Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hey Jane. Sorry to hear you are divorcing. I know how hard it can be. It was particularly hurtful when my former friends dumped me. Hope your friends treat you better than mine did. Best of luck.
Love this so much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hey Jane. Sorry to hear you are divorcing. I know how hard it can be. It was particularly hurtful when my former friends dumped me. Hope your friends treat you better than mine did. Best of luck.
Love this so much.
+2
+3
I'd write some version of this.
Anonymous wrote:Because now she is getting divorced and wants support.
She was one of a few good friends who dropped me when I got divorced five years ago. It was deliberate -- I was "accidentally" but probably purposely included on a group text, and my attempts to reach out to them after that were ignored, so I gave up after a while. Since then, I've only seen her once at a mutual friend's gathering about two years ago, where we were polite but distant.
She didn't apologize for or explain why she and the others cut me off. I know this often happens when people don't know how to respond to a friend's divorce, but it was really hurtful at the time. I'm in a good place now, but this churned up all those old feelings.
How would you respond to this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This. And then we can tell you how we'd respond. It really depends on what she said. And was it by text, email, or did she leave a voicemail?Anonymous wrote:What exactly did she say when she contacted you?
OP here. It was via text. Aside from pandemic-related pleasantries, it said, "You may have heard that J and I have made the painful decision to divorce. This has really thrown me for a loop, and I could really use a friend to talk to right now. Do you have some time to chat in the next few days?"
I'd respond something like, "I'm sorry to hear that you are divorcing. I know how hard it can be. But I don't think I'm the right person for you to talk to. Five years ago, when I was going through the same thing, you and other people I thought were my friends dropped me and ignored my attempts to reach out, and it was very hurtful. I haven't even seen you in two years. I'm in a good place now, but I can't be part of your support system. I wish you the best of luck."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This. And then we can tell you how we'd respond. It really depends on what she said. And was it by text, email, or did she leave a voicemail?Anonymous wrote:What exactly did she say when she contacted you?
OP here. It was via text. Aside from pandemic-related pleasantries, it said, "You may have heard that J and I have made the painful decision to divorce. This has really thrown me for a loop, and I could really use a friend to talk to right now. Do you have some time to chat in the next few days?"
I'd respond something like, "I'm sorry to hear that you are divorcing. I know how hard it can be. But I don't think I'm the right person for you to talk to. Five years ago, when I was going through the same thing, you and other people I thought were my friends dropped me and ignored my attempts to reach out, and it was very hurtful. I haven't even seen you in two years. I'm in a good place now, but I can't be part of your support system. I wish you the best of luck."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say "I'm so sorry Jane, I know how hard that is. Take good care."
I might even be a little warmer if I felt generous (There is peace on the other side, and I hope everything will work our for you. Or Wishing you all the best or something like that).
But I wouldn't go any further. I wouldn't be vindictive, and I wouldn't be encouraging. I'd just leave it there and would feel pretty comfortable with myself and that choice.
If she presses, or follow up, then I'd see what she said and make my next decision. A genuine apology might get some response from me, otherwise I'd probably wish her the best and then not get involved. "I'm sorry Jane. I really can empathize, but I also felt very hurt when you dropped contact with me X years ago and don't think I'm a good sounding board for you now. I do truly wish you the best. Take care."
This is the right answer. Classy, truthful, kind, but not selling yourself down the river.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This. And then we can tell you how we'd respond. It really depends on what she said. And was it by text, email, or did she leave a voicemail?Anonymous wrote:What exactly did she say when she contacted you?
OP here. It was via text. Aside from pandemic-related pleasantries, it said, "You may have heard that J and I have made the painful decision to divorce. This has really thrown me for a loop, and I could really use a friend to talk to right now. Do you have some time to chat in the next few days?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people drop friends when they get divorced?? That makes no sense! I’m happily married, but I’ve never felt that someone else’s divorce has anything to do with me or my friendships. That’s so odd to me.
Some people see their now-single friend as a threat, like she might go after their husband. Others think divorce might be "catching." And some think your status drops if you're not married, or you have some kind of stigma. Others think it's just "too hard" to socialize if you're not part of a couple. I don't get it, but some people really think that way.
Anonymous wrote:Why do people drop friends when they get divorced?? That makes no sense! I’m happily married, but I’ve never felt that someone else’s divorce has anything to do with me or my friendships. That’s so odd to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hey Jane. Sorry to hear you are divorcing. I know how hard it can be. It was particularly hurtful when my former friends dumped me. Hope your friends treat you better than mine did. Best of luck.
Love this so much.
+2
+3
I'd write some version of this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This. And then we can tell you how we'd respond. It really depends on what she said. And was it by text, email, or did she leave a voicemail?Anonymous wrote:What exactly did she say when she contacted you?
OP here. It was via text. Aside from pandemic-related pleasantries, it said, "You may have heard that J and I have made the painful decision to divorce. This has really thrown me for a loop, and I could really use a friend to talk to right now. Do you have some time to chat in the next few days?"