Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a time and place for these discussions and telling people you are just getting to know these things or talking about it a lot alienates people. It comes off as needy. No one likes needy. She needs professional help and good friends to support her - she really needs to learn what’s appropriate too.
So which "good friends" will support her? After all, "no one likes needy"? Really, all of you with the milk of human kindness flowing through your veins.
It must just be human nature to chase unlucky people out of the herd.
Anonymous wrote:I was in this friend's situation. My solution was to stop talking to people. Trauma is isolating. People don't understand, and though they love to think of themselves as lovely and caring, they're really just great big hypocrites.
Such a shame about your mood having been brought down, though, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a time and place for these discussions and telling people you are just getting to know these things or talking about it a lot alienates people. It comes off as needy. No one likes needy. She needs professional help and good friends to support her - she really needs to learn what’s appropriate too.
So which "good friends" will support her? After all, "no one likes needy"? Really, all of you with the milk of human kindness flowing through your veins.
It must just be human nature to chase unlucky people out of the herd.
Anonymous wrote:There is a time and place for these discussions and telling people you are just getting to know these things or talking about it a lot alienates people. It comes off as needy. No one likes needy. She needs professional help and good friends to support her - she really needs to learn what’s appropriate too.
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend who brings up her (very serious, very bad) trauma in basically every social situation. It puts a damper on the mood and then the whole event kind of has this shadow hanging over it for the rest of the duration. I was thinking of talking to this person privately and suggesting that they get professional help. I want them to know that I care about them but that this is a bit inappropriate. Is this going to come off as selfish but I don't really know what else to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a friend who brings up her (very serious, very bad) trauma in basically every social situation. It puts a damper on the mood and then the whole event kind of has this shadow hanging over it for the rest of the duration. I was thinking of talking to this person privately and suggesting that they get professional help. I want them to know that I care about them but that this is a bit inappropriate. Is this going to come off as selfish but I don't really know what else to do.
If there is anything I've learned is that she speaks of this trauma bc it effected her deeply and now is a part of her life. I completely understand not wanting to hear it and she probably shoud to go therapy for it. But not everyone can or does and they rely on friends to hear them out. It's hard to hear though for sure. My old friend had a miscarriage and it was the freaking saddest thing to hear, she told me everything. I was starting to get depressed and it was so so so sad for her.
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend who brings up her (very serious, very bad) trauma in basically every social situation. It puts a damper on the mood and then the whole event kind of has this shadow hanging over it for the rest of the duration. I was thinking of talking to this person privately and suggesting that they get professional help. I want them to know that I care about them but that this is a bit inappropriate. Is this going to come off as selfish but I don't really know what else to do.