Anonymous wrote:Men do this all the time.
"Thanks for the coffee, I think we'd be better off as friends"
"Good you stupid f***ing slut, I didn't like you anyways you fat whore"
etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kidding yourself is a really sad way to go through life. Can't you be rejected and deal with it honestly?
+1 If you "realize after the fact" that you didn't like your potential friend, partner, whatever, you need to analyze why you spent time cultivating the relationship in the first place. Claiming you didn't care or weren't interested after you get rejected is a weak cope.
Anonymous wrote:Kidding yourself is a really sad way to go through life. Can't you be rejected and deal with it honestly?
Anonymous wrote:I tend to like people who like me — they have great taste, after all. And I tend to not like or be indifferent to people who don’t.
Anonymous wrote:I'm talking about socially, not in romantic relationships, but I guess it could apply there.
Does this ever happen to you? I was making a new friend but she ghosted on me and I immediately realized I didn't even like her particularly. She lives nearby and I'm super social, and that's the main reason we hung out. So I guess she did me a favor.
Am I just rationalizing? I feel like this is me being mature, and if this happened 10 years ago I'd get hung up on it but not now. It's more like a relief. The rejection stings a little but honestly not even that much, I feel like I've got a point where if someone has an issue with me, that's their problem.
Anyone else feel this way?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm talking about socially, not in romantic relationships, but I guess it could apply there.
Does this ever happen to you? I was making a new friend but she ghosted on me and I immediately realized I didn't even like her particularly. She lives nearby and I'm super social, and that's the main reason we hung out. So I guess she did me a favor.
Am I just rationalizing? I feel like this is me being mature, and if this happened 10 years ago I'd get hung up on it but not now. It's more like a relief. The rejection stings a little but honestly not even that much, I feel like I've got a point where if someone has an issue with me, that's their problem.
Anyone else feel this way?
Men do it all the time. I would reject someone then they change behavior and do anything to get the woman back. Then ghost after they f..k.
Lots of psycho there . I never go back to a man whom I rejected once
Anonymous wrote:I'm talking about socially, not in romantic relationships, but I guess it could apply there.
Does this ever happen to you? I was making a new friend but she ghosted on me and I immediately realized I didn't even like her particularly. She lives nearby and I'm super social, and that's the main reason we hung out. So I guess she did me a favor.
Am I just rationalizing? I feel like this is me being mature, and if this happened 10 years ago I'd get hung up on it but not now. It's more like a relief. The rejection stings a little but honestly not even that much, I feel like I've got a point where if someone has an issue with me, that's their problem.
Anyone else feel this way?