Office culture can sometimes be a bit too full of dramatic reveals and surprises, but when a coworker is excited about big news, it’s easy to get caught up in the moment.
OP was dealing with a coworker, Amy, who had been dropping hints all week about a life-changing announcement. After hearing these hints repeatedly, OP jokingly guessed that she might be pregnant, not expecting that their guess would turn out to be correct.
While OP quickly apologized, the mood in the office shifted, and Amy later told OP they “stole her thunder.” Was OP wrong for making the guess, or was it just a harmless mistake? Keep reading to see how others feel about this office blunder.
A Redditor accidentally spoils his coworker’s pregnancy reveal with a guess, leading to awkward tension























In this scenario, the OP didn’t intend to be hurtful. But what happened touches on a well‑known social and emotional phenomenon: stealing someone’s thunder.
That means revealing or guessing another person’s news in a way that diminishes the impact of their planned announcement, even if no harm was meant. It’s an idiom people use when someone’s special moment is overshadowed or preempted by another’s action or comment.
When people plan a big reveal, especially something deeply personal like a pregnancy, the emotional value isn’t just the fact itself, it’s the moment of being the one who controls how others find out.
Many people look forward to that buildup and the reactions they will get when they finally share their news. So when someone correctly guesses it prematurely, it can feel like their moment was taken from them, even if you didn’t mean it that way.
There isn’t a lot of formal academic research specifically on pregnancy spoilers in social settings, but the emotional response makes sense in broader psychological terms. Human beings are wired to care about how surprises unfold, and unexpected disruptions to planned emotional experiences can be jarring.
For example, research on the emotion of surprise shows that surprise isn’t just about new information, it’s about the timing and expected reveal of that information. When expectations are violated, such as a planned reveal being guessed early, the emotional experience shifts.
Another factor that often plays into these situations is the spotlight effect, a cognitive bias where people overestimate how much others notice them, their actions, and their impact on events.
That helps explain why Amy may feel especially annoyed: she was anticipating an emotional peak focused on her, and when it didn’t happen exactly the way she planned, it felt like her spotlight moment was dimmed.
So, was the OP wrong for guessing? Probably not intentionally. Given that Amy repeatedly hinted at pregnancy and even brought up pregnancy themes, the OP’s guess wasn’t out of left field and it wasn’t hostile or malicious.
But intent isn’t the same as impact. Guessing correctly before someone has their planned moment can change the emotional experience for them, and that’s what Amy reacted to.
Here’s how to think about it constructively:
• Intent vs. Impact: You didn’t mean to take away her moment, but the impact was that her reveal lost some of its surprise.
• Emotional value of planned moments: For many people, the joy of sharing big news comes from the unveiling itself, not just from the news being known.
• Communication matters: In future situations where someone is clearly building anticipation, a good rule of thumb is to let them control the reveal, even if you have some idea what it might be.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
These users criticize Amy for making a big deal out of a common announcement and dragging it out, which made it too obvious and spoiled the surprise












This group points out Amy’s immature behavior and need for attention, particularly in a work setting













These users offer humor or sarcastic suggestions for how to handle Amy’s behavior





This group supports OP for taking charge of the situation and pointing out Amy’s obnoxiousness





Do you think the worker ruined the moment, or was Amy’s emotional response blown out of proportion? Share your thoughts below!


















