Anonymous wrote:Of course I would not say something to anyone.
I'm going with "A softer #3," which is to say treat her nicely and do not say anything to anyone else in the group, but don't fake like you're super-friends with her. Be polite and cordial, but don't over-act friendly.
Like, just don't sit next to her at a group dinner. Don't go over and talk to her at a house party. Say hello to her, and keep it moving. If she comes up to a small group you're talking to, stay for a minute and then go to the restroom or go refill your drink or something. See her only in the larger group setting. If a lunch invite comes and it's just you and her and only one other person, decline.
Come on. You can't figure this out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the other person know that you don’t like her? Or at least suspect? I guess it would depend if she knew and what was the reason why you didn’t like her. Big difference between “I just think she’s weird/boring” or whatever vs “she openly insulted me to my face.”
In my case, the lady is not weird, boring or insuling; it turns out we have absolutely nothing in common. She's an outdoorsy SAH DIYer arch Republican who likes to spend the weekends hiking and camping and is very frugal with a buck. None of those apply to meeasy enough to make very casual conversation and not take the relationship any farther.
Oh, well, if you don’t agree with her politically, then, of course, cut her off. And make sure all your other friends know why. No reason for people with different ideas about politics to hang out together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the other person know that you don’t like her? Or at least suspect? I guess it would depend if she knew and what was the reason why you didn’t like her. Big difference between “I just think she’s weird/boring” or whatever vs “she openly insulted me to my face.”
In my case, the lady is not weird, boring or insuling; it turns out we have absolutely nothing in common. She's an outdoorsy SAH DIYer arch Republican who likes to spend the weekends hiking and camping and is very frugal with a buck. None of those apply to meeasy enough to make very casual conversation and not take the relationship any farther.
Anonymous wrote:Of course I would not say something to anyone.
I'm going with "A softer #3," which is to say treat her nicely and do not say anything to anyone else in the group, but don't fake like you're super-friends with her. Be polite and cordial, but don't over-act friendly.
Like, just don't sit next to her at a group dinner. Don't go over and talk to her at a house party. Say hello to her, and keep it moving. If she comes up to a small group you're talking to, stay for a minute and then go to the restroom or go refill your drink or something. See her only in the larger group setting. If a lunch invite comes and it's just you and her and only one other person, decline.
Come on. You can't figure this out?
Anonymous wrote:Does the other person know that you don’t like her? Or at least suspect? I guess it would depend if she knew and what was the reason why you didn’t like her. Big difference between “I just think she’s weird/boring” or whatever vs “she openly insulted me to my face.”
easy enough to make very casual conversation and not take the relationship any farther.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course I would not say something to anyone.
I'm going with "A softer #3," which is to say treat her nicely and do not say anything to anyone else in the group, but don't fake like you're super-friends with her. Be polite and cordial, but don't over-act friendly.
Like, just don't sit next to her at a group dinner. Don't go over and talk to her at a house party. Say hello to her, and keep it moving. If she comes up to a small group you're talking to, stay for a minute and then go to the restroom or go refill your drink or something. See her only in the larger group setting. If a lunch invite comes and it's just you and her and only one other person, decline.
Come on. You can't figure this out?
This.
And the reason you do it like this is because you want to keep all your other friends, right? The way to keep friends long term is not to be a total bitch to one person bc you don't click. That's ok. The other person probably knows you don't click and doesn't like you as much either! If you start throwing grenades around, eventually the friend group will drop someone and it will be YOU.
Anonymous wrote:Somewhat informal poll, just curious where people land on this. Assume that you have a bigger friend group where everyone is a mutual friend, but there's one person who just don't like. Maybe it's just her personality rubs you the wrong way, or maybe she did or said something you found personally hurtful. Regardless, you don't like her. Do you:
1) Tell people you don't like her, and make it clear to her that you don't like her (not friendly in person, do not invite to things you organize, etc.)
2) Tell people you don't like her, but act friendly to her face and treat her as you do others in the group (i.e. include in group invites, etc.)
3) Keep your feelings to yourself, act friendly to her face and treat her as you do others in the group
4) Keep your feelings to yourself, but make it clear to her that you don't like her (not friendly, no invites)
I am firmly in the #1 camp but it is controversial, I know, and viewed as "drama" which everyone claims to hate. But I'm just someone who is honest about how I feel about people and I'm not going to go around pretending that I like someone I really don't, whether she's in the room or not.
What say you?