The narrator, a 24-year-old male working in an office setting, describes a situation involving a coworker named Amy (30F), who is known for making highly dramatic announcements.
For an entire week, Amy built anticipation about revealing some "HUGE news" during the team lunch on Friday, dropping vague hints that led to widespread speculation among the staff.
Feeling that the build-up was becoming excessive by Thursday, the narrator jokingly guessed Amy's news might be that she was pr****nt, which turned out to be correct.
This accidental reveal caused immediate awkwardness and upset Amy, who later confronted him, saying he "stole her thunder." The narrator is now unsure if he was wrong for spoiling her planned moment, despite it being only a lucky guess.












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The narrator is currently facing a conflict between acknowledging his accidental role in spoiling a coworker's planned announcement and the defense that his comment was merely a joke based on her own prolonged teasing.
The central issue revolves around respecting another person's desire to control the timing and presentation of personal news versus the unpredictable nature of social interaction when expectations are deliberately heightened.
Should the narrator accept full responsibility for ruining Amy's planned moment because the outcome affected her feelings, or is the coworker responsible for setting up such a high-stakes, prolonged reveal that invited accidental guessing?
The question remains whether the narrator is accountable for the emotional impact of an unintended spoiler.
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