Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't mention it. You were within a mile of her and didn't think to email or text to see if she wanted to stop by on a coffee break and give you a hug? How often do you seeeachother? I would be pretty offended.
On the other hand, I live in Arlington and am not really offended when people I'm not super close with don't reach out. There's so much to do here and I don't live in the city anymore. But it definitely signals the end of a friendship.
Sometimes you're in town for a very specific purpose - a wedding (and all the pre wedding stuff), to help a sick/hospitalized relative or friend, maybe you're there to attend a funeral and support grieving family/friends, etc. Your days may be booked and you really may have zero time to get together with anyone.
I would be really sad if a friend assumed the worst of me and held something like that against me. I would tell them that I was in town and why I was in town. I would hope that they would understand that I had no time to get together for chit chat - even though I would have loved that.
Of course I would totally understand if someone was in town for a specific purpose and had no free time! But it sounds like OP was just hanging out at a playground, letting the kids run around and grabbing lunch etc. Even if she wasn't able to estimate the exact time she would be there, she could have given the friend a heads up and then texted when they got there. If it didn't work out, no biggie. But since it didn't happen, she should just keep her mouth closed about how she was less than a mile away and didn't think to reach out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't mention it. You were within a mile of her and didn't think to email or text to see if she wanted to stop by on a coffee break and give you a hug? How often do you seeeachother? I would be pretty offended.
On the other hand, I live in Arlington and am not really offended when people I'm not super close with don't reach out. There's so much to do here and I don't live in the city anymore. But it definitely signals the end of a friendship.
Sometimes you're in town for a very specific purpose - a wedding (and all the pre wedding stuff), to help a sick/hospitalized relative or friend, maybe you're there to attend a funeral and support grieving family/friends, etc. Your days may be booked and you really may have zero time to get together with anyone.
I would be really sad if a friend assumed the worst of me and held something like that against me. I would tell them that I was in town and why I was in town. I would hope that they would understand that I had no time to get together for chit chat - even though I would have loved that.
Anonymous wrote:I'm shocked that people get offended over this.
Anonymous wrote:I'm shocked that people get offended over this.
Anonymous wrote:Don't mention it. You were within a mile of her and didn't think to email or text to see if she wanted to stop by on a coffee break and give you a hug? How often do you seeeachother? I would be pretty offended.
On the other hand, I live in Arlington and am not really offended when people I'm not super close with don't reach out. There's so much to do here and I don't live in the city anymore. But it definitely signals the end of a friendship.
Anonymous wrote:Last week I was on a family road trip and we stopped for a couple hours at an attraction near the home of my former co-worker / casual friend, before continuing to our destination. I "owe" my friend an email and I'd like to tell her how much we enjoyed her town.
There was no point in contacting her while we were there -- it was a weekday, I didn't know what time we'd arrive, and the whole point was to run some kids to exhaustion and then get back on the road. But now I feel odd saying, "I was within a mile of you last week and didn't even try to see you!" Should I just not mention it?
Anonymous wrote:I am PP whose friendship ended. If she had not ever mentioned it to me that would have been a whole lot better.