Updated
Updated · USA TODAY · Jul 13
TikTok’s ‘Crisis Friend’ Debate Tops 2 Million Views as Experts Urge Nuance on One-Sided Friendships
Updated
Updated · USA TODAY · Jul 13

TikTok’s ‘Crisis Friend’ Debate Tops 2 Million Views as Experts Urge Nuance on One-Sided Friendships

1 articles · Updated · USA TODAY · Jul 13

Summary

  • A TikTok debate over the “crisis friend” — someone who mainly contacts friends during emergencies — has gone viral, with one video warning against such relationships drawing more than 2 million views.
  • Experts say the label can blur an important distinction: a chronically one-sided friendship versus a temporary “crisis season” when someone genuinely needs extra support.
  • Shasta Nelson and psychotherapist Stephanie Sarkis say the real test is reciprocity over time — whether the friendship has enough mutual support, or “deposits,” to absorb periods of heavy need.
  • That question is getting sharper as loneliness leaves people with fewer close relationships, pushing more emotional demands onto a small circle of friends.
  • Their advice is to ask directly for reciprocity, thank friends for support, shift some conversations away from crisis, and avoid expecting conflict-free friendships.

Insights

Is the 'crisis friend' a toxic personality, or a symptom of our collective loneliness epidemic?
In an era of compassion fatigue, are our expectations for perfectly reciprocal friendships becoming unrealistic?
How do you set boundaries with a draining friend without making them feel completely abandoned?