Anonymous wrote:I agree with these posts. Toying with someone as an adult for sure is a sign of insecurity or a mental disorder. People that do this to you are insecure in themselves or may even secretly desire to be with you or like you and know they cannot. Either way best to simply avoid them.
Anonymous wrote:None of these people do it to everyone, or at least not to the same extent. It's always part of an "in group/out group" thing.
If you feel you are consistently targeted by people like this, then they are consistently identifying something about you. You can accept it, ignore it, leave when it happens, or try to develop in a way that makes you less of a target -- but you can't change them, and getting your feelings knotted up in the situation just makes it worse.
I'm not saying it's right. I'm saying that what you have control over is you. You can accept and deal, leave, or change. Talking about how mean it is at places like here may make you feel briefly better, but it changes nothing. Sad but true.
Mean people exist.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think they realize this about themselves, OP. They think well enough of you to befriend you, and then perhaps they some remarks escape them when referring to you when you're not there.
I have a very generous, kind-hearted, friend. Sometimes she has a few choice words when she talks about her other friends. She judges certain things about them. I'm sure she judges certain things about me, that she's shared with others. But every time any of us are in trouble, she's there for us: she cares for children of friends who have to go to hospital, she visits me when I'm sick and sends gifts of stuff she knows I like. I drove her to her chemo appointments. Actions matter more than words.
Autism makes it really hard to finely judge in these situations, OP, I know that. It's hard to distinguish gentle ribbing from a mean joke. It's difficult to weigh how to talk about people when they're not there. I think the bottom line is whether they're here for you when you need their help, and whether you're there for them when they need your help.
Anonymous wrote:Were they cats in a past life? What is the joy in playing headgames with someone, leading them on, pretending to be a friend to their face and then making jokes at their expense behind their back?
I didn't understand this when it was a middle school rite of passage, and I definitely don't understand it now. Maybe it's the integrity, maybe it's the autism... in any case, I'd love to hear from some of you Machiavellian manipulators as to what pleasure you derive from this little pastime.
I know there are loads of you on this site, so let's hear it!
Anonymous wrote:I don't think they realize this about themselves, OP. They think well enough of you to befriend you, and then perhaps they some remarks escape them when referring to you when you're not there.
I have a very generous, kind-hearted, friend. Sometimes she has a few choice words when she talks about her other friends. She judges certain things about them. I'm sure she judges certain things about me, that she's shared with others. But every time any of us are in trouble, she's there for us: she cares for children of friends who have to go to hospital, she visits me when I'm sick and sends gifts of stuff she knows I like. I drove her to her chemo appointments. Actions matter more than words.
Autism makes it really hard to finely judge in these situations, OP, I know that. It's hard to distinguish gentle ribbing from a mean joke. It's difficult to weigh how to talk about people when they're not there. I think the bottom line is whether they're here for you when you need their help, and whether you're there for them when they need your help.