A month backpacking through Southeast Asia with your closest friends sounds like the kind of trip people remember forever. Cheap flights, chaotic street markets, beach days, water parks, late-night food stalls, all the stuff that feels magical in your early twenties.
But sometimes group vacations don’t fall apart because of bad planning or missed flights.
Sometimes they collapse slowly, under the weight of one person’s unresolved struggles.
That’s what happened to one woman after a long-planned trip with four close friends turned emotionally exhausting before they were even halfway through it.
And now the group is divided over whether she finally snapped for understandable reasons, or crossed a line she can’t take back.





















The Problem Started Long Before the Vacation
Her friend group had known each other for about three years when they planned the trip. One full month traveling across Southeast Asia together.
But one friend, who she nicknamed “Durian” online, had already been struggling emotionally for a long time.
Two years earlier, he had opened up about binge eating, low self-esteem, and deep insecurity about his appearance. According to her, the group genuinely tried to support him.
They encouraged him to get help, offered workout accountability, and checked in regularly.
The problem was that every conversation eventually hit a wall.
He avoided the topic, shut down discussions, or promised vaguely that he’d “try” before changing the subject completely.
Eventually, the group stopped bringing it up because he said the pressure made his mental health worse.
Then, about a year before the trip, he announced he was finally serious about losing weight.
Everyone wanted to believe him.
She even offered to train with him because she admitted she wasn’t exactly athletic herself. For about a month, he showed up consistently.
Then the excuses started. Missed sessions. Delayed plans. Silence whenever anyone asked how things were going.
By the time the trip arrived, he had actually gained more weight instead of losing it.
And unfortunately, the emotional fallout followed him onto the plane.
When Sympathy Turns Into Exhaustion
At first, it was smaller things.
Complaints about walking. Complaints about seating. Complaints about clothes not fitting comfortably. Complaints that strangers were staring at him, even when nobody else noticed it happening.
The group tried to be patient.
But over time, the constant negativity started draining the atmosphere of the trip itself.
The breaking point came at a water park.
The entire ride there, he repeatedly talked about how anxious and insecure he felt about people seeing his body.
Once they arrived, he refused to go inside and caused what she described as a scene at the entrance.
That’s when she snapped.
She told him he didn’t have to participate if he didn’t want to, but he needed to stop ruining the vacation with his weight issues and should have thought about these problems before agreeing to the trip.
He left immediately and returned to the Airbnb with another friend.
Now the group is fractured with three weeks still remaining.
Why This Situation Feels So Messy
The uncomfortable truth is that both sides of this conflict make emotional sense.
Eating disorders and binge eating are deeply tied to mental health. According to organizations like the National Eating Disorders Association, binge eating disorder often involves cycles of shame, avoidance, anxiety, and social withdrawal.
Situations involving swimsuits, physical activity, public eating, or body exposure can become extremely emotionally triggering.
So yes, his distress was likely real.
But that doesn’t automatically mean everyone around him has unlimited emotional capacity to absorb it for an entire month.
That’s the part people often avoid admitting.
Caretaker fatigue is real in friendships too. When one person’s unresolved struggles dominate every shared experience, even compassionate friends can eventually hit a breaking point.
And once resentment builds quietly over time, it often comes out harsher than intended.
That seems to be exactly what happened here.
Where she probably crossed the line was making it specifically about his weight instead of his behavior. Several commenters pointed out that the real issue wasn’t his body size.
It was the constant complaining, emotional spiraling, and inability to regulate how much his distress affected everyone else.
Those are related things, but they are not the same thing.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
Many people sympathized with her frustration, especially those who had traveled with difficult or emotionally draining friends before.








Others felt she handled the situation poorly, especially by framing it as “weight problems” instead of addressing the disruptive behavior directly.









Still, most agreed on one thing. The group dynamic cannot survive another three weeks exactly like this.





















Sometimes people can deeply care about someone and still become exhausted by them.
That doesn’t automatically make either side evil.
Her friend is clearly struggling with serious insecurity and likely needs professional help far beyond what a friend group can provide. But friendships also can’t survive if every experience becomes centered around one person’s unhappiness.
The hard part is that once resentment finally explodes out loud, you usually can’t put it back in the box.
And unfortunately, group vacations have a way of exposing every crack in a friendship all at once.















