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Man Yells At Friend Who Suggests He Cancel His Wedding After His Fiancée Becomes Disabled

by Annie Nguyen
October 21, 2025
in Social Issues

Moments of crisis often reveal the truth about the people around us. Sometimes, it’s not the situation itself that hurts most, it’s the way others react to it. When one man’s fiancée became disabled after an accident, he chose to stand beside her, ready to face whatever came next together.

But not everyone shared his conviction. During what was supposed to be a casual hangout, a friend crossed a line, saying something cruel that no one expecting compassion should ever hear. His response came from the heart, raw and unfiltered, and now he’s wondering if he went too far defending the woman he loves.

The man and his fiancée had been together for five years and were deep in wedding planning when tragedy struck

Man Yells At Friend Who Suggests He Cancel His Wedding After His Fiancée Becomes Disabled
not the actual photo

'AITA for yelling at a friend when she said that I should think about cancelling my wedding because my fiancée has recently become disabled?'

My fiancée and I are planning on getting married in September, and we’ve been together for 5 years now.

A month ago, she got into an accident that has her in a wheelchair.

She’s been seeing a physical therapist about prosthetics but for now at least there’s no walking happening.

It’s been... an adjustment for both of us, and I won’t say it’s gone perfectly, but you can’t expect something like this to transition perfectly.

I recently went out with a couple friends, and I was talking about my fiancée

and how she was doing when one of them asked if I had thought about calling off the wedding.

I immediately said no and asked why I would, and she started talking about how she’s going to be a burden

and I don’t want to start the better part of my life with dead weight as a wife.

This really pissed me off and i yelled at her that just because she got into an accident doesn’t make her worthless

and that she should shut her mouth if only s__t is going to come out of it.

I’ll admit I made a bit of a scene, so I left and went home.

My fiancée says that I shouldn’t have been so harsh and that she can see where my friend is coming from,

and that she only has my best interests in mind.

This honestly really surprised me since my friend was talking about her, and she’s saying I should have been less harsh.

So I’m wondering whether I went overboard since the woman getting trashed even thinks I was too harsh. AITA?

The original poster (OP) stood up for his fiancée after a friend suggested canceling their wedding because she’d “be a burden.” His anger, though loud, was a moral reflex rather than cruelty. What he encountered wasn’t concern; it was ableism disguised as practicality.

According to Dr. Michelle Nario-Redmond, a social psychologist who studies disability stigma, people frequently project fear and pity onto disabled individuals, assuming dependency instead of capability.

She writes, “Disability prejudice often hides behind rational language, concern, logistics, or protection, but it ultimately questions the disabled person’s worth.” That’s precisely what happened here. The friend’s comment stripped the fiancée of agency and reduced her identity to physical limitation.

The fiancée’s surprising empathy toward the friend suggests internalized ableism, a common psychological response after sudden injury. Newly disabled individuals often struggle with guilt and self-perception, believing they’ve become “a burden” to loved ones.

Dr. Refah Alqahtani at Nottingham University notes that self-stigma among newly disabled adults correlates strongly with depression and lowered relationship satisfaction, particularly when the partner adopts a caretaker role rather than an equal one. The fiancée’s defense of the friend’s cruelty may reflect her fear that deep down, others secretly agree.

From a social standpoint, OP’s anger was justified and even healthy. Publicly confronting prejudice, especially when it targets someone vulnerable, reinforces both love and dignity. But now the challenge shifts inward. The fiancée needs reassurance that she isn’t a burden and that her worth remains unchanged.

Couples in similar situations benefit from therapy focused on role renegotiation, transforming the narrative from “carer and dependent” to “partners adapting together.” A counselor specializing in disability adjustment or trauma recovery can help both partners rebuild identity and intimacy on equal footing.

Finally, boundaries must be drawn with the “friend.” Anyone who calls your future spouse “dead weight” forfeits the right to intimacy in your circle. Supportive friends don’t plant doubt, they offer empathy.

OP’s defense was not overreaction; it was love in its fiercest, most protective form. In times like this, kindness isn’t measured by calmness; it’s measured by conviction.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

This group noted the fiancée might be internalizing guilt and viewing herself as a burden

lostonravenna − NTA. Your fiancée likely feels the same way about herself as your friend does.

Not necessarily that you should cancel the wedding, but she may think of herself as a burden and a deadweight.

Your friend is no friend at all and that’s an unacceptable thing to say.

Just because someone can’t walk doesn’t mean they don’t deserve to be married to someone who loves and cares for them.

[Reddit User] − NTA Your friend calling your wife dead weight is f__king disrespectful

nikokazini − NTA. Please emphasise to your fiancée that’s she’s not a deadweight or burden to you.

She sounds like she’s feeling like she might be. She also sounds lovely. Congratulations on your nuptials!

hotelsaregross − NTA I'm the disabled spouse. Your fiancee is feeling enormous guilt, misplaced as it may be,

and will be more inclined to be generous when people say things to you like that.

It'll get a lot better, but the switch from healthy to disabled is a big one, and takes years mentally

Your "friend" is an enormous gaping a__hole, and you are great.

These commenters encouraged OP to distance himself from the so-called friend

[Reddit User] − Hard NTA- Your fiancé is way too nice. I would’ve most definitely have hated anyone

who said that about me and would’ve gotten mad at my bf for yelling at someone who said that about me.

First of all, your love life is none of your friend’s business so your friend has no business making comments like this.

Second of all, your friend is insinuating that’s disabled people are universally unattractive

and cannot be loved and/or have healthy relationships which is extremely rude and stupid.

She may be incompatible with disabled people but that doesn’t mean that everyone is. This girl is no real friend to you.

Anyone who insults the person you love and are spending the rest of your life with in such a horrible way isn’t your true friend.

True friends never say things like this about their friends’ partners. You really should cut this girl out of your life.

Why would you want to be friends with someone who says such horrible things about your fiancé?

usernameawesome1 − NTA at all. The friend I would consider not inviting to the wedding.

And address the doubt that your fiance has about herself before you get married.

She is obviously thinking that if she agreed with the friend and this needs to be addressed to support her

and help her confidence and heal mentally from the accident.

Recovery from injuries that are life changing take a myriad of emotions and struggles.

ka36 − NTA, that's some stupid, mean spirited s__t to say. Your fiancee also sounds like a good person, at least from this limited info.

This commenter, sharing personal experience as a young carer, empathized with OP but advised open communication, emotional support, and self-care to prevent burnout

Adelineslife − NTA - I actually had this EXACT situation happen. I was a carer for my ex for 3 years.

It was a huge amount of stress on me because I was also working full time, but I loved him.

A friend of mine said something along the lines of him being a burden and to let him go

so I can find someone younger and healthy (my ex was 15 years older than I). I was soooo upset.

I ended up leaving the party and we had a messenger conversation a week or so later,

where I voiced that I wanted an apology because what he said was very hurtful in a time where I needed support.

He dug his heels in and refused to apologise. That was a few years ago now and we haven’t spoken since. Good riddance.

It’s hard for young people to empathise with young carers. Usually spousal carers are older and have lived their lives together.

We have our whole lives ahead of us and if you aren’t emotionally attached

it’s easy to say “let them go and live your life to the fullest with someone else”.

Not that it’s the right thing to say, but I can see how people come to that conclusion when they aren’t in the situation and want the best for their...

Talk to your friend about what about her comment upset you. Her reaction will determine what you should do with that friendship.

As someone who was a young carer I have some advice on what I wish I had done differently:

1) find someone you CAN talk to without judgement. That might be a friend or a counsellor.

You need someone you can vent all the ugly and difficult stuff to so resentment doesn’t build.

Someone who won’t tell you to leave or make a judgement about your partner. You need support.

2) self care, self care, self care. You can’t look after someone without looking after yourself.

That can mean playing a sport each week, going to the cinema with friends etc. Whatever floats your boat and fills your cup.

Taking some time out where you aren’t a carer for a little while.

On reflection, I can see that I did neither of these things

and it actually resulted in me having a stress breakdown which took a good 18 months - 2 years to physically and emotionally recover from.

This lone commenter rated it ESH, arguing that while the friend’s comment was disrespectful

Cautious_Board − ESH Your friend absolutely shouldn’t have called your SO dead weight.

But also I don’t think it’s inappropriate for a close friend to ask this question of you.

When people marry they say “til death do us part” and “for better or worse”

but your head is in the sand if you don’t acknowledge that those statements are ideals rather than absolutes. Divorce happens. Often.

Unless you don’t accept divorce as ever being acceptable, then you accept there are limits to those statements.

For many people, becoming a carer is something they may not be able to take on board, especially if, financially, you can’t afford help.

Sure they want to think they can do it, but that doesn’t mean when faced with that reality, they can.

And you haven’t yet made that commitment - it’s reasonable to reevaluate whether that’s a commitment you want to make given the drastic change this has made.

If a close friend was in this situation, and they hadn’t had a conversation about the changes in their life,

or if I was concerned they wanted out but was too scared to even voice it out of fear for being seen as a horrible person for that - then...

Not in public, not in such a disrespectful way. But there isn’t a nice way to say - so thinking of calling off the wedding?

I don’t think you’re TA for having those thoughts. Disabled people aren’t dead weight. But being a carer is not a walk in the park.

Carers often experience social isolation, and poor physical and mental health directly linked to being a carer. That’s a lot to take on.

Love doesn’t vanish when bodies change, it deepens, evolves, and demands courage. So, was he wrong to shout? Maybe. But if love isn’t worth raising your voice for, what is?

Would you have done the same in his shoes or tried to keep calm in the face of such cruelty?

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

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