Anonymous wrote:For purposes of this conversation, a one-upper is someone who always seems to want to 'top' everything you say. So like if you tell a friend your kid got a cold at daycare and the cough has really been lingering, she will one-up you by saying 'oh my nanny ensures my child never gets that kind of illness.' The one-upping isn't always just to be superior, sometimes it can be for attention or sympathy. Like if you are with a group of friends and describing a difficult situation at work, a one-upper might jump in with 'oh I'm dealing with that too, only it's worse because...'
When this behavior comes up on DCUM, I often see the advice to call it out, every time, until they stop.
Has anyone ever actually done this, and did it work? I am curious because the one time I had a friend like this in my life, I attempted to call it out and she started flipping it around on me and saying I was too sensitive or was misinterpreting her comments. It turned into an argument. Eventually I just quit being friends with her. But calling it out had no impact and I think just made her defensive.
So I'm just interested to hear if anyone has ever done this successfully. I find this behavior really obnoxious and actually wish there was a good way to get someone to become self aware about it and stop but in my experience, there is not.
Anonymous wrote:I have also seen friends in a group complain about this (not from me). I do sometimes think some people are very sensitive and the person who is supposedly one-upping them actually isn't. It's kind of complex sometimes, not always clear cut.
Anonymous wrote:You just got to let it go an choose how much time you want to spend with them. Everyone else sees it too. I’m in my late 40’s and there are still people that do it as this age. I’m convinced it’s part of some sort of personality issue.