Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your friendship can't weather one of you needing to say "can't chat now. Going into. Meeting" without the other getting pissy and passive aggressive, it's not a healthy friendship. Hope you're overthinking it.
+1 it sounds like you did nothing wrong. You’re not responsible for whatever she’s feeling. You’ve done everything you can to kindly and supportively reconnect so I would just let it go for now.
Both of these PPs. She is happy for you and sad for herself. She is having a mini meltdown.
I think no matter how close anyone is, the general feeling is that you want your friends to succeed, but not more than you. Have you been commiserating about your jobs, and now you got a great one?
Whatever the case, you can't lessen your success, or not do a great job, because you're worried about her feelings.
She is having a mini meltdown?
How old are you people?
You obviously have low EQ. Friend, who normally response immediately and often, suddenly stops responding, though is reading the texts. She is having issues with jealousy.
But how old are they?
Op just sounds codependent with her friend. And probably has some sort of anxiety.
Got it. I thought you were asking how old the respondents were. Agreed, OP and her friend sound young. I would guess they have been commiserating over how hard it is starting out, then OP got a great job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your friendship can't weather one of you needing to say "can't chat now. Going into. Meeting" without the other getting pissy and passive aggressive, it's not a healthy friendship. Hope you're overthinking it.
+1 it sounds like you did nothing wrong. You’re not responsible for whatever she’s feeling. You’ve done everything you can to kindly and supportively reconnect so I would just let it go for now.
Both of these PPs. She is happy for you and sad for herself. She is having a mini meltdown.
I think no matter how close anyone is, the general feeling is that you want your friends to succeed, but not more than you. Have you been commiserating about your jobs, and now you got a great one?
Whatever the case, you can't lessen your success, or not do a great job, because you're worried about her feelings.
She is having a mini meltdown?
How old are you people?
You obviously have low EQ. Friend, who normally response immediately and often, suddenly stops responding, though is reading the texts. She is having issues with jealousy.
But how old are they?
Op just sounds codependent with her friend. And probably has some sort of anxiety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your friendship can't weather one of you needing to say "can't chat now. Going into. Meeting" without the other getting pissy and passive aggressive, it's not a healthy friendship. Hope you're overthinking it.
+1 it sounds like you did nothing wrong. You’re not responsible for whatever she’s feeling. You’ve done everything you can to kindly and supportively reconnect so I would just let it go for now.
Both of these PPs. She is happy for you and sad for herself. She is having a mini meltdown.
I think no matter how close anyone is, the general feeling is that you want your friends to succeed, but not more than you. Have you been commiserating about your jobs, and now you got a great one?
Whatever the case, you can't lessen your success, or not do a great job, because you're worried about her feelings.
She is having a mini meltdown?
How old are you people?
You obviously have low EQ. Friend, who normally response immediately and often, suddenly stops responding, though is reading the texts. She is having issues with jealousy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your friendship can't weather one of you needing to say "can't chat now. Going into. Meeting" without the other getting pissy and passive aggressive, it's not a healthy friendship. Hope you're overthinking it.
+1 it sounds like you did nothing wrong. You’re not responsible for whatever she’s feeling. You’ve done everything you can to kindly and supportively reconnect so I would just let it go for now.
Both of these PPs. She is happy for you and sad for herself. She is having a mini meltdown.
I think no matter how close anyone is, the general feeling is that you want your friends to succeed, but not more than you. Have you been commiserating about your jobs, and now you got a great one?
Whatever the case, you can't lessen your success, or not do a great job, because you're worried about her feelings.
She is having a mini meltdown?
How old are you people?
You obviously have low EQ. Friend, who normally response immediately and often, suddenly stops responding, though is reading the texts. She is having issues with jealousy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How do you know she read your texts?
DP. Some people leave notifications on. So when they read a text it shows that they did and when. I always turn it off.
This isn't a certainty. If the app is still open, it may mark as read without the message actually being read.
Not that anyone owes you a same-day response, however typical that may be for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your friendship can't weather one of you needing to say "can't chat now. Going into. Meeting" without the other getting pissy and passive aggressive, it's not a healthy friendship. Hope you're overthinking it.
+1 it sounds like you did nothing wrong. You’re not responsible for whatever she’s feeling. You’ve done everything you can to kindly and supportively reconnect so I would just let it go for now.
Both of these PPs. She is happy for you and sad for herself. She is having a mini meltdown.
I think no matter how close anyone is, the general feeling is that you want your friends to succeed, but not more than you. Have you been commiserating about your jobs, and now you got a great one?
Whatever the case, you can't lessen your success, or not do a great job, because you're worried about her feelings.
She is having a mini meltdown?
How old are you people?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How do you know she read your texts?
DP. Some people leave notifications on. So when they read a text it shows that they did and when. I always turn it off.