Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Had a similar situation with an aggressive couple, but was able to encourage DH to tell he suffered from corrosive IBS and, as a result, frequently lost control of his bowels (including bloody discharge from the back passage) at inopportune times. They were really obsessed with their cars and furniture and soon stopped asking. Unfortunately, they then began telling everyone about DH's IBS challenges (and that they suspected it was connected to a variety of social diseases) which negatively impacted DH's business as a massage artist and certified auditor.
You gave an aggressive, pushy person such an embarrassing piece of gossip? Of course they blabbed about it to anyone who would listen. That's what aggressive, boundary pushing people do - they have no normal sense of privacy or common decency. Did you not know that?
We were very disappointed and upset by the way they turned the tables on us, going so far as to mail DH adult diapers at his place of work. They also would circle around us at subsequent social gatherings, making comments about odors and bad smells and laughing about it. Very unpleasant people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Had a similar situation with an aggressive couple, but was able to encourage DH to tell he suffered from corrosive IBS and, as a result, frequently lost control of his bowels (including bloody discharge from the back passage) at inopportune times. They were really obsessed with their cars and furniture and soon stopped asking. Unfortunately, they then began telling everyone about DH's IBS challenges (and that they suspected it was connected to a variety of social diseases) which negatively impacted DH's business as a massage artist and certified auditor.
You gave an aggressive, pushy person such an embarrassing piece of gossip? Of course they blabbed about it to anyone who would listen. That's what aggressive, boundary pushing people do - they have no normal sense of privacy or common decency. Did you not know that?
Anonymous wrote:Had a similar situation with an aggressive couple, but was able to encourage DH to tell he suffered from corrosive IBS and, as a result, frequently lost control of his bowels (including bloody discharge from the back passage) at inopportune times. They were really obsessed with their cars and furniture and soon stopped asking. Unfortunately, they then began telling everyone about DH's IBS challenges (and that they suspected it was connected to a variety of social diseases) which negatively impacted DH's business as a massage artist and certified auditor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell her your marriage is strained and your therapist wants you to focus on each other
This is an awesome response.
Anonymous wrote:I don't demand anything. I usually simply ask.
Obviously you are not under an obligation to respond to your former friend's request. Just keep forgetting to respond to texts and/or be too busy to get together. You can't tell someone you find them too annoying to hang out with.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. One example is that we were planning a short mini-vacation to an area that they know so DH asked them if they had any recommendations. They responded excitedly that they were going on a short vacation someplace else with another family member and we should join them. DH said no we're going to the mountains not the beach and just with our immediate family. They went on and on about how we should go with them. Later, she was furious with DH that he didn't agree to go on vacation with her and her husband. It went back and forth between pouty pout face and being angry. It was weird.