You're not required to be here if it's not interesting. You've totally discounted what she said and think women should suck it up. Pretty obvious you're one of the mean girls. |
No, if you read what she wrote, she was complaining about being seated far from the queen bee. |
Yes, part of a growing pattern of being excluded, ostracized, and left out. She also tried to explain it away as you're doing here but it became obvious. Not sure why you're so dismissive of her experience. |
You sound like a control freak. I can discuss women dynamics in general with respect to her situation if I want and if you don't like it don't respond to my posts. She needs to learn, there are mean girls... it's not about you. You can't be part of every group, BFD, find your own group. It's not hard to learn to deal with people who are mean. They are in your family, they are at work, they were in school, they are neighbors, you can't get rid of them, you can only learn to not let them affect you. |
It was a growing pattern but she kept going back for more exclusion... why? just recognize these people are different values than you and move on. |
She's allowed to call out the mean girls. Sorry you feel triggered that not everyone is up for your BS. |
| I refuse to believe that Mandy Moore, Hillary Duff and Meghan Trainer are the mean girls in this group. |
Wow so mad and bitter that she put her thoughts out there about her experience. Why can't she just suffer in silence? |
DP from the person you are going back and forth with. I disagree it's "not hard" to deal with people who are mean. Especially people who are mean in passive aggressive ways that may make it hard to deal with in a straightforward way. Also people are different. I really struggle with people like this. I especially struggle with this particular sort of meanness, where it's like this social undermining. I'm not built for it and I really work to handle it well and, as you say, not let it affect me. I've been working at it for 20 years. It's still really hard. I've had to go to therapy to deal with it and my therapist says she has so many clients who struggle with these issues. To me I just come back to this: I cannot for the life of me understand why women engage in what they refer to as "friendships" with people they treat like this. It baffles me. I have known women who will say to my face that they *love* me, will compliment me and make a big show of how important I am to them (call me one of their best friends, talk me up to others, etc.) and then will just absolutely trash me behind my back, tell lies or exaggerations to make me look bad, etc. I had a friend like this once who started dating a guy I was good friends with and suddenly started making these little "jokes" about me making fun of my appearance, my education, my job. I was direct with her and told her the jokes hurt my feelings and made me not want to be around her, and this just made her meaner. But then she'd claim to other people that I was a "dear friend" and she was devastated to lose my friendship. In the end I concluded she's just manipulative and not a genuine person, but it wasn't easy and extracting myself from her friendship wasn't easy either. So yes people want to talk about this stuff, commiserate, try to help one another. Why is that bad? If anything I share can help someone not go through what I have, I am very happy to have helped. And when others talk about these experiences, it makes me feel less alone and that helps me feel more resilient in dealing with people like this who, again, I just don't understand. It's such a weird, dysfunctional approach to human relationships. I'll never get it. |
It's an abuse pattern. It's the same reason someone will stay in a relationship with an abuser. The abuser makes you feel dependent on them emotionally. The tactics are pretty well known. "Lovebombing" is a common one and very prevalent one and you can see how it's especially effective with women in new motherhood, which can be a time when you just feel unsure of yourself. Then when they are mean you don't trust your own judgment. Are they actually being mean or are you being too sensitive? They'll tell you you're being too sensitive, even if you just have this nagging issue where whenever you are around these women, you don't feel good. This is gaslighting. If you try to separate, they'll gossip about you. Since these are friend groups and not just one person, trying to get away from the one or two women who are the instigators doesn't work because if you try to hang out with others in the group, you will be accused of being exclusive. This is DARVO. And so on. That's why people linger in these toxic friend groups for years, just feeling vaguely bad but also feeling like if they leave, they'll lose all their friends and be alone. It's emotional abuse. It is really not dissimilar to an emotionally abusive romantic relationship. TL;DR: People don't leave because they have been convinced that their value is dependent on being part of the group. That's why it happens most often when women are in life transitions where they are likely to feel insecure, like new motherhood. It's vulnerable people falling into abusive patterns with people who are narcissistic and manipulative, not unlike people who wind up in emotionally abusive romantic relationships. |
There's a world of possibilities between suffering in silence and publishing an essay about it! |
DP and yes but also publishing an essay about it gives women who have struggled with the same thing a chance to feel seen and understood. It sounds like she was actually encouraged to write the essay by other women she spoke to after going through it who identified with her experience and liked what she had to say about it. The essay is also well written, so there is that. |
Really? A world of possibilities? Putting pen to paper, or typing out feelings, seems to be a pretty obvious possibility. But somehow it hurt your sensibilities to read it, I guess. |
I think everyone involved in this is a bit much, but my feelings certainly aren't hurt. (And if they were, I might type it out, but I would not submit it for publication as an essay in a widely-read magazine!) |
Why not? Because nobody would read it? Is it shameful? |