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AIBU to think friendships built on unequal footing turn into either exploitation or charity?

2 replies

KeenTaupeDog · 26/10/2025 20:53

When I started uni a few years ago I was really lonely and desperate for connection. There was a girl on my course who was always posting questions in the group chat, and I was usually the only one who bothered to reply. That tiny bit of kindness turned into what I thought was a friendship.

She was from a developing country on a scholarship, told me about her dad’s death, her family relying on her income, etc. I genuinely felt sorry for her and wanted to help. I gave her my notes, explained stuff over calls, even donated to one of her fundraisers. I didn’t expect much back – I knew she had a lot going on.

But it quickly changed. The generosity started being treated like obligation. She’d get annoyed if I didn’t donate again, or call me stingy. She wanted souvenirs from my holidays, intros to people with funding, added me to random WhatsApp groups about “opportunities”. When I pushed back, she got rude and started mocking my grades.

She ran three GoFundMes in less than a year, each “urgent”. What struck me was the expectation – as if of course her Western friends would chip in. She even said asking for souvenirs was “normal in her culture”, but none of her other friends did that, so I don’t buy it.

There was a huge imbalance. I was focused on career building, she was limited by visa rules and did care work on weekends. I helped her and her friends academically but they never offered much in return. They didn’t understand my neurodiversity either – acted like it was some “excuse” I made up. My parents told me to “keep being kind” because I was lonely, which made it worse because I felt guilty even when I wanted to pull away.

Eventually I realised the whole thing wasn’t friendship. It was obligation on my end and entitlement on hers. And it had this weird colonial undertone too – like she genuinely believed Westerners owe her because of history, so I should basically subsidise her life. I do get where that belief comes from, historically speaking, but applying it personally felt manipulative.

I’ve replayed it a hundred times wondering if I overshared about money, or should’ve kept boundaries clearer. But the bottom line is: kindness without reciprocity just becomes charity. And charity isn’t friendship.
AIBU to think that friendships only work when both people can give roughly something back – even if it’s just emotional effort or respect? Otherwise it turns into either exploitation or pity.

OP posts:
DoAWheelie · 26/10/2025 22:22

Cheeky Fuckers exist from all walks of life. But it doesn't mean all friendships have to be between fully equal parties to be worthwhile.

Just keep an eye out for future CFs and cut them off early.

CarpetKnees · 26/10/2025 22:31

This relationship doesn't sound healthy or a friendship at all. It sounds like she took advantage of you and your kindness
BUT that doesn't mean all friendships-built-on-unequal-footing-turn-into-either-exploitation-or-charity , no.

As @DoAWheelie there are people that try to take advantage in all walks of life, and people who think the world owes them something in all walks of life.

But most people aren't like that.

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