College life often comes with its fair share of chaos, group projects, 8 a.m. lectures, and the infamous “bonding activities” that sometimes cross the line into hazing. But for one sorority sister on Reddit, what her friends thought was a harmless prank turned into a terrifying dissociative episode that ended with campus police and ruined party plans.
Her story raises bigger questions about mental health, consent, and whether Greek life really offers the supportive sisterhood it promises. And of course, Reddit had plenty to say about who was in the wrong. Want the tea? Let’s unpack this sorority drama.
A college student explained that she has a history of dissociation when under stress, a coping mechanism from childhood trauma















The situation unfolds around an unexpected trauma response: under stress, OP experiences dissociation, feeling completely disconnected from reality, like her body is acting on autopilot.
When her sorority sisters “pranked” her by physically restraining her and moving her without consent, what they meant to be playful instead triggered a dissociative reaction: she escaped via a fire exit and wandered into the woods until she regained composure.
The group’s response? Anger that the night was ruined, not concern for her distress. They even suggested she warn them next time she’s liable to “go crazy”, a harmful way to dismiss serious mental health needs.
This isn’t just a friendship hiccup. It’s a breach of trust and safety, amplified by misunderstanding. The prank itself, non-consensually carrying someone, looks less like a playful “sisterhood” moment and more like hazing, crossing personal boundaries with harmful consequences.
Hazing is a widespread, often normalized problem in campus organizations. According to Hazing in View, one of the largest studies on the matter, 55% of students in clubs, teams, or organizations reported hazing behaviors; yet 90% didn’t consider themselves hazed, and 95% didn’t report it. This normalization frequently silence those most affected and worsens dangerous practices.
Recent legislation reflects growing awareness: the Stop Campus Hazing Act (2024) now requires U.S. institutions to report hazing incidents in their annual security reports. This push for transparency and prevention underscores how deeply problematic hazing remains, even when disguised as harmless “fun.”
Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, in The Body Keeps the Score, observes, “Traumatized people chronically feel unsafe inside their bodies: The past is alive in the form of gnawing interior discomfort.” This captures how dissociation manifests as a protective escape during panic or threat, especially misinterpreted as irrational behavior.
OP’s trauma response was not a sign of craziness, but a distress signal triggered by an unsafe environment. She is under no obligation to pre-discuss her mental health with others, that’s private information. That said, the sorority’s behavior was negligent at best and harassing at worst.
Reporting the incident to Greek life leadership or the school’s Title IX/Student Affairs office would be appropriate. Taking a break from Greek life might also support her mental health in the long term.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
These users called her not the asshole, condemning the sorority for a hazing-like prank, ignoring her trauma, and prioritizing a party over her safety, urging her to quit Greek life
























This commenter also supported quitting, sharing a story of a toxic sorority charging exorbitant fees, reinforcing that such groups can harm mental health






What was meant to be a playful prank turned into a frightening ordeal that revealed just how unsafe and unsupportive this sorority really was. Instead of apologizing, they blamed the victim for reacting to their reckless behavior.
So here’s the question: should OP give Greek life another shot, hoping for genuine sisterhood, or walk away for good and find community elsewhere? And more importantly, when does a “prank” stop being funny and start being a violation?










