Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure you have the right email?
If you're sure, then let it go. I've sent plenty of long laborious emails in the past that have gotten no acknowledgement. Please remember that when we do a good deed, it is an end in itself, not the gratitude of those we help!
OP here, good points. I did check with my sister. My sister's friend had responded to my sister's "I'm putting you two together" e-mail with a basic, "Thanks, looking forward to hearing from your sister!" So I know she got it, because it's all a connected gmail chain. My sister got the e-mail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see why you had to mention that she was a SAHM in your post. Seems irrelevant and just opening yet another door to bash SAHMs.
I'm sorry that you helped a person out and didn't get a response but this could have happened with anyone.
OP here. Again, I was a SAHM for three years. Maybe I should have put that in my original post, but my point was--this person has no recent experience, and no contact in a field where I have more recent experience and more contacts. In this particular part of life, freelance writing, she is starting from Ground Zero. So everything I gave her, including story pitches/ideas, was a huge leap forward for her. I think that's relevant. I think that's a bigger "gift" than, say, telling an attorney friend who's asking for potential client leads about a lead; presumably, she'd already have a base of clients and contacts.
Anonymous wrote:Are you sure you have the right email?
If you're sure, then let it go. I've sent plenty of long laborious emails in the past that have gotten no acknowledgement. Please remember that when we do a good deed, it is an end in itself, not the gratitude of those we help!
Anonymous wrote:I don't see why you had to mention that she was a SAHM in your post. Seems irrelevant and just opening yet another door to bash SAHMs.
I'm sorry that you helped a person out and didn't get a response but this could have happened with anyone.