Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s weird you assumed your friend wouldn’t want $ for the ticket.
Agree. You know the ticket cost money.
Do you always expect things for free?
Anonymous wrote:I get where the ticket purchaser is coming from.
Sounds like you and she could have communicated better about what to do if you couldn't sell the ticket.
Anonymous wrote:An expensive lesson for the last minute emergency types. It's not your problem to solve for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s weird you assumed your friend wouldn’t want $ for the ticket.
Agree. You know the ticket cost money.
Do you always expect things for free?
Anonymous wrote:
Give her the money for the tickets.
Nothing in life is free. Lesson learned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend and I were planning on going to a concert together, she had a last minute emergency and couldn’t go so she sent the tickets to me. I told her I would try to sell them or just find someone to go with. This morning she texted me asking if I was able to sell them and I said no, but I found a friend to go with. Then she asked me for money for the ticket and I was a little taken aback, I was under the impression she just gave the tickets to me? WWYD? I had paid her for my ticket, but was just going to give her ticket to my friend. She didn’t say that up front when she cancelled.
Why do you expect your friend to buy a ticket for your other friend? They should at least split the price.
Anonymous wrote:A friend and I were planning on going to a concert together, she had a last minute emergency and couldn’t go so she sent the tickets to me. I told her I would try to sell them or just find someone to go with. This morning she texted me asking if I was able to sell them and I said no, but I found a friend to go with. Then she asked me for money for the ticket and I was a little taken aback, I was under the impression she just gave the tickets to me? WWYD? I had paid her for my ticket, but was just going to give her ticket to my friend. She didn’t say that up front when she cancelled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is not your job to sell her ticket.
Ordinarily I would agree but I think OP is being obtuse here. It's not that hard to re-sell concert tickets in this day and age -- you post them online and especially if you are far enough in advance, you can usually recoup all or most of your costs.
What I think happened is that OP *offered* to find a buyer for the second ticket because she still wanted to go, and since her friend had bought the tickets and was in possession of them, her friend handed them over so OP could do that. But instead of finding a buyer, OP just found another friend she wanted to go with and told the original friend she "couldn't find a buyer."
I think the friend would have just tried to resell her own ticket, but OP likely insisted on having it so she could try to find someone she wanted to go with.
Anonymous wrote:
Give her the money for the tickets.
Nothing in life is free. Lesson learned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is not your job to sell her ticket.
Ordinarily I would agree but I think OP is being obtuse here. It's not that hard to re-sell concert tickets in this day and age -- you post them online and especially if you are far enough in advance, you can usually recoup all or most of your costs.
What I think happened is that OP *offered* to find a buyer for the second ticket because she still wanted to go, and since her friend had bought the tickets and was in possession of them, her friend handed them over so OP could do that. But instead of finding a buyer, OP just found another friend she wanted to go with and told the original friend she "couldn't find a buyer."
I think the friend would have just tried to resell her own ticket, but OP likely insisted on having it so she could try to find someone she wanted to go with.