Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Her husband didn’t expect that you would be living with them for months and months. It sounds like your sister didn’t either.
She has her own apartment according to the post
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you were miserable in NYC, and now you’re miserable in DC, and that’s on…your sister?
I wasn't miserable in NYC. I had a great life there for 8-9 years, but then my relationship imploded, office politics became intolerable, etc. I'm not a generally "miserable" person.
But I did move to DC to be near supportive family and, after 3 months, suddenly I feel ghosted by the very reason I moved here: my sister.
And there it is. You moved here for: your sister.
You didn’t move here for: yourself. You didn’t move here for new opportunities, a change of pace, a fresh start, new adventures. So you put all your eggs in one basket, and that basket is a working parent who has tons going on and can’t be your social life, your reason for being, and your crutch forever.
Move back to NYC and reconnect with your old friends and make a new start there.
Anonymous wrote:Her husband didn’t expect that you would be living with them for months and months. It sounds like your sister didn’t either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you were miserable in NYC, and now you’re miserable in DC, and that’s on…your sister?
I wasn't miserable in NYC. I had a great life there for 8-9 years, but then my relationship imploded, office politics became intolerable, etc. I'm not a generally "miserable" person.
But I did move to DC to be near supportive family and, after 3 months, suddenly I feel ghosted by the very reason I moved here: my sister.
You expect more than THREE MONTHS OF SUPPORT from busy, working parents? Like, you had a breakup. OK. The world doesn’t stop. She supported you for a summer, now either pick up the pieces and get yourself together here, or go back to New York and get yourself together there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you were miserable in NYC, and now you’re miserable in DC, and that’s on…your sister?
I wasn't miserable in NYC. I had a great life there for 8-9 years, but then my relationship imploded, office politics became intolerable, etc. I'm not a generally "miserable" person.
But I did move to DC to be near supportive family and, after 3 months, suddenly I feel ghosted by the very reason I moved here: my sister.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you were miserable in NYC, and now you’re miserable in DC, and that’s on…your sister?
I wasn't miserable in NYC. I had a great life there for 8-9 years, but then my relationship imploded, office politics became intolerable, etc. I'm not a generally "miserable" person.
But I did move to DC to be near supportive family and, after 3 months, suddenly I feel ghosted by the very reason I moved here: my sister.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you need a workspace with people in it, go to one of those shared workspaces. I wouldn’t want someone in my house All The Time, either.
Make their lives easier, not harder. “Can I come over for dinner” on top of all that working parents do? No. Try, “Do you guys want to come over for pizza,” or “Can I bring a lasagna by on Friday” or something that’s making a contribution, not just using them as your social crutch.
My apartment is a small one-bedroom with galley kitchen so I don't usually invite them over. When I come over for dinner -- I bring the food!!
Anonymous wrote:If you need a workspace with people in it, go to one of those shared workspaces. I wouldn’t want someone in my house All The Time, either.
Make their lives easier, not harder. “Can I come over for dinner” on top of all that working parents do? No. Try, “Do you guys want to come over for pizza,” or “Can I bring a lasagna by on Friday” or something that’s making a contribution, not just using them as your social crutch.
Anonymous wrote:So you were miserable in NYC, and now you’re miserable in DC, and that’s on…your sister?