Anonymous wrote:
Op here. I just think we have a history of her making everything about her and not really listening.
I’m very introverted and she’s an extrovert so normally I don’t mind listening to her.
Anonymous wrote:Did you call it a business when you talked to her? Because you seem to flip between calling it a business here and saying it’s not a business so you don’t need to do business related things.
Anonymous wrote:Criticism is the heart of love, and maybe she was blunt and maybe out of line, and maybe was trying to make sure you had thought of xyz, and maybe she could have phrased things less presumptively, but maybe you also are reacting this way because she hit on weaknesses that you can't answer and if you dig into that, maybe you need to recognize her intent to try to help, however poorly she deployed it...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give her some grace. She regrets it and she’s trying to apologize. Your feelings are hurt, and I get that. Mine would be, too. But this is forgivable, especially because she’s trying. Now go prove her wrong!
Op here. I’m not going to end the friendship but I definitely need some time and space. We’d ordinarily talk/text/or see each other several days a week, but I need at least a few weeks off.
The thing is, I don’t need to prove her wrong. Like just even having that thought tells me this is not the right kind of friendship for me. My friend should be rooting for me.
I'm wondering how many people you interact with regularly... Some friends are the cheerleader type. Others think they're caring by warning you about potential pitfalls. This one sounds like the latter.
Anonymous wrote:Criticism is the heart of love, and maybe she was blunt and maybe out of line, and maybe was trying to make sure you had thought of xyz, and maybe she could have phrased things less presumptively, but maybe you also are reacting this way because she hit on weaknesses that you can't answer and if you dig into that, maybe you need to recognize her intent to try to help, however poorly she deployed it...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give her some grace. She regrets it and she’s trying to apologize. Your feelings are hurt, and I get that. Mine would be, too. But this is forgivable, especially because she’s trying. Now go prove her wrong!
Op here. I’m not going to end the friendship but I definitely need some time and space. We’d ordinarily talk/text/or see each other several days a week, but I need at least a few weeks off.
The thing is, I don’t need to prove her wrong. Like just even having that thought tells me this is not the right kind of friendship for me. My friend should be rooting for me.
Anonymous wrote:I work in small business advocacy and I meet a LOT of entrepreneurs in my industry. I also have a hobby that many women turn into a side hustle and I read their posts about pricing and customers on FB sites dedicated to the hobby.
I will be honest with you, OP, a LOT of small business owners have subject matter expertise and/or talent, but do not know crap about running a business. A lot of women in my hobby who use it as a side hustle don’t seem to understand the difference between revenue and profit. Many of them value their time at $0/hr and would realize that even at minimum wage, they are technically losing money on their business and would have more income if they just worked at Target or the grocery store. Finally, a lot of entrepreneurs don’t seem to understand their customer base and market well and over estimate the convert rate for advertising or what customers are willing to pay.
If your friend’s unsolicited advice was stuff like “you’re making quilts? My neighbor’s daughter’s teacher sells quilts and she always donated one to the school auction for publicity. Maybe you should do that” then chalk it up to her being well meaning, but off base, and let it go as long as she doesn’t bring it up again.
But also consider that maybe you didn’t think everything through and you are still in the “dreaming” phase - thinking through the what ifs in case you are successful. If she brought up some considerations that you haven’t addressed yet, try to put your defensiveness aside. Someone you talk to 2-3x a week for years cares about you and there might be a grain of truth to her assessment you aren’t ready to hear.