Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The OP is super self-centered. OP, you've said the friend is having a rough time, but you demand that the friend be responsive to YOU, otherwise the assumption is that the friend feels negatively about YOU.
This is OP. I know she’s having a rough time - last week we met for lunch and we talked about it. It just sucks to think that there’s a miscommunication that’s causing this silence. I didn’t intend to be short and I really wanted to know more about her opportunity.
I won’t chase, it just sucks!
Anonymous wrote:The OP is super self-centered. OP, you've said the friend is having a rough time, but you demand that the friend be responsive to YOU, otherwise the assumption is that the friend feels negatively about YOU.
Anonymous wrote:OP, did she finally respond?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your friendship can't weather one of you needing to say "can't chat now. Going into. Meeting" without the other getting pissy and passive aggressive, it's not a healthy friendship. Hope you're overthinking it.
Seriously. I had to abruptly end a call with my best friend last night and she isn't the least bit upset about it. Nor am I when she does the same. We make time for each other as much as we can, but also, life happens.
But assuming that the friend is being pissy and passive aggressive also does not speak well for OP.
You guys hate each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How do you know she read your texts?
DP. Some people leave notifications on. So when they read a text it shows that they did and when. I always turn it off.
This isn't a certainty. If the app is still open, it may mark as read without the message actually being read.
Not that anyone owes you a same-day response, however typical that may be for you.
Anonymous wrote:I recently started my dream job, which is 100% in person and pretty intense. Yesterday my good friend texted me asking how it was going; we bantered back and forth. Then she told me about a great new opportunity that just came up for her, and I texted back how exciting it was, asking for more details…and then noticed I had to attend a meeting and told her so, but that I wanted to hear all about it!
She said “you have more important things to attend to! Go to your meeting!” After my meeting - two hours later - I texted back following up with questions about her opportunity. She read these, but did not respond. Around lunchtime today I texted a cutesy “hello” gif, which she read but did not respond to. Finally, when I got home today, I sent a message saying “hey I know you’re busy, but I want you to know how excited I am for you! What a great opportunity!” (She read this and has not responded.)
Why did she stop responding? Obviously I won’t reach out again but ouch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your friendship can't weather one of you needing to say "can't chat now. Going into. Meeting" without the other getting pissy and passive aggressive, it's not a healthy friendship. Hope you're overthinking it.
Seriously. I had to abruptly end a call with my best friend last night and she isn't the least bit upset about it. Nor am I when she does the same. We make time for each other as much as we can, but also, life happens.
Anonymous wrote:If your friendship can't weather one of you needing to say "can't chat now. Going into. Meeting" without the other getting pissy and passive aggressive, it's not a healthy friendship. Hope you're overthinking it.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. I know she read the messages because we use a service that has read receipts, which we both enable.
I know this might sound immature but we are actually in our thirties and, yes, genuinely busy, but this pattern of not responding is not the norm for either of us.
She and her family have been having a tough time due to location (she is a trailing spouse) and she’s currently in school to try to find more opportunities. So jealousy is possible but it wasn’t something I expected. I think she might have been put off by how quickly I jumped off (but I really did have to go).
This kind of codependent/passive aggressive dynamic is also not normal for our friendship! (I’m referring to us both.)
I’ll try not to worry about it, but it’s a little disappointing. Thanks for the perspectives.
Anonymous wrote:If OP‘s friend is jealous for the new opportunity (I can’t tell, only OP would know if she’s the type), then this isn’t a friend worth having. It would be so immature and petty to begrudge OP her new job, and I wouldn't trust a friend like that. Maybe see if she responds (she could have been legitimately busy), and if OP gets a bad vibe from her, I would downgrade her to acquaintance status and not tell her personal stuff anymore. Sad that grown women act like this. OP - I hope that’s not the case, but if it is, you now know her true colors.