Anonymous wrote:What's everyone's take on this? Was discussing it with my DH last night because we're going to a wedding soon which will likely also be attended by a couple we were friends with several years ago but fell out with because we found out the wife had been gossiping about me/us. We never had a fight or anything, but after I found out what she was saying, I stopped inviting them over and did a slow fade on her (at first just turning down invites but eventually just not even responding to texts). I don't like gossips and the stuff she was saying felt very invasive and unkind (comments about my marriage, my kids, and my intelligence -- just off limits stuff in my book).
I told DH I would just ignore them all night but he thinks that will stir up more drama. He thinks we should be smiley and friendly with them. I get his point -- doing this is definitely "taking the high ground" and is more likely to make it look like we don't care about them at all, which is good. But honestly, I'm not sure I'm capable of that. I can see myself interacting with them but I don't think I could fake friendliness.
What says DCUM? Cold shoulder or fake friendly? And if the latter, how best to accomplish it when you really don't feel it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would act like it’s someone you just met but have no interest in getting to know. Polite, vague, fake smile, totally uninvested, classy, keep it short, move away. Do not answer a single question you don’t want to answer. Use vague responses like “oh, you know!” Make sure they see you as confident and happy and not caring about them at all. If you can scope out the seating chart when you arrive, if you’re at the same table, sit as far from them as possible. If you’re stuck next to them, spend as little time actually sitting down as possible. Get your hair done before the wedding. Feel confident. She’s a gossipy jerk and you’re v better without them.
OP here. This is really helpful, thank you.
Anonymous wrote:I would act like it’s someone you just met but have no interest in getting to know. Polite, vague, fake smile, totally uninvested, classy, keep it short, move away. Do not answer a single question you don’t want to answer. Use vague responses like “oh, you know!” Make sure they see you as confident and happy and not caring about them at all. If you can scope out the seating chart when you arrive, if you’re at the same table, sit as far from them as possible. If you’re stuck next to them, spend as little time actually sitting down as possible. Get your hair done before the wedding. Feel confident. She’s a gossipy jerk and you’re v better without them.
Anonymous wrote:I would act like it’s someone you just met but have no interest in getting to know. Polite, vague, fake smile, totally uninvested, classy, keep it short, move away. Do not answer a single question you don’t want to answer. Use vague responses like “oh, you know!” Make sure they see you as confident and happy and not caring about them at all. If you can scope out the seating chart when you arrive, if you’re at the same table, sit as far from them as possible. If you’re stuck next to them, spend as little time actually sitting down as possible. Get your hair done before the wedding. Feel confident. She’s a gossipy jerk and you’re v better without them.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know. I don't operate like this at all.
I would have said something direct way back when to her. You say you don't like gossips but you're kind of part of the problem. Don't ignore people at a wedding.