no use. She was very insulting and called them names, it was so embarrassing.

I stayed with Ashley and eventually the manager arrived with the chair. He helped Ashley and she went home.

2 days after we got home, Ashley asked me if I'd be down for a similar vacation next year. I told her no thanks.

I tried to explain to her that I think after our experience it's better if we don't vacation together.

Ashley is now angry with me and said I'm being ableist but I struggle to put up with how disorganised she is in regards to her own needs.

There is a very fine line between empathy and enabling, and this story crosses it.

Chronic pain conditions like fibromyalgia are notoriously difficult to manage. They are invisible, unpredictable, and exhausting. You have to have sympathy for Ashley’s physical struggle; carrying heavy luggage when your body feels like it’s on fire is a nightmare scenario.

However, the sympathy stops the moment you scream at a service worker. That is where Ashley lost the plot. Disability requires management and planning, especially in travel. Expecting a train station to have on-demand mobility aids during peak times without booking ahead is unrealistic.

Blaming the minimum-wage staff for that oversight isn’t a symptom of fibromyalgia, it’s a symptom of entitlement. The OP is right to draw a boundary here. You can love your friend, support their health journey, and still refuse to sign up for a voluntary hostage situation in a foreign city.

Expert Opinion

This conflict brings up the crucial distinction between medical limitations and behavioral choices.

In the chronic illness community, there is a concept called The Spoon Theory, created by Christine Miserandino. It explains that people with chronic conditions start the day with a limited number of “spoons” (units of energy). Every task, showering, walking, carrying bags, costs a spoon. When you run out, you crash.

Ashley clearly ran out of spoons. She overpacked (costing spoons to carry), she walked too far (costing spoons), and by the time she reached the station, she was in a deficit.

But here is where the “ableism” accusation falls flat. Experts in accessible travel emphasize that the key to traveling with limited “spoons” is radical preparation. The Arthritis Foundation explicitly advises travelers with chronic pain to “pace, plan, and prioritize.” They recommend engaging accessibility services well in advance, often 24 to 48 hours, to ensure resources like wheelchairs are reserved.

By failing to book assistance and overpacking, Ashley set herself up for a crash.

Furthermore, labeling the OP’s refusal as “ableist” is a misuse of the term. Ableism is discrimination in favor of able-bodied people. The OP isn’t refusing to travel because Ashley needs a wheelchair; she is refusing to travel because Ashley failed to book one and then verbally abused staff.

As noted in travel etiquette guides from organizations like Open Doors Organization, part of inclusive travel is the shared responsibility of communication. Ashley failed to communicate her needs to the rail service, and the resulting chaos is not something the OP is required to endure repeatedly.

Check out how the community responded:

The Reddit community was quick to point out that loving a friend doesn’t mean you have to be their travel nurse or punching bag. 

Dragon_Fire_Skye - NTA. You aren't refusing to vacation together because of your friend's disability. You simply aren't vacation compatible.

There are very few people I will vacay with because we simply don't want to go to the same places...

I would be at a complete loss with someone who brought two hair dryers with her.

mattromo - NTA... If you had a friend with the same health issue who packed properly, knew their physical limits,

asked for assistance ahead of time and wasn't rude to people, you would probably be great travel partners.

Perhaps the most damning verdicts came from people who actually suffer from similar conditions; having a condition is not a license to be rude.

Wandering_aimlessly9 - Nta. As someone who has lupus and something called Ehlers Danlos... Her behavior is NOT ok on any level...

It’s narcissistic behavior to think you have a right to throw a temper tantrum... No one owes her ANYTHING because she’s disabled!!!

Fallen-Werecat - NTA... It is very hard to plan a vacation around [chronic pain]. If you pack for being at 10% that can lugging around a bunch of medical aids...

The last bit at the train station was unacceptable on her part for treating the people poorly.

CalendarDad - You're not refusing to vacation with her because she has fibromyalgia.

You're refusing to vacation with her because she's a royal pain in the [behind].

Many users zeroed in on the logic of packing seven outfits and heavy electronics for a three-day trip when you have a condition that causes pain upon lifting heavy objects.

nackle09 - NTA, while fibromyalgia is no joke, it appears she did quite a few things to make her own situation worse.

Even with those things aside, just her flat out yelling at the employees at the station would have been it for me.

C_Majuscula - NTA. She's not a good traveler. Overpacking, complaining about her overpacking, not knowing her limits, berating staff.

A clear verdict.

[Reddit User] - NTA. Like, her behavior has nothing to do with a disability

so that shouldn't even be mentioned, except where she tried to make it an excuse (gross).

How to Navigate a “Travel Breakup”

Telling a friend you don’t want to travel with them is awkward, but it doesn’t have to end the friendship.

1. Validate the Pain, but Critique the Plan: When discussing this, separate the person from the planning. Don’t say “You are too difficult.”

Instead, say: “I struggle with travel when we don’t have a rigid plan. I felt really helpless at the train station when we didn’t have a reservation, and the confrontation with the staff was really stressful for me. I prefer a different style of travel that doesn’t mesh well with the flexibility you need.”

2. The “Staycation” Pivot: If she asks again, offer an alternative that removes the logistical stress. I don’t think I can do another city trip, but I’d love to come over for a movie marathon or go to that spa near your house.” Keep the friendship in environments where you both thrive.

3. Don’t Accept the Label: If she uses the “ableist” card again, be firm but kind. “It is not ableist to expect basic politeness to service workers. My issue wasn’t the wheelchair; it was the yelling. I love you, but I won’t travel with that kind of conflict.”

Conclusion

This story serves as a reminder that disability explains a lot of things, but it excuses very little when it comes to abusing strangers. The OP did her best to support her friend, but friendship is a two-way street; or in this case, a two-way train track. If one person derails, you aren’t obligated to stay on board for the next crash.

So, the consensus is NTA. Do you think the friend is just unaware of her own limits, or is she using her condition as a pass for bad behavior?

Marry Anna

Marry Anna

Marry Anna, a lively writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT, is known for his energetic style in entertainment journalism. With a focus on accuracy, Marry Anna explores celebrities' lives, providing unique insights and interviews.

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