Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I think we need to see the note you sent her asking for the favor.
Or did you call her?
I think her offense might have come from the way you asked.
I said, "Hey ____, I have a huge favor to ask and you can totally say no. Absolutely no worries if you do!" She said it was no problem and that she would be happy to help. I told her that the door code was still the same as last time and where to find the item.
Not really making a strong argument against you treating her as an errand boy here.
Listen, you asked for a pretty big favor and said it's fine if she said no. Be true to your word that it's fine if, after doing you the favor, she now says no more.
Anonymous wrote:Is this that bad? I had to suddenly leave and go out of town. I realize that I left something important at home. I asked my friend if she could go to my house, get it, take it to the PO and overnight it to me. I told her I would of course pay for the shipping and compensate her for gas, etc. She agreed to do it and I cash app'd her $250. After she mailed it, she sent me the rec from the PO. It was $65 to ship. I thanked her profusely and confirmed that she got the cash app. Later that night she sent me a text saying how I treated her like an "errand boy". I'm confused as to what social norm I broke here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was worth $250 to overnight that you couldn't just buy new?
+1 that's the bigger question here. Fill us in OP.
I'm not OP but I was thinking it was something along the lines of prescription medicine that wasn't ready for refill or a prescription nightguard (I can't sleep without mine and my teeth are jacked so the off-the-shelf ones don't work for me).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If she was okay going to your house and doing this for you when you asked, then the social norm you broke was by paying her $100+ to do it above shipping cost. It's either a favor (repay the cost of shipping) or a TaskRabbit (pay them for their time).
Who gets mad about getting paid for being inconvenienced?
Someone who was doing a favor for a friend and made to feel cheap by the payment. This could be a particular problem in this friendship if OP has more money and throws it around regularly. Anyway, I don't see where it says she was mad, she just told OP how she made her feel. Cue everyone calling her names because she used her big girl words instead of stewing over it or going to DCUM to vent.
Yeah, one nonsensical sentence is really "big girl words". I'm sure this was really fun for you to come type out though.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I think we need to see the note you sent her asking for the favor.
Or did you call her?
I think her offense might have come from the way you asked.
I said, "Hey ____, I have a huge favor to ask and you can totally say no. Absolutely no worries if you do!" She said it was no problem and that she would be happy to help. I told her that the door code was still the same as last time and where to find the item.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here,
This is the full message she sent:
"Larla, I got the cash app. Thanks. I just want to say in the future, please don't regard me as your errand boy."
FWIW, I sent the cash app before she even went to the PO. I just wanted it to be done so she wouldn't be waiting around for her reimbursement. Also, no there was no implication that she had to do it. I even said in the message, "if you can't, no worries at all!" and meant it because I have a few local friends I could ask.
I think you are overreacting to this. It sounds like she's annoyed. Perhaps the favor was more burdensome than you realize (maybe it took a lot longer than you think to find the item and get it shipped, maybe she ran into irritating challenges at the shipping place, maybe she was having a stressful day of her own when you asked it of her), and it turns out that it was a really disruptive favor. It's okay for her to express her frustration with that, especially if she thinks you may not realize it was a big deal.
And she's setting a boundary for the future -- next time, don't call her for something like this. Now you know. Sure, it would have been better if she'd just told you at the time "this is too much for me, can you ask someone else?" But maybe she thought it wouldn't be that bad, or maybe she really wanted to come through for you in that moment and only realized once she was in the middle of it that it was more burdensome than she thought.
At the end of the day, you are the one who made a mistake and needed her help. She's a little put out, she's let you know she can't help you next time. Just thank her again and move on.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I think we need to see the note you sent her asking for the favor.
Or did you call her?
I think her offense might have come from the way you asked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was worth $250 to overnight that you couldn't just buy new?
+1 that's the bigger question here. Fill us in OP.