Well that’s fine - only she didn’t just “get out of it once she realized how immature it was.” She wrote a public article on it and slandered her ex friends. And she didn’t “get out of it” she was iced out. So she’s not low drama. She’s the definition of high drama. |
They should have said nothing. If they had ignored the article and not involved themselves at all, I think it would have blown over in a few days and no one would care about it at all. Duff's husband basically put up a bit flashing neon sign saying "HEY MY WIFE WAS 100% IN THAT GROUP ASHLEY TISDALE SAID WAS TOXIC AND IN CASE YOU WERE WONDERING: IT WAS AND IS TOXIC AND, SURPRISE!, I'M PART OF THE PROBLEM TOO." |
Nobody was slandered. She’s allowed to write about her own personal experiences after the fact. Your overreaction is a bit dramatic here. |
Everyone lies. But I find it odd that you're saying that the proper reaction to Ashley's article was to lie. That's...interesting. |
Weird take, but ok. If she was fine with all the women, like you seem to claim, then why couldn't they have either ironed out their differences or left on a good note? Better yet, why couldn't they all have written a joint article about the ways in which groups of really nice women can somehow become toxic when all of them are so nice? |
In their eyes it would almost certainly just be a denial. To Ashley it might appear to be a lie. She felt iced out and ignored. They might say they just didn’t like her becasue of x, y, z. They likely have a different take. So it’s not a lie but a different interpretation so they “don’t know what she’s talking about” or “aren’t friends” . It’s really not that hard. Do you often see things in black and white? |
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Just like when the pretty girl gets excluded by the other mean girls at the best lunch table in middle school, this group pulled the same on a former actress. Women can be the worst to other women.
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I think they probably just didn’t like her. |
All the women named are famously pretty. I think the interpersonal dynamics are probably a bit more complex than all my haterz jus jellus. |
It doesn't sound like the other women had any interest in ironing out differences or ending on a good note. Her description of the dynamic is that she felt excluded from activities and sidelined in general, but that when she reached out to say she was feeling hurt, people said things like "oh we just assumed you were invited" or that they forgot. I've been through this and that's part of the power play. They ignore you and exclude you, and if you say "hey it seems like people are upset with me but I don't know why, can we talk about it?" and everyone says "we have no idea what you're talking about, don't be so sensitive" and then it just continues. There is no closure, just a general feeling of rejection, and that is by design. They think no one can criticize them for their actions because they've gone out of their way to do the whole thing passively and under the cover of "oops I just just forgot to invite you." |
This is what I'm thinking. Especially if they were an already established closer group of women. It's hard to break into groups like that and you pretty much have to be universally liked/have multiple strong relationships with women in the larger group for it to happen. I've been in the same friend group of 10 women for about a decade now. We all have sub groups for different reasons (I'd say I'm in 4 subgroups) and we all have friendships/groups outside of the main group, but for many of us, this is the core local group. I have a shorthand with these women, they know me, my husband, my kids and we have a significant history with one another. It's not that I'm not interested in other friends, I'm fine creating new relationships, but I wouldn't initiate trying to fold another friend into this particular group. I can't say people are clamouring to join us, I think we're pretty chill and not overly obvious about our clique in most cases. I don't use social media and for the women in the group who do, they're very selective about posting. For me, as a general rule I don't talk about what I do and who I do it with with outside friends unless it's in some way pertinent, but I find it rarely is. Many of my non-group friends probably think I sit at home a lot and that's fine by me. |
+1 That group is likely a bangable buffet of young milfs. |
If they didn't like her and didn't want to be friends with her, then they should not have done things like shown up to her daughter's birthday party or invited her to all the things in the first place. Sure, maybe they invite her to a few things but people don't click and it fizzles out. That happens and I'm sure wouldn't feel good to her, but at least it's honest and a natural process and then she goes and finds other friends. What she describes is a group who were very friendly to her until suddenly they were not, and rather than discuss the issue with her like adults or at least own up to their change in feeling, decided to gaslight her by excluding her from things but then claiming later they just forgot to invite her. Passive aggression is a terrible personality trait. Don't do this. |
+1. You seem the same sort of behavior in here with people saying she had no business airing this in public and not talking it out as if the former friends were going to admit to what they were doing or be honest with her. If they wanted to handle it that way they would have, but they didn’t. |
Confirmation: i see Ems, Christina, Raina, and a Striker sister in the alleged toxic mom gang per page six
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