Anonymous wrote:Please send your castoff, overbearing friend my way! She’s sounds like a loving, thoughtful and kind person.
I thought you were going to describe someone truly overbearing and well, toxic.
I long ago ditched a burgeoning friendship with another new mom who took to lecturing and berating me about newborn health, nutrition and safety. That’s overbearing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Her mom died recently and she talked about that w you and you had a friend disappointment and talked to her about that. You’re getting closer. Also, I agree w PP: have some perspective. Her mom just died and she is undoubtedly in a lot of emotional pain/grief. No matter what her relationship with her mom was like, losing a parent is a huge deal. She needs friends right now. If you can’t be a good friend to her, why? What are you afraid of? Getting too close w somrone?
You mention you’re from the Midwest (or moved to DC from the Midwest) I lived in the Midwest for 9 years and though im very outgoing and friendly, it was so hard to make real friends there. Midwest people are kind but distant. It’s hard to become close bc they don’t really let you in. They have their family and their little friend group from childhood or hs or college and it’s very insular. They’re not open to making new, close friends. Maybe you fit that Midwest stereotype too, OP. Nice but just looking for surface level relationships.
I’m not sure if this makes a difference or not but her mom died in August, so it isn’t recent. She was talking about her because this was a few days after Mother’s Day. I offered to help her with moving her mom’s things because it was a considerate thing to do and wanted to be a good friend. I don’t want you all to think I’ve dismissed her grief.
Maybe it is a Midwest thing - “kind but distant”. I don’t know.
Anonymous wrote:Her mom died recently and she talked about that w you and you had a friend disappointment and talked to her about that. You’re getting closer. Also, I agree w PP: have some perspective. Her mom just died and she is undoubtedly in a lot of emotional pain/grief. No matter what her relationship with her mom was like, losing a parent is a huge deal. She needs friends right now. If you can’t be a good friend to her, why? What are you afraid of? Getting too close w somrone?
You mention you’re from the Midwest (or moved to DC from the Midwest) I lived in the Midwest for 9 years and though im very outgoing and friendly, it was so hard to make real friends there. Midwest people are kind but distant. It’s hard to become close bc they don’t really let you in. They have their family and their little friend group from childhood or hs or college and it’s very insular. They’re not open to making new, close friends. Maybe you fit that Midwest stereotype too, OP. Nice but just looking for surface level relationships.
Anonymous wrote:I mean the flip of that is you’ve only hung out with her a couple times and now you’re spilling your guts that you’re crying over your bachelorette party. Why do you get to treat her like your personal therapist but expect her to leave you alone unless summoned?
Especially weird since her mother just passed. Have some perspective. She’s probably struggling way more than you are, yet she’s the one trying to offer support. She probably needs the emotional support herself and is trying to build the friendship in a way that isn’t self-serving.
Sorry but you sound like a user. That you want the benefits of a deep, close friendship where you can cry about a stupid bachelorette party but don’t want to reciprocate. If you want shallow friendships where you just see each other once a month, that’s fine, but keep the conversations light hearted and don’t turn them into therapy sessions.
Anonymous wrote:You go to therapy to find out why this bothers you.