People From Around The World Share Moments When They Realized They Were The Bad Guys
Someone does something to offend you. You get angry, and then you decide to get even. So you work yourself into a rage, you put on your evil Machiavellian hat, and you're delightedly planning your revenge in your dungeon lair, when you suddenly realize... Wait a minute. All that guy did was scuff my shoe. And in response I'm planning to take over the world? Am... Am I the bad guy here?
Okay, it's usually not as dramatic as all that, but you take the point. We've all had moments where we had to face up to the fact that we're the ones who are in the wrong; we're the bad guys.
These people from all over the world recently went online to share such stories. Hey -- at least they realized!
40. Every weekend is Halloween for them
39. They're in a better place now
38. What makes kids want to do this?!
37. From the mouths of babes
36. Watch yourself
35. You can become a bad boss without even realizing
34. That 1% though...
33. At least you realized you were wrong
32. Good for her for calling you out
31. A biiiiiiit of an overreaction
30. At least it's minty
29. Passing notes
28. Never jump to conclusions
27. Yeah, yeah, whatever
26. Some guys never learn this lesson
25. The common denominator
24. Too soon?
23. Rock and roll all night
Back in my rage-all-day-everyday college days, we’d routinely party until the sun came up. One time, a roommate came downstairs and turned down our music. As he was walking back upstairs, I cranked it back up. He came back and started jawing at me about respect and I wasn’t having any of that. Huge jerk energy on my part.
22. A change for the better
When I was a teen, I went to a restaurant with several of my friends. We had been at an arcade earlier, so I had a pocket full of quarters. My tip that night was quarters sprinkled in glasses, in food, and on plates. Thought it would be funny, but I look back on it now and it wasn’t. It’s something for which I’m deeply ashamed and it fills me with regret every time I think of it.
Now I am extremely nice to the wait staff.
21. Lost and found
20. This is like a knife in the heart
We were on a family holiday in a caravan park by the sea. I was probably 10 years old, maybe eleven. There was a large number of kids the same age as me who would hang around together. One of the kids was from the country and awkward. The crowd as a whole decided to exclude him from the activities by basically ignoring him.
Being young and easily led, I decided to follow the crowd. He came over to play football and everyone walked away from leaving him by himself and crying. He shouted out, “I thought you were my friend!” whilst bawling his eyes out. To this day, thirty-five years later, I can still hear him. Wish I had more backbone as a kid.
19. "Why won't women give nice guys like me a chance?"
18. Imagine their confusion
When I was a little kid, I mixed up the words “lesbian” and “pedestrian.” Long story short, there was a circular park near my house that my mom would walk around for exercise. I would ride my bike next to her. As she was walking, I was riding ahead of her trying to clear a path by saying, “Excuse me lesbians,” instead of, “Excuse me, pedestrians.”
17. E.T. phone home
Back in seventh grade, this really shy girl used to have a HUGE crush on me. Her friends told me she would leave PE early to go to the changing room in order to look pretty for the next class that we were both in. Then her friends kept asking for me to talk to her and ask her out, but I refused because to me, “She looked like an alien.”
Unfortunately, her friends told her, and she was devastated. I was honestly just stating why I didn’t want to “date” her, but I realized how freaking mean and terrible my comments were. I apologized to her for being an insensitive jerk and she forgave me. We managed to become friends in eighth grade and all throughout high school.
I still feel bad about whenever I think of her.
16. No such thing as free yogurt
15. Sneaky, sneaky
Went to a concert and did some pre-gaming in the parking lot. Start walking towards the venue and really have to pee. Getting to an area with lots of people around and no discreet location. Think I’m gonna pee myself. Get close enough where I can see the row of about 20 porta potties. Get tunnel vision towards my target and B-line it to the closest one.
Just as I reach for the handle, it opens up. Perfect timing. I go in and relieve myself. Come out and realize each porta potty had a line about 30 people deep. I just cut about 600 people. I felt bad, but worth it to not wet myself.
14. The better brother
13. That poor girl
12. The best laid plans
I broke up with my girlfriend of three years from a subway station pay phone in Germany. I was getting ready to live there for the year, and she was planning on moving there with me in a few months (she was living in the U.S. at the time). She was supposed to come out to visit me and check things out that following week.
I felt terrible, but it was clear to me we had no future, and I hadn’t really been able to admit it to myself until then. I was totally the jerk. She blocked my email not long after that.
11. I don't have the restraint to be this much of a jerk
I still feel bad about this even though it isn’t a huge thing. I went to a restaurant I am at all the time. I know the staff, they know me. I sat at the bar like I usually do and ordered a steak. The waitress isn’t paying much attention even though it isn’t busy. A runner brings out my steak and sets it down in front of me before disappearing back into the kitchen.
But, the problem is, I have no silverware. For some reason, this annoys me. There is no silverware set out on the tables I can grab, the waitress (who is also working the bar) isn’t paying much attention. So, I wait for her to come over. I could have yelled for her, I could have gone over and tapped her on the shoulder, but instead I waited.
30 minutes later she comes over with my bill. Looking down she sees that nothing has been touched. Surprised she asks, “Was something wrong with the steak?” I say, “I don’t know, I didn’t have any silverware to eat it with…” in exactly the ticked-off tone you would imagine. She apologizes and offers to go get silverware, but I tell her its cold now and I have to get back to work. I pay my bill, leave no tip and walk out.
There was no reason for me to be a jerk. I apologized to her over and over again afterward. It had been a frustrating day and I took it out on her. It was well within my power to get some silverware; I was just being a jerk.
10. No, anxiety is the bad guy
9. They got the wrong man
I had a terrible job in a warehouse and was getting bloody noses every single night because there was so much dust everywhere. One night, I put up a sign that said “This Job Sucks” on one of the pillars in the back. The next night, the line manager bought us all ice cream and as he was walking through the warehouse, he saw it.
Everybody knew that I had done it, but no one was going to snitch. Meanwhile, there was this annoying kid named Brandon who was making me angry and for some reason they suspected him. The next night, I almost got into a fight with him over some stupid stuff and at the end of the shift, they fired him, thinking he had put the sign up.
I totally got away with it.
8. You let them make you cold
I was bullied in elementary school, the worst of which happened around the fifth and sixth grades. In seventh grade, things began to improve a bit, and by grade eight they were pretty much okay, but I still carried a lot of that trauma. In eighth grade, a girl in my class, who was not part of, but who was friends with the people who had bullied me, asked for my number so we could text each other over the march break.
I gave it to her, reluctantly, and said, “Fine, but you know I’d never actually text you right?” I still remember the crestfallen look on her face. I still feel awful about that to this day. I let what those kids did to me embitter me to the point that I didn’t believe that someone who was friends with the “popular” crowd would interact with me without it being some sort of cruel joke.
I apologized to her a couple years later in high school, when I got over a lot of my misgivings about people, and she explained that she had felt so bad about what had gone on with her friend group and me because she had realized that year that everything they’d said about me was false. She was being genuine when she asked for my number, and she wanted to try and make up for all the horrible things they’d done.
Despite the fact that she was upset and initially didn’t understand my reaction, she said that she understood at that point what it had probably looked like in my mind, and that she didn’t blame me at all for reacting snottily. We’re all good now, but I’ll still always remember that moment as an important reminder for myself.
Sometimes people are genuine, and sometimes they’re kind, and that when you assume that everyone is bad all the time you miss out on some really great people.
7. Some things you can never unsay
When I was in elementary school, there was this kid who lost his father to cancer during the school year. One day after he came back to school (can’t remember how long after), we got into some sort of dispute on the playground. I don’t remember exactly how it came to me saying, “At least my dad isn’t dead,” but that’s exactly what came out of my mouth.
I spent the day in the principal’s office. To this day, this is one of the biggest regrets of my life and I’m 23. I still feel terrible about it because I never got to apologize to the kid because we moved away shortly after. I don’t even remember his name, but I’ll never forget saying that.
6. "I stole it fair and square"
Back in the fifth grade, there was this kid with a really cool ruler (one of those blue and green ones that’s rubber and you can bend it and whatnot). One day, I decided I was going to steal it. It was during recess, and no one noticed me, and my plan was dutifully completed. I tried being smart about it and didn’t start using it until a few days later, but the kid found out and tattled on the teacher, so I lost the ruler.
10-year-old me thought, “That’s not fair! I stole it fair and square!” I eventually came up with the thought that if I couldn’t have it, neither could he. So again, I stole the ruler during another recess, but this time, I decided to drop it into a drain, never to be seen again.
5. That's just how the Play Place smells
I was at the McDonald’s Play Place with some of my kids a few years back. Two boys who I assumed were brothers came down the slide. The bigger one said, “It stinks in there! I think somebody farted.” Completely forgetting that I’m not among my friends, I point to the other kid and raise my eyebrows like, “I think he did it.”
The other kid gets all sad looking and backs away from me. I said I was sorry and just kidding, but it turns out they weren’t brothers or even friends and the damage was done. The kid gave me the stink eye as he left with his grandpa shortly after. Basically, I was a Vince Vaughn character.
4. My fist will fix it
Once I was having a smoke outside the bar in my hometown doing whatever, being young, when, on the way in, this guy makes some crack at me about how I was dressed. I got pretty mad about it and lipped off to my friends. This got back to the guy inside, who had some mutual friends or something, and he ended up asking me if I wanted to step outside.
My blood already having being fired up, I looked at him and just said, “Ya, let’s do it,” and another guy near my age steps out with us. In the lights of the entrance as we get outside, just as I’m going into get-ready-to-scrap mode, I get my first clear look at the guy… he had to be near 60 and was not a large man by any means.
It was at exactly this moment that I realized: A) I was going to fight an old man outside the pub and kick his butt, looking like a piece of crap or B) I was going to get my butt kicked by said old man and look like a complete tool. In that moment, I actually had the exact thought: “Oh, I’m the jerk here.”
He said he didn’t realize what he said would get me so mad and apologized, and I said I overreacted and made a fool of myself. We went off on our separate ways, but still, sometimes I look back on this whole thing and just think... man, what were you thinking?
3. Pennies from heaven
I did this as a kid (8 or 9). There's a bar above the rink where my Dad played broomball every Friday night. I'd go to every game.
He'd go grab a drink with friends/teammates afterwards and I'd play air hockey with some other kids in the adjacent room.
Whenever we need a $1 for the machine, I'd go to the bar because there'd always seem to be a dollar or two just lying on the bar top.
I always thought the adults we're just forgetful with their money after the got a drink and that money was fine to take.
Guess I was just stealing from bartenders every Friday night for about a year...
2. Yeah, you're a bad person
I ghosted a girl off Tinder after we slept together. Not long after that I got hired at a restaurant and found out she worked there too. Then I saw her changing her wig and my trainer told me she had cancer.
1. There's a perfectly rational explanation for everything...
I suspected my wife of cheating and had had the feeling for some time, so when she received a late-night text, while she was sleeping, I decided I needed to check her phone. The text was from a known friend and was typical so no big deal, but I chose to scan through previous ones just to…I guess see if there was anything.
I wasn’t opening them, just skimming to see if there were any obvious signs. Not too far in, I found a number I didn’t recognize and didn’t have any name attached. There were all these romantic texts saying things like we never had enough time and stuff like that. I was upset and couldn’t decide if I should wake her or confront her the next day after having thought things over.
About an hour or so later, I heard her get up to use the bathroom. Without giving it much thought, I went to her. After a little small talk, I asked her who the heck the number was. She paused and stared at me, and it was then I had my answer. I told her about the texts I found and repeated some of them. I explained why I was going through her phone. And she laughed at me.
She said they were song lyrics she had sent to herself to look up later (this was pre-smartphone) and that I’m a dumbass for not knowing his own wife’s phone number. I pulled my phone out and, sure enough, hers was the number I had found. I was, indeed, a dumbass. And now a snooping jerk. She kept her phone locked after that, and we happily divorced soon after.