When a friend asks for something of yours

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The fact you have had three friends like this means there is something going on with you that you put up with this nonsense. I’m not blaming you — these people are terrible. But I’m 51 with lots of friends over many years. No one has ever asked me something like this. I do think you need more insight as to why you remain friends with people like this.
Many of us learn these behaviors from one of our parents so the behavior is familiar and we don't shy away from it as other people might, even if it makes us uncomfortable. OP - the first step is to acknowledge that your friend's behavior makes you really uncomfortable. The next step is to ask yourself why you invited someone like this into your life. And then you work on learning to build boundaries in your relationships and not to say yes when you really want to say no. Who cares that this person does so much for others. That doesn't actually make them a good person. Selflessness can be a good trait but not always. They feed off people like you who think you must be crazy to say no to someone who is seemingly so generous to others with their time. You are not a bad person for having manipulative people in your life but you can definitely learn how to stop the cycle once you understand why you do this.


I thought about this, and whether it was true. My parents never took my stuff. But I also I never really had ownership over anything until I was closer to 18.

This is fairly typical right? In other words, up until I was close to an adult, I never picked out anything for myself, although things were bought for me. And also, things would just disappear from my room without a word.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The fact you have had three friends like this means there is something going on with you that you put up with this nonsense. I’m not blaming you — these people are terrible. But I’m 51 with lots of friends over many years. No one has ever asked me something like this. I do think you need more insight as to why you remain friends with people like this.
Many of us learn these behaviors from one of our parents so the behavior is familiar and we don't shy away from it as other people might, even if it makes us uncomfortable. OP - the first step is to acknowledge that your friend's behavior makes you really uncomfortable. The next step is to ask yourself why you invited someone like this into your life. And then you work on learning to build boundaries in your relationships and not to say yes when you really want to say no. Who cares that this person does so much for others. That doesn't actually make them a good person. Selflessness can be a good trait but not always. They feed off people like you who think you must be crazy to say no to someone who is seemingly so generous to others with their time. You are not a bad person for having manipulative people in your life but you can definitely learn how to stop the cycle once you understand why you do this.


I thought about this, and whether it was true. My parents never took my stuff. But I also I never really had ownership over anything until I was closer to 18.

This is fairly typical right? In other words, up until I was close to an adult, I never picked out anything for myself, although things were bought for me. And also, things would just disappear from my room without a word.
No the behavior you learned was about not having boundaries and not being able to say no to people without feeling guilty.
Anonymous
Duh of course you shouldn’t. It’s a ridiculous request. I would be so weirded out if a friend was asking for my stuff and would obviously not do this to someone.
Anonymous
Only relevancy would be, "if you ever think of getting rid of it, please think of me. I really love it." Sometimes people do redecorate. But this is something said once, once only
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The fact you have had three friends like this means there is something going on with you that you put up with this nonsense. I’m not blaming you — these people are terrible. But I’m 51 with lots of friends over many years. No one has ever asked me something like this. I do think you need more insight as to why you remain friends with people like this.
Many of us learn these behaviors from one of our parents so the behavior is familiar and we don't shy away from it as other people might, even if it makes us uncomfortable. OP - the first step is to acknowledge that your friend's behavior makes you really uncomfortable. The next step is to ask yourself why you invited someone like this into your life. And then you work on learning to build boundaries in your relationships and not to say yes when you really want to say no. Who cares that this person does so much for others. That doesn't actually make them a good person. Selflessness can be a good trait but not always. They feed off people like you who think you must be crazy to say no to someone who is seemingly so generous to others with their time. You are not a bad person for having manipulative people in your life but you can definitely learn how to stop the cycle once you understand why you do this.


I thought about this, and whether it was true. My parents never took my stuff. But I also I never really had ownership over anything until I was closer to 18.

This is fairly typical right? In other words, up until I was close to an adult, I never picked out anything for myself, although things were bought for me. And also, things would just disappear from my room without a word.
No the behavior you learned was about not having boundaries and not being able to say no to people without feeling guilty.


OHHH. Yeah, that was 100 percent true. I was never allowed to say no. I would have gotten whooped by my parents. And yeah I would have been given a major guilt trip or made out to be a really bad selfish girl by my grandma and my aunts.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The fact you have had three friends like this means there is something going on with you that you put up with this nonsense. I’m not blaming you — these people are terrible. But I’m 51 with lots of friends over many years. No one has ever asked me something like this. I do think you need more insight as to why you remain friends with people like this.
Many of us learn these behaviors from one of our parents so the behavior is familiar and we don't shy away from it as other people might, even if it makes us uncomfortable. OP - the first step is to acknowledge that your friend's behavior makes you really uncomfortable. The next step is to ask yourself why you invited someone like this into your life. And then you work on learning to build boundaries in your relationships and not to say yes when you really want to say no. Who cares that this person does so much for others. That doesn't actually make them a good person. Selflessness can be a good trait but not always. They feed off people like you who think you must be crazy to say no to someone who is seemingly so generous to others with their time. You are not a bad person for having manipulative people in your life but you can definitely learn how to stop the cycle once you understand why you do this.


I thought about this, and whether it was true. My parents never took my stuff. But I also I never really had ownership over anything until I was closer to 18.

This is fairly typical right? In other words, up until I was close to an adult, I never picked out anything for myself, although things were bought for me. And also, things would just disappear from my room without a word.
president then.



Honestly this is bizarre. I was given gifts and those were mine. Like from 5 on. I picked out things for my room. I had an allowance and what I used it for was mine. Things never disappeared.

Anonymous
WTAF??? She is incredibly rude.

NO, do not give her the poster.
Anonymous
Skip president then not sure how it got there. OP are your family immigrants or have a religious affiliation
corresponding to treating girls as les than with no property rights.
Anonymous
What *I* would do is say “no bit** I’ve already told you that you can’t have it, stop asking.” I would then move on with life because there is no way I am feeling bad about not giving some entitled friend a cherished gift from my husband just because they want it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The fact you have had three friends like this means there is something going on with you that you put up with this nonsense. I’m not blaming you — these people are terrible. But I’m 51 with lots of friends over many years. No one has ever asked me something like this. I do think you need more insight as to why you remain friends with people like this.
Many of us learn these behaviors from one of our parents so the behavior is familiar and we don't shy away from it as other people might, even if it makes us uncomfortable. OP - the first step is to acknowledge that your friend's behavior makes you really uncomfortable. The next step is to ask yourself why you invited someone like this into your life. And then you work on learning to build boundaries in your relationships and not to say yes when you really want to say no. Who cares that this person does so much for others. That doesn't actually make them a good person. Selflessness can be a good trait but not always. They feed off people like you who think you must be crazy to say no to someone who is seemingly so generous to others with their time. You are not a bad person for having manipulative people in your life but you can definitely learn how to stop the cycle once you understand why you do this.


I thought about this, and whether it was true. My parents never took my stuff. But I also I never really had ownership over anything until I was closer to 18.

This is fairly typical right? In other words, up until I was close to an adult, I never picked out anything for myself, although things were bought for me. And also, things would just disappear from my room without a word.


That is not normal, no. Have you considered therapy to talk about your childhood and boundaries and friendship?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The fact you have had three friends like this means there is something going on with you that you put up with this nonsense. I’m not blaming you — these people are terrible. But I’m 51 with lots of friends over many years. No one has ever asked me something like this. I do think you need more insight as to why you remain friends with people like this.
Many of us learn these behaviors from one of our parents so the behavior is familiar and we don't shy away from it as other people might, even if it makes us uncomfortable. OP - the first step is to acknowledge that your friend's behavior makes you really uncomfortable. The next step is to ask yourself why you invited someone like this into your life. And then you work on learning to build boundaries in your relationships and not to say yes when you really want to say no. Who cares that this person does so much for others. That doesn't actually make them a good person. Selflessness can be a good trait but not always. They feed off people like you who think you must be crazy to say no to someone who is seemingly so generous to others with their time. You are not a bad person for having manipulative people in your life but you can definitely learn how to stop the cycle once you understand why you do this.


I thought about this, and whether it was true. My parents never took my stuff. But I also I never really had ownership over anything until I was closer to 18.

This is fairly typical right? In other words, up until I was close to an adult, I never picked out anything for myself, although things were bought for me. And also, things would just disappear from my room without a word.
president then.



Honestly this is bizarre. I was given gifts and those were mine. Like from 5 on. I picked out things for my room. I had an allowance and what I used it for was mine. Things never disappeared.



No allowance. They also didn’t want me getting a job. If I needed anything, I had to ask. And honestly most things they said no to, so I didn’t ask, or I just felt too guilty to ask for something for myself. But things like school supplies, and such, I could buy. My aunts brought me clothes on my bdays and I got hand me downs. My aunts decorated my room, I had no input. My room was like a hotel room. Nothing individualized. No pictures.

Looking back maybe that’s why I felt so sentimentally attached to those little things like my shorts and the clock.
Anonymous
You do know that sometimes people are incredibly giving to manipulate other people, right?
Anonymous
I have a lot of friends and I have literally never had any friend ask me for anything I owned. I have had friends who expressed interest in stuff my daughter had outgrown and I happily gave that stuff away. But your situation is weird. This woman is crazy and you should cut ties.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:You do know that sometimes people are incredibly giving to manipulate other people, right?
Most people don't know this.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:You do know that sometimes people are incredibly giving to manipulate other people, right?


Yes. And as soon as you set a boundary and say no they will start listing off all the things they did for you.

They are keeping very close track and see it as a debt that you owe them.

Been there. I have a mother like this, so I attracted this type into my life until I really figured out why.
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