Anonymous wrote:I don’t think you can forget what she did and how you feel is justified of course.
What I think you can do is fill up the void in your life so that what she did doesn’t loom so large. Hard to do during COVID but there are ways. Do you have other friends OP? Do you have kids? Do you have hobbies? Do you volunteer? Do you have a creative outlet to express yourself and these universal feelings? The busier you are and the better the people who you surround yourself with, the less this will matter. I genuinely forget about some old petty friends and what they did because I have fabulous mature fun friends now who are good people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you see her, toss our head back and laugh. Shake your head. Then move on.
OP doesn't seem capable of laughing or shrugging this off, though. A year later, and she is bothered by this woman.
This is OP. If I did this, I feel confident this woman would go around telling people that I was deranged and that she saw me "laughing hysterically on the street and talking to herself." I would really prefer not to draw her attention to me in any way.
I am wondering why you didn't confront her at the time. You write it wasn't worth the conflict to you, but here you are a year later. She's not doing anything to you. You seem bothered by her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you see her, toss our head back and laugh. Shake your head. Then move on.
OP doesn't seem capable of laughing or shrugging this off, though. A year later, and she is bothered by this woman.
This is OP. If I did this, I feel confident this woman would go around telling people that I was deranged and that she saw me "laughing hysterically on the street and talking to herself." I would really prefer not to draw her attention to me in any way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you see her, toss our head back and laugh. Shake your head. Then move on.
OP doesn't seem capable of laughing or shrugging this off, though. A year later, and she is bothered by this woman.
Anonymous wrote:When you see her, toss our head back and laugh. Shake your head. Then move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a person who lives in my neighborhood who did some really awful things to me, including spreading a series of nasty lies about me. I have cut off all contact with her and don't even really talk to any of our mutual friends because I view her as dangerous and I just want to stay away from her.
The problem is she live a few blocks away, and I see her and her husband sometimes. It's not enough to where I'd consider moving (like if she was my next door neighbor, I would 100% move without even thinking that hard about it). But it's enough where it feels like a pretty regular reminder of what happened with her -- like maybe once or twice a week.
I thought that with time it would get easier and eventually I wouldn't think that much about it. But it's been over a year and it still upsets me. I just saw her last night outside the grocery store and have been in a funk ever since because I'm dwelling on what happened with her and can't seem to snap myself out of it. I know it will pass in a day or two, but then I also know I'll inevitably see her somewhere and go through it again.
I think a major reason it bothers me is that while I think I made the best choice given the circumstances, some part of me will always feel angry that she "got away" with telling these lies about me. When it happened, I decided I'd rather just not spend time with people who talk behind others back in this way, and also that anyone who believed these lies about me probably wasn't a friend worth having anyway. But it does mean she basically got what she wanted -- she was cruel to me for whatever reason, and I disappeared rather than fight it out because it just didn't feel like a worthwhile conflict to me. So it feels like she "won" even though I don't necessarily feel like I lost anything of real value.
Any advice for how I can deal with these brief glimpses of her without getting upset? I know I need to let it go, as the song says, but I'm obviously having a hard time. Any guidance?
What did she say about you? Were you able to set the record straight?