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-   -   True Friends (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=19500)

freshnesschronic 02-10-2009 09:19 AM

True Friends
 
So I thought I had a true friend. A new friend who was down for me most all the time, we talk about most anything at a personal level. But then I've noticed recently when she has become very stressed, with school, social life, and extra curriculars she says things to me which are very cruel. I, knowing her personality and how she exaggerates every issue in her life and makes it seem like only she is going through this excruciating pain, just shrug it off because I know not to take it at face value. But I've realized she says this bullshit to me, directly criticizes and says harsh statements at times, and then never apologizes later. I mean yes I know she lets things overwhelm her, but that's still not cool to never say to a good friend "I'm sorry about what I said earlier, I didn't mean it, I just got caught up in my emotions."

Perry Winkle 02-10-2009 10:28 AM

Talk to her about it when she's not feeling completely overwhelmed?

kerosene 02-10-2009 10:32 AM

Some people don't know how to apologize. It's weird, yes, but true. You know how when you were little and did something to hurt someone (even accidentally) and your mom would say "You need to say you are sorry?" Well, some peoples' parents never do that. There are people in my life like that and it drives me crazy, but I just have to understand that they don't know how.

dar512 02-10-2009 02:38 PM

It depends on whether they feel it but can't or won't say it, or they just don't feel it. IME people with no empathy are not worth the time, and potentially dangerous.

kerosene 02-10-2009 02:41 PM

That's true. I was assuming Fresh's girl was one of the former. I hate to think that there are people out there who have no sense of remorse at all. But I know some of them, so I know they exist.

Aliantha 02-10-2009 03:33 PM

I'm with the 'tell her how you're feeling' vote on this one. Maybe she sees those things she says as far less important than you do. Maybe she just assumes that you know she doesn't mean it the way it sounds.

Just let her know that it's not cool to do it in the first place, and it's even less cool to not say something when things have settled down.

Clodfobble 02-10-2009 06:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by freshnesschronic
how she exaggerates every issue in her life and makes it seem like only she is going through this excruciating pain

Can I tell you the honest truth? She is a drama queen, and is not going to change. She is not getting stressed and snapping at you unexpectedly, she is using her stress as an excuse for attention and drama. Mark my words, this person is not worth being around in the long run.

Aliantha 02-10-2009 06:06 PM

They're pretty young yet though Clod, and lots of 'kids' that age do tend toward drama until they either realise it's unneccessary or someone points it out to them. Maybe there's hope for her.

eta: I guess what I'm trying to say is that if fresh really does think she's a good friend, she might be worth the effort and when it all comes down to it, no one's perfect.

Beestie 02-10-2009 06:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clodfobble (Post 532982)
Can I tell you the honest truth? She is a drama queen, and is not going to change. She is not getting stressed and snapping at you unexpectedly, she is using her stress as an excuse for attention and drama. Mark my words, this person is not worth being around in the long run.

Exactly. Man up and tell her to find another punching bag.

Shawnee123 02-10-2009 06:11 PM

Heh...I'm torn on this one.

Earlier I wanted to say that the sad truth is that a person who has a handful of TRUE friends is very lucky. I thought it sounded negative, and I'm not trying to diss the human race, but I think that "tried and true would lay down and die for you" is a rare connection.

I also thought she seemed like a princess type, but then I thought maybe some of the others are right: talk to her and tell her.

If she's really a jerk she'll be completely unreceptive, and you'll know.

Not for a few years, buddy, but if you do find a woman who is a tried and true best friend...marry her! :)

TheMercenary 02-10-2009 07:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Perry Winkle (Post 532799)
Talk to her about it when she's not feeling completely overwhelmed?

I would have to agree. I think by talking to her when she is not spinning up in her stress and nastiness that most, but obviously not all, people will be reasonable, esp if you have developed a relationship from the past experiences as you described them. Sit her down and tell her your feelings, all of them. You cannot be vague, you must be specific about the things that bothered you by the specific things she said that hurt you. She will understand or she will lose it completely and you will be right back where you started, so nothing really lost. I would find it hard to continue to have a relationship with her after that point if she goes off on you for your honesty. Good luck.

Hoof Hearted 02-10-2009 09:49 PM

I wouldn't wait for a calm/quiet period to discuss it at all. Why take a nice moment and ruin it? ...because she (if she is a true drama-llama) will feel she is being unjustly attacked and will react negatively.

Nope.
Toss it right back at her the very next time she snarks-off at you.
Ask her why she would say something like that to you?
Or tell her (with a smile on your face and in your voice) that was a lovely thing to say and then leave her company immediately.

If you show her no reaction, it is reinforcing her belief that her behavior is acceptable and she will escalate it, and never moderate it, if you don't let her know it is not acceptable.
If she never contacts you again...count yourself lucky.


*story*
I had a BF who got angry at me for something I had no control over.
I was to drop him off to fish at a river with his brother for two hours and I was going to the stable to ride my horse. After my ride, I was to return to the river to pick him and his brother up at the agreed upon time.
No cell phones.
BF's fishing pole broke after the first few casts, but by the time he walked to the little bait store to use the pay phone, I had already left the stable on my horse and was unreachable. When I returned from my relaxing ride, he was fuming and took it out on me verbally, though I had no control over what had happened. He told me to: 'not even think about staying overnight with him'.
I dropped him and his brother off, didn't say a word and drove home. I didn't make any effort to contact him. After about three days, he called me and asked why I hadn't been around, and I reminded him that I was doing what he last told me to do. He was silent as he thought about that. I didn't help him or make it easier for him to apologize to me. But he did apologize.

Oh, how I wish I had just stayed "gone". I would not have suffered further at his whims, though I am glad of the opportunity to appreciate my husband because of that evil-tempered BF.

When people show you who they are...believe them.
This girl is showing you who she is. Are you going to believe her?

classicman 02-10-2009 10:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hoof Hearted (Post 533073)
When people show you who they are...believe them.

Excellent!

Stormieweather 02-10-2009 10:51 PM

Some people thrive on drama. They aren't concerned with the effects of their drama on those around them, they're focusing on the adrenaline rush that emotional overdrive brings. They like living emotionally on the edge and often encourage drama to fill their addiction.

You can tell this friend you're hurt by her attitude towards you and ask her to stop, but if she chooses not to, there is nothing further you can do about her.

You do have the right to choose not to have that sort of person in your life, however.

freshnesschronic 02-11-2009 12:35 AM

Thank you all, I appreciate it.

I will say this, she is definitely a drama queen--half the conversation we have is about some of her issues.

I'm going to totally reevaluate the friendship in 3 weeks--right now I am coordinating a dance scene with her with other students. After our performance I will take a serious step back from the friendship and see what happens--I honestly don't like being around people who think they can say whatever and still think "oh it's ok we're friends." Honestly, we've only been friends for a year and close friends for 8 months, so yeah I don't have that many attachments do her that would hurt my social life....I think...But yes I did consider her a good friend, before this semester when she became more than overwhelmed.

xoxoxoBruce 02-11-2009 12:42 AM

When she attacks you, smack her in the snoot.

DanaC 02-11-2009 10:26 AM

'drama queen' can be a stage rather than the fixed character. If nobody bothers challenging her on her attitude, then she will continue on her merry way thinking that's acceptable. You're both young and still learning how to be the adults you now are. All the rules start changing and people change and evolve alongside at very different rates.

Don't put up with it. Being her friend and being her emotional punchbag are not the same thing. Putting up with that kind of nonsense wouldn't do her any favours and harms you.

lookout123 02-11-2009 12:44 PM

drama queens? no thanks. run fast and far.

footfootfoot 02-11-2009 05:52 PM

http://www.zappos.com/n/es/d/35217/page/1.html

lumberjim 02-11-2009 06:19 PM

if she's mean to you and doesnt care enough about your feeeelings to apologize......maybe youre the bitch.

in the relationship, i mean. maybe she's more masculine than you are. i mean....probably she's more masculine. go have a nice cry. you'll feel better.

Spectacle 02-11-2009 07:25 PM

I don't think you've known her long enough. Only friends for a year? Now she is showing you how she reacts to things that aren't going good for her...and now that you have seen it (and you don't like it) then you should tell her straight up or just...don't look to her as a good friend.

classicman 02-11-2009 07:48 PM

let her go - don't initiate contact with her and when (if) she asks why... tell her. In ten or twenty years you'll laugh about her with your "True Friends."

Cicero 02-11-2009 11:40 PM

True Friends tell their friends when they are being a bitch. It's true. I've had to do this several times and will continue to do it. We usually remain friends.

DanaC 02-12-2009 05:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cicero (Post 533548)
True Friends tell their friends when they are being a bitch.

That is so fuckin' true.

Perry Winkle 02-13-2009 01:09 AM

I wouldn't take Hoof Hearted's approach. That will end up escalating an already tense situation, which is as mature as treating someone poorly in the first place.

You can still let her know her behavior is unacceptable without escalating. Directly and calmly (if possible) tell her how you feel about the way she's treating you. It doesn't help to be passive aggressive.

Don't start in with dramatic lines like "why would you say that to me?" She'll respond with her excuse about how overwhelmed she is, and it will all become part of an act you will be doomed to repeat as long as the relationship continues.

piercehawkeye45 02-13-2009 08:26 AM

It is not an excuse to consistently attack someone over stress. People do slip every once in a while but if its on a consistent basis that means there are deeper problems or, more likely, she is just a drama queen. Everyone gets stressed and has to deal with it without taking it out on others, its a part of life.

I personally would yell at her the next time she did that to me and directly question her of how she has some right to attack people when she gets stressed but no one else doesn't. Mention how I have stress but I do not use it as an excuse to attack other people, how other people have stress and do not use it to attach other people. That will force the issue upon her that she is either a drama queen and other people have caught on to it and are not willing to take it or she is very bad at controlling stress and has deeper issues. That will force her to change or move on. I would benefit from either.

Shawnee123 02-13-2009 08:33 AM

What do you call a guy who is always yakkin' and bawling...a Drama King?

dar512 02-13-2009 09:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Shawnee123 (Post 534018)
What do you call a guy who is always yakkin' and bawling...a Drama King?

Guys tend to suffer in silence. Unless their looking for pity sex.

A bit of trivia. Camels are known to grow very attached to their mates and male camels will mourn over a lost love. But in their case they're known as dramedarys.

Perry Winkle 02-13-2009 09:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Shawnee123 (Post 534018)
What do you call a guy who is always yakkin' and bawling...a Drama King?

A Mongolian porn star.

footfootfoot 02-13-2009 09:57 PM

Friends help you move.
True friends help you move bodies.

Perry Winkle 02-14-2009 12:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot (Post 534313)
True friends help you move bodies.

And they don't bitch about carrying the heavy end.

xoxoxoBruce 02-14-2009 02:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dar512 (Post 534031)
A bit of trivia. Camels are known to grow very attached to their mates and male camels will mourn over a lost love. But in their case they're known as dramedarys.

:thumb2:


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