Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This might make sense with an mlm, but in that field I wonder if your friend is reacting from insecurities
Op here. It’s not an MLM. It’s in the tech/AI/cybersecurity space which is where DH, brother, and I all work. And we are spending no more than a few thousand dollars on it, and no one is quitting their job.
Why do you care so much about your friend's opinion on this if it's just small potatoes?
Op here. She did more than give her opinion. She went on a diatribe listing all the reasons why it won’t work and detailing everything she thinks I’m doing wrong.
I’m hurt by it. I’m not sure there needs to be some big deep reason. But I feel like I opened up about something that matters to me and shared with her and then she crapped all over it before I had even finished explaining barely anything about it.
OK, you're hurt. What are you going to do about it? Punish her? She's already apologized. Now you are ruminating here about it. The ball is in your court about whether to accept the apology and move on or not. I guess not.
I disagree. It's not OP's job to either "get over it" or not. The friend way overstepped. The friend has to prove to OP that she can be supportive and that she won't do this again, or OP won't go to her next time she has news about something new she's doing. The friend screwed up the dynamics of the friendship and an apology does not repair that.
Anonymous wrote:The friend messed up in a way that a simple apology won't fix. She created a bad dynamic that will no be part of their friendship as long as OP is involved in this business, unless the friend does more than apologize.
The friend was way overly critical and offered a ton of unsolicited advice, and then when OP didn't take it, the friend pushed back and got annoyed about it. So now now this side hustle business is a point of contention. If it succeeds, OP absolutely will feel vindicated. But also if it fails, it's going to hang over their friendship because the friend went too far in criticizing it. It's going to hard for the friend to be supportive if the plan fails, because OP will know that the friend is thinking "I told you so" even if she doesn't say it. And also now OP will be reluctant to share things like this with the friend in the future because she won't want this kind of criticism and judgment.
The friend made a big mistake, not a little one. As a friend, you have to learn sometimes to hold your tongue even if you think someone is making a mistake. It's not your job to prevent your friends from making mistakes. Mistakes are part of life. Unless someone asks directly for your advice, don't give it.
Anonymous wrote:Op here with an update. Friend has been reaching out and I’ve been unresponsive. Today I just let her know that of course we will always be friends but that I’m hurt and this really feels like a pattern. Essentially, I share something vulnerable that I’m struggling with and she points out all the reasons I should have known and/or created this problem and/or things I have done wrong, etc. Maybe I’m too sensitive but I’m just tired of this dynamic and need to take a step back.
Anonymous wrote:Op here with an update. Friend has been reaching out and I’ve been unresponsive. Today I just let her know that of course we will always be friends but that I’m hurt and this really feels like a pattern. Essentially, I share something vulnerable that I’m struggling with and she points out all the reasons I should have known and/or created this problem and/or things I have done wrong, etc. Maybe I’m too sensitive but I’m just tired of this dynamic and need to take a step back.
Anonymous wrote:OP, how how is for you to make new friends? you seem to have spent a significant amount of time with this friend, and her personality should not be some surprising news to you. if you are an introvert, it's probably what makes your friendship possible at some level. it comes at a cost.
as some have suggested, you don't have to decide anything right now. let things cool off first. and when you do make your decision, take into account not only the faults of this friend, but also, how many other friends you do have and how hard it is for you to make new ones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She recognized she overstepped and apologized. I'm not sure what else you want.
Also, have you considered the thought she might be right?
Op here. If you read through the thread I answer both of these questions above.
Why would I want to waste my time doing that? Are you new to the Internet or something?