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SIL Claims Mania Is “Only Bipolar,” Then Explodes When The RN Proves Her Wrong

by Annie Nguyen
November 16, 2025
in Social Issues

Family dinners often mix warmth with unexpected tension, especially when new members join the table. Mental health topics can surface naturally, yet they carry risks if facts clash with personal beliefs. A casual chat can spiral when someone feels challenged in front of relatives.

The original poster, a nurse with bipolar disorder herself, met her brother-in-law’s new wife for the first time months after their elopement. At a recent gathering, the wife brought up her unmedicated bipolar diagnosis and grew adamant that mania belongs only to that condition.

The poster gently corrected her with evidence, even involving her doctor husband for support. Things escalated fast. Read on to see Reddit’s split on who truly embarrassed whom.

A new bride’s voice rose at family dinner when the nurse sister-in-law quietly corrected her claim that mania belongs only to bipolar disorder

SIL Claims Mania Is “Only Bipolar,” Then Explodes When The RN Proves Her Wrong
Not the actual photo

AITA for embarrassing my BILs new wife in front of everyone?

For context, it was not my intention but it was absolutely how it played out.

My BIL (husband's brother) was away for college for 4 years and ended up eloping with a women he had known for 7 months.

None of us knew her, not that it mattered. But we just met her for the first time back a few months ago.

She seemed pleasant, a bit shy (which is to be expected) and a bit rough around the edges

(no big deal at all but just like fidgety, darting her head and looking behind her shoulder like someone was standing there when no one was).

We found out a short few weeks later that she has bipolar, unmedicated,

so her behaviors absolutely made sense (I'm an RN, as well as a social worker, and I also have bipolar but I'm medicated).

On Saturday MIL invited the whole family down for dinner and BIL and his new wife (Hannah) show up

and we got to chatting at the dinner table about her diagnosis. She brought it up, not me

(but she knew I knew about it so it started as small talk I believe). Well it didn't talk long for her to dive deep in to this conversation.

Using her arms and hands to talk, getting a bit loud. No problems, the family is loud so she fits right in.

But then she became angry, over nothing. Started saying stuff like "it absolutely f__king repulses me

that people without bipolar try claiming they are manic when mania is strictly a bipolar thing".

I wasn't rude by any means but I did correct her, quietly, and said "actually mania comes in all forms

and is not limited to bipolar disorders. Even people with brain tumors have been known to have manic episodes."

She immediately said I was wrong. That her doctor told her that it was strictly a bipolar thing, etc.

So I just stood firm and said "He's wrong" and even pulled up my medical ebook to show her the paragraph

that speaks on mania and everything that can cause an episode. She refused to read it so I just turned to my husband

(who wasn't paying attention to us) and said "Hunny, you're a doctor, what causes manic episodes".

He starts listing off multiple things, including manic depressive episodes, seasonal affective disorder, postpartum psychosis or schizoaffective disorder.

Well Hannah was pissed. She immediately said that we were just trying to one up her and that she "knew what she was talking about".

My husband immediately said "obviously not if you're going to sit here, argue and gatekeep symptoms of illnesses

against two medical professionals." He then turned and walked off, leaving us at the table with both BILs, SIL and MIL looking on.

Hannah then starts crying saying I embarrassed her on purpose for no good reason other than my pride

and stormed out of the room after screaming for everyone to stop staring at her.

BIL is telling me I should have just shut my mouth and storms after her. I'm really confused if I'm the AH here.

ETA: Making an add to include some key points here. I was quiet throughout this entire conversation.

I was speaking so no one else could hear, which is exactly why my husband (who was sitting directly beside me)

has no idea what we were talking about until I brought him in to the conversation.

She did not appear to be in any sort of episode when the conversation began,

other than the first initial spew of how it repulses her (she calmed down immediately afterwards)

and only slowly showed how manic she was after raising her voice at my husband

for simply stating what can cause a manic episode that does not include bipolar.

I was having what I thought was an academically correct conversation with an individual as small talk (mentioned in my post).

She was the one who became loud and belligerent.

No one at that table had any clue what me and Hannah were even talking about until Hannah started screaming at me over the table.

It is my job as both a social worker and an RN to educate individuals whom are uneducated on their illness.

So yes, that probably played a part. It's more dangerous to be uneducated than it is to be educated

and to be blunt, her doctor giving her false information to begin with is troubling in itself.

Most people know the tension that comes when a simple conversation suddenly turns emotional. In moments like this, it isn’t really about who’s right; it’s about feeling understood, respected, and safe. For OP, talking with her brother-in-law’s new wife wasn’t meant to be a debate.

It started as two people bonding over a shared diagnosis. But beneath the surface was a familiar emotional dynamic: one person eager to feel knowledgeable and in control of their narrative, and another trying to offer clarity without intending harm.

From a psychological standpoint, OP’s discomfort grew the moment Hannah shifted from conversation to confrontation. OP wasn’t reacting to the topic itself; she was reacting to the emotional volatility.

As an RN and social worker, she’s trained to clarify misinformation, especially about mental health. But Hannah, unmedicated and already anxious in a new family environment, was likely trying to protect her sense of identity.

When someone feels insecure about their condition, challenges, even gentle ones, can feel like personal attacks. OP’s correction may have felt, to Hannah, less like information and more like invalidation.

Yet there’s another angle worth exploring. Many people in OP’s position would have backed away from the conversation entirely, especially knowing the emotional sensitivity involved.

But OP approached it the way a clinician might, fact-first, solution-oriented, while Hannah approached it emotionally. They weren’t just having different opinions; they were having different kinds of conversations.

Psychologist Dr. Marsha Linehan, known for developing Dialectical Behavior Therapy, notes that people with emotional dysregulation often interpret neutral feedback as criticism because their internal alarm system is already heightened. She explains that validating the emotion, not the fact, can prevent escalation.

Similarly, Verywell Mind highlights that confrontation during emotional activation often backfires because the brain shifts into defensiveness rather than reasoning.

In this context, OP wasn’t wrong about the information, but the timing and setting created the perfect storm. Hannah wasn’t able to absorb correction, and OP wasn’t in “family dinner” mode so much as “professional accuracy” mode. Both needs collided.

Sometimes the most effective support comes not from correcting inaccuracies, but from meeting someone where they emotionally are, even if the facts have to wait for another day.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

These Redditors insisted the girlfriend was still emotionally tied to her ex

SamSpayedPI − NTA I hate it when I'm having (what I think is) a strictly academic discussion with someone, and they start to take it all personally.

Boeing367-80 − NTA. Hannah's diagnosis does not give her a license to rearrange reality as she sees fit, and she brought up the topic in the first place.

andurilmat − NTA she embarresd herself by doubling down. Sounds like you gave her plenty of opportunities to retract her statement.

RegretfulRespawns − NTA. She embarrassed herself! Your husband is absolutely right, she’s gatekeeping her illness.

I’m not sure where you should proceed from here, but going forward I would probably go LC.

If her whole family is with her on this, it’ll constantly be brought up that this argument happened. I’d save myself the headache!

concernedreader1982 − NTA I dated someone with Bipolar disorder who also chose to be untreated. It was a nightmare.

Their mood swings and manic episodes were extremely scary and unpromted

Hopefully Hannah will choose to get medication from her doctor soon.

This group praised the breakup as smart red-flag avoidance

Ladyughsalot1 − ESH You’re a medical professional. You know she isn’t medicated.

While we are responsible for our behavior even when managing mental illness, you could see her becoming agitated.

And you helped escalate. “Not yelling” Doesn’t mean you didn’t help escalate.

You had the option of shutting down the conversation.

Instead you chose to fight because you were right, and even brought in a 3rd party.

happybanana134 − ESH. You pulled up a medical ebook at the dinner table?

And then dragged your husband into this? Was it really that important to be 'right'?

Just change the subject. You weren't working, you were at a family dinner.

So no, not your job to educate her. She is not your problem to fix. There's a time and a place for this.

SoupNo682 − it´s probably bad idea to argue with an unmedicated mentally ill person.

These users emphasized the need for strong boundaries with exes

Princess-Bridget − I’m going to give a very very gentle ESH. Yes, SIL was wrong.

She was exhibiting some serious know-it-all syndrome And was out of line.

She also was in a social situation that was likely uncomfortable for her since she doesn’t know any of you very well yet.

She is also not getting proper treatment for her diagnosis.

Far_Anteater_256 − NTA. She embarrassed herself & thinks she can blame you for it.

DehyaDaBest − NTA. Did you really embarrass her or did she just embarrass herself?

Our nurse SIL chose facts over friction, but the bride’s meltdown stole the show. Was correcting worth the family fallout, or should pros pick peace at the table? Would you slide in a gentle redirect or let the myth marinate? Drop your dinner-drama wisdom below!

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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