It should have been one of the happiest seasons of his life. After a year and a half of being engaged, a man and his fiancée were preparing to welcome their first child.
The news brought excitement, a bit of family tension at first, and then, eventually, joy all around.
They were even thinking ahead, talking about godparents, imagining the kind of support system they wanted for their baby.
One name came up naturally. His best friend of five years.

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At first, the friend, who had a known history of depression, reacted with surprise when he heard about the pregnancy.
Nothing alarming, just a bit off. The couple assumed he needed time to process it. Instead, things took a sharp turn two weeks later.
At 3 a.m., the man received a call from his friend, who had apparently borrowed someone else’s phone. What followed was twenty minutes of shouting, insults, and chaos.
The friend was drunk, yelling about him and his fiancée while someone else tried to wrestle the phone away. It felt less like a conversation and more like being ambushed.
Still, he tried to handle it calmly. The next day, when the apology came, blaming alcohol for the outburst, he accepted it. People make mistakes. That could have been the end of it.
It wasn’t.
The very next night, the friend went out drinking again. This time, instead of a call, it was a direct attack on the fiancée. The messages were cruel and personal.
He called her names, questioned her character, and then crossed a line that couldn’t be uncrossed. He told her to get an abortion, claiming it would somehow “save” his friend from her.
That was it.
The man cut him off completely. No calls, no messages, no second chances. For months, there was silence, and honestly, it felt justified.
Protecting his partner, especially while she was pregnant, became the priority. Some lines, once crossed, change everything.
Then, on his birthday, the friend reached out.
It wasn’t a dramatic apology or a long explanation. Just an attempt to reconnect.
But instead of reopening the door, the man shut it firmly. He told him he wanted nothing to do with him, that what he said was unacceptable, and that there was no coming back from it.
That’s when the situation twisted again.
The friend shifted the narrative. He accused the couple of outing his mental health struggles to his mother.
According to him, they had violated his privacy, exposed something deeply personal, and turned people against him.
The man didn’t hold back this time. He said he didn’t care. Not because mental health didn’t matter, but because, in his eyes, it had nothing to do with the behavior that caused all this damage.
To him, the issue was simple. His friend had been cruel, repeatedly, and then tried to hide behind excuses.
He blocked him everywhere.
What he didn’t expect was the fallout from the rest of their social circle.
Some friends sided with him, seeing the situation as clear-cut. Others weren’t so sure.
A few argued that he had crossed a line by dismissing mental health entirely, even in anger.
Some even claimed the friend was “innocent,” or at least not fully responsible for what he said while drunk and struggling.
That’s where things got messy.
Because while mental health can explain behavior, it doesn’t erase consequences.
And alcohol might lower inhibitions, but it rarely invents entirely new thoughts out of thin air. The cruelty in those messages didn’t come from nowhere.
At the same time, his own reaction wasn’t perfect. Saying he didn’t care about someone’s mental health, even in the heat of the moment, can come across as harsh and dismissive.
It’s the kind of statement that sticks, especially when repeated through a group of mutual friends.
Still, context matters. He wasn’t responding to a quiet confession or a plea for help. He was reacting to repeated, targeted attacks against the person he loves most.
There’s also something else worth noticing here. The friend didn’t just lash out once.
He apologized, then did it again, escalating the behavior. That pattern makes it harder to chalk everything up to a bad night.
At some point, accountability has to enter the picture.
Here’s the comments of Reddit users:
Most people were firmly on his side, arguing that mental health and alcohol are not free passes for abusive behavior. Many pointed out that protecting his fiancée and future child should come first, no exceptions.
![He Cut Off His Best Friend After a Drunken Rant Targeted His Pregnant Fiancée, and Now Their Entire Circle Is Divided [Reddit User] − NTA NTA NTA This guy is off the rails and needs to find someone else to abuse. Block him permanently.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/wp-editor-1777351302258-32.webp)









Others, however, zoomed in on the way he spoke about both his friend’s condition and, at times, even his fiancée, suggesting there might be deeper issues in the group dynamic.



A few comments were blunt enough to sting, but the overall tone leaned supportive, with a strong message. Boundaries matter, and sometimes cutting someone off is the only real option.








![He Cut Off His Best Friend After a Drunken Rant Targeted His Pregnant Fiancée, and Now Their Entire Circle Is Divided [Reddit User] − NTA, he can not blame mental heath and being drunk for saying things like that.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/wp-editor-1777351338288-53.webp)

















