Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“We’d love yo get together with you but I am not willing to see X.”
If you say it the right way, she may not ask why, but if she does, then you say “we had a falling out.” No elaboration, let it sit there. Most people will not ask a second time. They’ve asked their one question and know pushing for more is rude. If she pushes, then standard, “it’s not worth going into; or, I don’t want to go into it further; etc”. She will wonder, but you can just ignore.
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This sounds good in theory, until the person is who inviting you unknowingly asks your ex-AP what on earth happened. Then it will be in your ex-APs hands, who might very well put you.
I agree with the stomach virus posters.
I'm not in high school anymore damned if I'm gonna be pressured by the fear of gossip into putting on some grandiose performance for people who aren't central figures in my life and I don't even interact with on a daily basis. Anonymous wrote:“We’d love yo get together with you but I am not willing to see X.”
If you say it the right way, she may not ask why, but if she does, then you say “we had a falling out.” No elaboration, let it sit there. Most people will not ask a second time. They’ve asked their one question and know pushing for more is rude. If she pushes, then standard, “it’s not worth going into; or, I don’t want to go into it further; etc”. She will wonder, but you can just ignore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Constructive advice...be straight up about it and say “I don’t wanna get together with So-and-So my husband and I can’t stand him.”
This or move your trip. Anything else and your friend will still try and facilitate a meet up.
Anonymous wrote:Constructive advice...be straight up about it and say “I don’t wanna get together with So-and-So my husband and I can’t stand him.”
Anonymous wrote:Looking for constructive advice only...please don’t rip me apart.
My family will be traveling on vacation and visiting an old friend. We have already made tentative dinner plans. It just so happens that our mutual friend will also be in town with his family. Of course now the friend I am visiting is insisting we all get together. However, this person is somebody that I cannot see. I have worked very hard to heal from significant emotional trauma from this person...it almost ruined my marriage. Of course DH nor I would agree to get together with this person, but my bigger problem is how to tell my friend no - without raising red flags. We all used to be very close so it would be fairly shocking for me to say no. While I doubt this person would ever agree to see me either, my concern is that during the dinner my friend will sabotage the conversation by going on and on about how it’s crazy we are all in the same town on the same week and can’t even get together. My DH is not going to want to sit through a dinner like that! I feel like I’m walking into something I’d rather avoid. Is there anything I can do/say to make this actually bearable at this point? Not bringing DH to dinner is not an option! Thanks for any suggestions.