Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My nephew sucks the air out of the room, which my BIL admitted to DH and I several years ago. I was surprised to hear him say that about his own son and glad I was not the only one who thought so. From the moment he enters a room, he is talking nonstop and has an opinion about everything. He is not obnoxious but it is exhausting to be around him for long periods of time. He has almost 2000 facebook friends and is constantly posting and sharing. His SO is quiet and thoughtful.
Aspergers? On the spectrum?
Anonymous wrote:My nephew sucks the air out of the room, which my BIL admitted to DH and I several years ago. I was surprised to hear him say that about his own son and glad I was not the only one who thought so. From the moment he enters a room, he is talking nonstop and has an opinion about everything. He is not obnoxious but it is exhausting to be around him for long periods of time. He has almost 2000 facebook friends and is constantly posting and sharing. His SO is quiet and thoughtful.
Anonymous wrote:I dread her coming over
See this is your fault. You do not have to have her over. You bring this on yourself. If she's in your house, there is no easy way to get her out of your house when you've had enough. You and DH should meet her at a neutral location. Have the socializing end when you've had enough. If the two of you differ in your tolerance for this person, drive separately. One of you can stay and socialize longer.
Anonymous wrote:I dread her coming over
See this is your fault. You do not have to have her over. You bring this on yourself. If she's in your house, there is no easy way to get her out of your house when you've had enough. You and DH should meet her at a neutral location. Have the socializing end when you've had enough. If the two of you differ in your tolerance for this person, drive separately. One of you can stay and socialize longer.
I dread her coming over
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband has a friend (female) like this. I dread her coming over. She is so bossy, talks all the time, thinks she knows everything. I am an expert in my field, but she will go on and on about things in my field, things that I know are wrong. I find it impossible to interrupt her, even when she is speaking about my field of expertise, to inject some actual knowledge. She is very loud. Sometimes she wants to take me shopping, and she insists of picking everything I buy (she has little money) and will take things I have chosen out of my basket and put it back on the shelf. She is, however, quite charming when you first meet her. She is a professional musician, very articulate, and projects self confidence. But, honestly, I just can not bear her up close.
This is really not the same situation. Your husband's friend is easy to deal with: just avoid her or don't let her bother you. Who cares? This is not someone important to you like a sister.
Anonymous wrote:My husband has a friend (female) like this. I dread her coming over. She is so bossy, talks all the time, thinks she knows everything. I am an expert in my field, but she will go on and on about things in my field, things that I know are wrong. I find it impossible to interrupt her, even when she is speaking about my field of expertise, to inject some actual knowledge. She is very loud. Sometimes she wants to take me shopping, and she insists of picking everything I buy (she has little money) and will take things I have chosen out of my basket and put it back on the shelf. She is, however, quite charming when you first meet her. She is a professional musician, very articulate, and projects self confidence. But, honestly, I just can not bear her up close.
Anonymous wrote:This is going to be blunt. I just have to *massive eyeroll* at the PP who stated that she was the same as the OP's sister, then proceeded, at OP's request, to suck the life out of this post. Start your own post, PP. This is about OP.
OP, I'd accept that this is who she is and take her in limited doses. It must feel crazy for her to be her. Possibly she's manic, or a narcissist, or overcompensating for self-esteem issues, or she's a people pleaser, or she's uncomfortable with silences and has to fill them. Who knows. If you are close enough, and she admits/agrees that she does this and needs help (ie, if this topic has been previously well-travelled in the past by you or your sibs and it's accepted all around as fact, even by sister) then maybe you could establish a gentle codeword or look you can give her to rein it in when she's dominating the social situation.
If she's not aware/not self-reflective enough to realize sucks the air out, like the PP, then I suggest you merely enjoy her "charm" in limited doses.
This is going to be blunt. I just have to *massive eyeroll* at the PP who stated that she was the same as the OP's sister, then proceeded, at OP's request, to suck the life out of this post. Start your own post, PP. This is about OP.