Anonymous wrote:I had this problem. The friend was also part of my professional network.
I tried to do the slow fade but she wouldn’t let it fade though I know her heart wasn’t in it.
I knew letting anyone else know would cause ripples and coding sides so I kept up this charade for 8 more years until we moved several states away.
I am finally free! Except she still sends a Christmas card though I don’t send her one and we haven’t talked for 5 years. She doesn’t write anything on the card. Pointless. I received this year’s card and turned around and chucked it into the recycling bin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please don’t do this. You’re going to make things tense and shitty for everyone for no real reason. Just tough it out.
I agree.
You’re inviting speculation and hurt feelings.
You don’t have to be best friends with her, but it sounds like you’d like to ostracize her from your group.
Grow up and suck it up for the few hours when you’ll be in the same room together.
I don’t want to ostracize her. I go to events when she is present. I say hello and exchange small talk. I consciously don’t sit near her and almost always leave physical area if she is there. I’m sure she has noticed but I try not to make it obvious to others.
However, I don’t want to invite her to something for myself or my child.
A big part of the falling out has to do with how her child treats my child. That started it and I started to dislike mom altogether over the past 2 years.
Did anyone read this?
This is really absurd. Children grow and change--and there is often more than one side to the story. You need(ed) to leave the child drama out of it and act like the adults you purportedly are. However, it appears your maturity stalled at around 14, based on your explanations on how you want to handle it.
Back to junior high for you.
My friend and I think her child is a future serial killer type child and the mom was abused and something very wrong with mom. I don’t trust her and don’t want her or her child in my house. Both mom and child go to therapy and have a lot of problems. At the same time, mom tries hard to appear perfect and puts others down around her.
I don’t want to spread rumors about child’s disturbing behaviors and my friend’s Split personality.
Anonymous wrote:Why is the child singling out your child out of this larger group? If the child is as disturbed as you describe, wouldn’t more parents be weary?
I’m all for you cutting this person out but you need to own it and the resulting fallout with the group.
Anonymous wrote:Is the extended group aware her child has been unkind to yours?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was growing up this area was not as transient as it is now. We had almost all the same neighbors for my entire childhood. There was a lot of bitchiness and people having conflicts but guess what, they just continued socializing with each other. It was a neighborhood filled with families with kids so there were plenty of opportunities to mingle.
I feel like the era of real adulthood is over. Just a bunch of adolescents and children in big bodies.
We do not live in the same neighborhood. Our kids don’t attend the same schools. We have to go out of our way to make time for each other with our busy schedules.
In years past, we would make plans 6 months in advance to do things together.
My point is that you just have to live with people in your life that are less than perfect. You have to deal with people in your friend group that you dislike. That is adult life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please don’t do this. You’re going to make things tense and shitty for everyone for no real reason. Just tough it out.
I agree.
You’re inviting speculation and hurt feelings.
You don’t have to be best friends with her, but it sounds like you’d like to ostracize her from your group.
Grow up and suck it up for the few hours when you’ll be in the same room together.
I don’t want to ostracize her. I go to events when she is present. I say hello and exchange small talk. I consciously don’t sit near her and almost always leave physical area if she is there. I’m sure she has noticed but I try not to make it obvious to others.
However, I don’t want to invite her to something for myself or my child.
A big part of the falling out has to do with how her child treats my child. That started it and I started to dislike mom altogether over the past 2 years.
Did anyone read this?
This is really absurd. Children grow and change--and there is often more than one side to the story. You need(ed) to leave the child drama out of it and act like the adults you purportedly are. However, it appears your maturity stalled at around 14, based on your explanations on how you want to handle it.
Back to junior high for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please don’t do this. You’re going to make things tense and shitty for everyone for no real reason. Just tough it out.
I agree.
You’re inviting speculation and hurt feelings.
You don’t have to be best friends with her, but it sounds like you’d like to ostracize her from your group.
Grow up and suck it up for the few hours when you’ll be in the same room together.
I don’t want to ostracize her. I go to events when she is present. I say hello and exchange small talk. I consciously don’t sit near her and almost always leave physical area if she is there. I’m sure she has noticed but I try not to make it obvious to others.
However, I don’t want to invite her to something for myself or my child.
A big part of the falling out has to do with how her child treats my child. That started it and I started to dislike mom altogether over the past 2 years.