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AITJ for refusing to help my friend fix a contract mess after he ignored my warnings?
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Someone gets excited about an opportunity, sends over the paperwork as a formality, and receives back a careful and detailed explanation of why this specific document is a problem. The response to that explanation is almost never gratitude. It is usually some variation of you worry too much, relax, not everything is a legal thriller. The advice gets ignored and the person who gave it gets turned into a bit at their expense for a few weeks in the group chat.
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Then the thing that was always going to happen happens.
The part that deserves more attention here is not the contract blowing up. That was predictable and predicted out loud. The more interesting part is the expectation that the person who was mocked for giving the warning should now donate their weekend to fixing the fallout. The logic only works if you treat expertise as a renewable resource that resets after every use. He said no thank you to the help when it was free and clean and would have actually solved the problem. Now that the problem is live and messy and requires significantly more work, the help is expected again, presumably without any acknowledgment of what happened in between. -
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Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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Being called petty for this is a very specific kind of frustrating. Petty implies the refusal is about ego or score settling. It is not. It is about the fact that help has a cost, and that cost is easier to ignore when everything is still fine. The guy who reads the fine print is a useful friend to have. He just is not infinitely useful in every direction regardless of how the previous interaction went.
Some messes are worth cleaning up. Some messes are tuition. -
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