Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I quickly made friends with this woman who I was only loosely acquainted with. We had a lot in common and were both restarting our careers after some time off raising young kids.
I connected her to someone prominent in my community who was looking to hire someone part time. Since then, I’ve started to feel like she’s social climbing and that I’m not making the cut. We haven’t fought but I feel like she’s slow fading me.
I haven’t felt this weird since I was in middle or high school. Most of my women friends have been pretty low drama. At first I was wondering if I did something to make her upset and then I thought about it more and concluded it’s social climbing. The other friends she’s posting with are richer than me and they take more trips together. It does give me a bit of FOMO but I don’t really want to be friends with the other women, so not really. I guess it just makes me feel a little envious or left out.
Nothing really to ask. Similar stories of this happening to 30-40s women would make me feel better though.
the friendship didn’t actually take shape the way you expected. That happens sometimes, and it’s important to recognize it for what it is so you can move forward cleanly. You showed up with good intentions, and now you know where things stand. No need to hold space for something that isn’t there.
Sometimes feelings actually are facts. OP - don't wait to be dropped. Go ahead and do the dropping. Stop reaching out. This person has shown you who she is. No need to invest more energy in the friendship.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'd move on.
You did her a great favor .. it somewhat backfired.
How did it backfire? “Higher status” (which is how OP sees it, not how I do) people will always remember what you did. I’ve been the recipient of this in so many ways.
Favours like network contacts should be transactional, and to me it’s weird that you’ve made it that way. I’m not sure what you want from her?
Feelings aren’t facts, and your FOMO and whatever are on you, honestly. You could be networking more with this other person if it was what you wanted. Or maybe, these people socially click more than you do. That’s part of life, and it’s you making it more middle school by holding the fact that you introduced them as some kind of currency.
I know it hurts to be left out, but you need to reflect on your part. If it wasn’t that important to you before, why is it so important to you now?
How did it backfire?
OP cleary feels used.
Feeling aren’t facts. Period!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'd move on.
You did her a great favor .. it somewhat backfired.
How did it backfire? “Higher status” (which is how OP sees it, not how I do) people will always remember what you did. I’ve been the recipient of this in so many ways.
Favours like network contacts should be transactional, and to me it’s weird that you’ve made it that way. I’m not sure what you want from her?
Feelings aren’t facts, and your FOMO and whatever are on you, honestly. You could be networking more with this other person if it was what you wanted. Or maybe, these people socially click more than you do. That’s part of life, and it’s you making it more middle school by holding the fact that you introduced them as some kind of currency.
I know it hurts to be left out, but you need to reflect on your part. If it wasn’t that important to you before, why is it so important to you now?
How did it backfire?
OP cleary feels used.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'd move on.
You did her a great favor .. it somewhat backfired.
How did it backfire? “Higher status” (which is how OP sees it, not how I do) people will always remember what you did. I’ve been the recipient of this in so many ways.
Favours like network contacts should be transactional, and to me it’s weird that you’ve made it that way. I’m not sure what you want from her?
Feelings aren’t facts, and your FOMO and whatever are on you, honestly. You could be networking more with this other person if it was what you wanted. Or maybe, these people socially click more than you do. That’s part of life, and it’s you making it more middle school by holding the fact that you introduced them as some kind of currency.
I know it hurts to be left out, but you need to reflect on your part. If it wasn’t that important to you before, why is it so important to you now?
Anonymous wrote:
I'd move on.
You did her a great favor .. it somewhat backfired.
Anonymous wrote:So I quickly made friends with this woman who I was only loosely acquainted with. We had a lot in common and were both restarting our careers after some time off raising young kids.
I connected her to someone prominent in my community who was looking to hire someone part time. Since then, I’ve started to feel like she’s social climbing and that I’m not making the cut. We haven’t fought but I feel like she’s slow fading me.
I haven’t felt this weird since I was in middle or high school. Most of my women friends have been pretty low drama. At first I was wondering if I did something to make her upset and then I thought about it more and concluded it’s social climbing. The other friends she’s posting with are richer than me and they take more trips together. It does give me a bit of FOMO but I don’t really want to be friends with the other women, so not really. I guess it just makes me feel a little envious or left out.
Nothing really to ask. Similar stories of this happening to 30-40s women would make me feel better though.