Sometimes when we first become friends with someone, we may overlook some red flags. So weaskedtheBuzzFeed Community: “What was the exact moment when you finally realized you were friends with the ‘mean girl’”? and a lot of people provided very vulnerable stories below:

1.“I was friends with her from middle school through college; we were actually roommates for a couple of years. I should have known she was trouble because she was constantly bouncing back and forth with certain friends, being close one minute and then cutting off and fighting the next. One evening, I was sitting on the patio of our apartment, and one of these on-again, off-again friends walked up and asked if she was home. I said yes and let him in, not thinking anything of it. Two minutes later, she was chasing him out and screaming at me, asking how I could let him in when I knew they were fighting. I was so pissed and just exhausted by it all. I couldn’t keep up with it anymore. At that moment, I knew it was over. I put major distance between us until our lease was up, and when she asked if I wanted to sign again, it was a hard no. I haven’t seen her since.”

2.“She hailed ‘good communication’ in relationships, but whenever she was upset or took any anger out on me, she gave me the silent treatment or intentionally started conversations to then ignore or be snappy towards me. (She later admitted to doing this all intentionally). She later tried to act like this never happened and be ‘somewhat friends’ without ever apologizing for her actions or caring how it all made me feel.”

— nicrae123

3.“I had abest friendwho I’ve known since kindergarten and when I look back, she was actually THE bully of my life. It was particularly bad in middle school when there were some days when she went out of her way to make my life hell. One time, she was ‘bored’ and decided to chew a whole pack of gum only to secretly spit it in my brand new backpack (not just once, but multiple times). Ironically, I was too busy to pay attention because I was doing HER homework for her. When I finally noticed, I was obviously upset, and she told me it was ‘just gum’ and got mad at me for being mad. I stayed in that friendship for that long because a) I was a kid and didn’t know any better b) after she did something shitty, she would usually love-bomb me back into the friendship. Last I heard, she roped in her high-school sweetheart into marrying her, and they’re recently in the midst of a divorce. I’m going to take a guess that she’s still toxic.”

4.“She was sleeping with my ex-husband for well over a year. My ex would take much longer getting home from work on certain days (saying he stopped at a buddy’s house, and his friends would, of course, cover for him). Then, when I was hospitalized, they both came to pick me up and made me sit in the back seat of my husband’s and my vehicle. She was my ‘best friend’. They both told me on Christmas Eve that they had been sneaking around for a few months and kicked me out of my own home. Mind you, she was also married with kids. On Mother’s Day that year, I found out that she was pregnant but she wasn’t sure if it was her husband’s or my ex’s. My ex now lives right next to her and her husband (who she went back to and is also pregnant again), and he solely takes care of their kid but doesn’t help to take care of our two boys. I’m now happily married and expecting my first baby girl.”

— gemamabear1621

5.“I had a really good friend who completely betrayed me. Let’s call her Sophie. At a wedding, I was dancing with a guy we were both friends with, Tom. We’d all had a bit to drink, and she took me aside and warned me kindly that it looked like Tom and I were getting a bit close, I was being a bit embarrassing, and I might regret it the next day. I actually really liked Tom, but I didn’t want a drunken thing in front of everyone and was shy of it going wrong, so I thanked her and composed myself. Later that night, she started flirting with him, and two weeks later, they got together. I put it aside. I’d never actually told her I liked him, and we were such good friends. I naively didn’t consider that it could have been malicious until a year later.”

" She apace discover a new friend chemical group of all ample girls . We would see her out sometimes , and she would flex her nose up at us . Well , daddy ’s caller sank within eight years of that , and they had no savings as they boast it all on stupid deep multitude shit . She no longer had a credit card and was forced to get a job . She got hook up with , got divorced , moved back home , and has been living the ' poor ' life ever since .

Only one of our friends from the old twenty-four hours accepted her apology and has been talking with her off and on . There ’s a circumstances more drama between us , so we have n’t talked , but yeah , she got her karma . Those rich friends dump her as presently as she lost all her stock . "

— morganleslay

Two women sit on a couch in a cozy living room talking. One is animated, gesturing with her hands, while the other listens attentively

7.“She was my sorority Big Sister, and I thought she was a real friend. We spent all our free time together. Then, one night, I mentioned that I was thinking of running for the executive board, and she looked me dead in the face and said, ‘As much as I love you, you won’t win. Nobody likes you. People think because you’re friends with some of the board members, you’re a snitch and a troublemaker. I know you aren’t, but that’s what they think.’ I knew at that moment it was a lie, but I was stunned and so, so sad because her words were either a lie that meant she wasn’t actually a good friend or the truth, which meant I had 60-something people who thought poorly of me.”

8.“So, currently, I’m in a friendship that I didn’t realize was toxic until recently. The girl, let’s call her Ava, has been going to school with me since 2nd grade at a small private school. I was never close friends with Ava until 8th grade (I’m in 9th) because I was put into a separate class away from my best friend that year. Ava isn’t mean to me, but she is to others, and when I call her off on it, she doesn’t see how what she said could genuinely hurt somebody. For most of 9th grade, I was in a friend group of four until Ava ruined it. She told the entire class about a girl’s private situation in her life. The girl completely left the friend group. That day, I made it clear to Ava that if she didn’t start being kind to others and respectful of them and their choices, then I would leave, too. She tried to be nicer, but she gave up after a week. I can’t decide if I should leave the friendship. Should I?”

— silverhawk17

10.“She kicked everyone out of her house when we were watching a movie. She didn’t like that people had different opinions and decided we should just leave. It wasn’t even a huge disagreement. Some people just didn’t find the message compelling. I told her I needed a break for a bit after that (in hindsight, she was highly co-dependent, and I had been waving that off as immaturity even though we were the same age). When we met up to discuss how to move forward in the friendship, she expected an apology for me needing space because it made her feel like the bad guy. I knew she had a victim complex, but I had a lot of sympathy for her and kept ignoring her tendency to be manipulative.”

" She would complain that people , especially past Friend , would abandon her , so I felt I had to try extra hard after the movie incident to ' testify ' that I would still be there for her . It did n’t matter because , after that , she look a few months and ghosted me — and several other friends . Do n’t ignore red flags y' all . "

— minirocket91

11.“In short, I didn’t realize that my former BFF (let’s call her Amy) was a mean girl because she was kind and generous to me (for the most part). Amy was gorgeous, vivacious, and had an enviable wardrobe. I noticed that she seemed to get in fights with friends a lot, but she always gave me some sob story about how mean they were to her. Eventually, I grew suspicious, and my suspicions were confirmed when I spoke to a former friend of hers (let’s call her Julie). It turns out that Amy is a mean girl who spreads harmful lies about friends, exes, and even employers. (I’m talking HARMFUL lies, like things that could ruin a person’s career.) She also bullied friends, finding their biggest insecurity or trauma and exploiting it.”

12.“I was friends with this girl in college. I was shy, and she was super extroverted, so I was naturally attracted to her personality. There are so many stories of her being a mean girl (i.e., throwingice creamat some random girl walking down the street, dipping a girl’s hair in popcorn flavoring while it dangled over the seat in front of us at the movies). Anyway, one of our mutual friends took up knitting as a hobby and made herself a beautiful scarf that took her HOURS to make. My ‘friend’ looked at her and said, ‘That is the ugliest thing I’ve ever seen.’ I knew right there that she was just straight-up mean and that she clearly didn’t understand how hurtful her words were.”

— creativesealion33

13.And finally, “The lightbulb moment was after high school. We had been friends since kindergarten but hadn’t kept in touch much after graduating, and I would no longer have considered her a close friend. When I got engaged in my early 20s and chose my bridal party, she told me she was surprised I wouldn’t have asked her to be a part of it since we were ‘best friends.’ I felt bad (so naive!), so I arranged to have her be a large part of the pre-wedding events.”

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