Anonymous wrote:Op, here, and these are all thoughtful responses. Thank you.
I do think deep down she means well, but not being heard bugs me. It's like she's hearing what she wants regardless of what I say, and that's not a relationship. That's you making yourself feel better.
Years ago, I had a supervisor who insisted on throwing me a going-away party even after I repeatedly said I did not want one. She "surprised" me with one anyway, and I surprised her by walking out. In her world, I was the bad guy. The party was for her to feel good, not me.
I deeply dislike boundary-challenged people.
Should I continue ignoring her, or once again tell her I am fine?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound like my mom. If anyone reaches out to her with any kindness, she sees it as an intrusion or judgment.
“Thank you! I appreciate that you’re thinking of me. Thankfully we have savings so we aren’t struggling right now. I will use this gift card when we are all together for Thanksgiving.”
And the grieving thing is not fair. Nobody can read your mind (especially because you’re limited in what you share with them), so feeling angry that she is sending you cards on his birthday because you’re not upset is a you problem.
I understand this. I don't invade other people's space, so I guess that's my issue. If I say I am fine, leave it/me alone. Doing otherwise reeks of you not respecting my boundaries and doing what makes YOU feel better. That's not goodwill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound like my mom. If anyone reaches out to her with any kindness, she sees it as an intrusion or judgment.
“Thank you! I appreciate that you’re thinking of me. Thankfully we have savings so we aren’t struggling right now. I will use this gift card when we are all together for Thanksgiving.”
And the grieving thing is not fair. Nobody can read your mind (especially because you’re limited in what you share with them), so feeling angry that she is sending you cards on his birthday because you’re not upset is a you problem.
I understand this. I don't invade other people's space, so I guess that's my issue. If I say I am fine, leave it/me alone. Doing otherwise reeks of you not respecting my boundaries and doing what makes YOU feel better. That's not goodwill.
Anonymous wrote:You sound like my mom. If anyone reaches out to her with any kindness, she sees it as an intrusion or judgment.
“Thank you! I appreciate that you’re thinking of me. Thankfully we have savings so we aren’t struggling right now. I will use this gift card when we are all together for Thanksgiving.”
And the grieving thing is not fair. Nobody can read your mind (especially because you’re limited in what you share with them), so feeling angry that she is sending you cards on his birthday because you’re not upset is a you problem.
Anonymous wrote:I have a family member who projects her feelings onto others. I have seen this trait in her for years and have mostly distanced myself and ignored it. For instance, when her dad died, she took it extremely hard, so she assumed I was feeling the same when my dad passed. I wasn't. I loved my dad, but I have experienced death enough to know how to manage emotions, grieve, and move on. However, she can't accept that as normal. She sends scriptures, "thinking of you" messages on his birthday and death anniversary, and makes assumptions despite my telling her how I feel.
I am furloughed, and she sent a grocery gift card saying," I sent this because I know you will say you are okay, even when you aren't." It annoyed me more than anything, because I am financially and otherwise okay. She could have benefited a charity with her giving rather than me. I promptly donated it.
On the surface, her ways seem loving. However, I don't think they come from a place of goodwill; more like wanting to see/find something wrong. I am very limited with what I share with most people, so her actions come across as prying to see what will stick.
Should I continue ignoring her, or once again tell her I am fine? I am a strong, self-reliant person, and this seems to bother her.