Quote from: trapthavok on September 10, 2008, 01:36:25 PM
Nate's Example
Ok ok here's the example for real: We had a meet and greet, fun and games type of intro party to our GLBTQ club here on campus.... One of my friends (whom I used to consider a best friend) is president of our club, so I always help out and get things ready before events. That part I don't mind, I used to do it to have time to hang out with her, but now I just really like doing it for myself and not so much to be around her anymore. I don't hold an official position in the club, because I'm more helpful without one. I like helping.
The problem that arose that night was that my friend was feeling like crap that night. I don't know exactly what her problem was, but because of it, she kept taking everything that happened that night as a personal hit on her. She thought no one respected her and listened to her [not true] and then wouldn't talk to me for 3 days. I didn't know at the time that she was feeling bad because I was having a great time, and I'm personally dense when it comes to other people and if they're having a bad day, but I could tell once she started getting quiet and left early. I kept asking her what was wrong over those 3 days and telling her if she wanted to talk about it, ever, I was here. The way she was acting, I thought someone in her family had died (I'm being serious here, I'm not joking) she was just THAT upset.
This friend, I used to consider my best friend because I used to be able to tell her anything and get advice, whether I asked for it or not. She never really talked about herself, but I figured that she would open up in time (my mistake, that's one of my flaws I have to fix). So when she came to the meeting three nights later and announced she was quitting as president because she'd been so miserable at the party and felt she'd been disrespected, it came as a surprise for me, and as kind of a shock because it was like.... That's all you were upset about and you couldn't even tell me that? I thought we were tighter than that. Then she texts me and apologizes for not telling me, then goes on about how I hurt her feelings at the party so I don't think she was especially sorry.
I'm a clown. I crack jokes a lot, and yes if you're in a bad mood, it can be taken the wrong way. So I made sure she knew that. She acted as though she knew it was partially her fault for getting upset at the jokes I'd made, but was still mad at me for making them while she was upset. I don't know when people are upset, you can't just assume I can read your mind, and that's what I told her. I would have never made jokes had I known she was upset, I'd have tried to cheer her up. But because she was upset with me this ONE time, I was supposed to be sorry and know that she was upset with me. She could have told me right there at the party and said "please stop" and I would have stopped, but instead she chose to wait 3 days and then say I hurt her feelings, at which point I'm over it. What bugs me most is that she even brought it up because if you're feeling bad about something else, everything's gonna turn sour in your eyes, even my jokes so there's no reason to be mad at me especially if you didn't tell me you were feeling bad.
It ticked me off because I've been such a good friend to her and vice versa that she wouldn't talk to me 3 days over something that stupid that I had NO control over...... It just goes to show maybe we weren't as good friends as I'd thought. Because she's hurt my feelings multiple times in the past, but I've tried to dismiss it rather than confront her about it because I think I was just in the mindset that we were closer than we actually are, and it was probably in my head, so I've never brought those things up with her. I figure its all me, and I'm just presuming too much of our friendship. But she gets mad this ONE time and its like the world must shatter.
I don't know if that was a good example or not, I am really bothered by her right now so she's the only friend I can call to mind. (This isn't the only reason she's bugging me but it's one of the big reasons, yes).
Okay, here are my thoughts on this. First of all, one thing that's important to remember from the get-go is that emotions are very rarely rational. And cold logic is something that usually doesn't get a look-in with the heat of emotional responses in full flow.
Women are emotional, intuitive people, honey. And our emotions are often closer to the surface and a lot more easily manipulated. Your friend sounds like she was suffering with, amongst other things, a bad case of low self-confidence and low self-esteem. When that happens, the perceptions of a person are overwhelming and all-encompassing. Whether what they're feeling with regard to themselves and their self-worth is accurate or not... that doesn't make a shred of difference. You could have choirs of angels proclaiming how magnificent they are and it would fall on deaf ears. If someone is low on self-esteem then, by its very nature, they're going to think that they're worthless and that nothing they do is ever good enough. They have to realise that's not the case by themselves, and heaven knows that's a hard thing to do.
I suspect that it's this very reason that she didn't open up about herself to you. And here I can speak from personal experience. It's not because of you and anything you've done or haven't done... but, as you said, you were able to talk to her about anything and get advice on your issues whether you wanted it or not. This, I think, was her way of dealing with her own mental state... by focusing on you and yours. By doing that, she could afford to
not think about how she was feeling by helping you and concentrating on how
you were feeling.
The reason she may have waited so long to say anything to you... there are three possibilities that I can think of:
1. She was forced to deal with the way she was feeling after so long trying to not think about it. And it was like a dam breaking. Her emotions were just so overwhelming through however long she'd spent bottling everything up and trying to escape them by focusing on other people (perhaps a reason she wanted the position of authority at the club -- a way to not have to think about her own feelings by busying herself with other things) that, for a while, she couldn't think about anything else except how she was feeling.
This is no reflection on you, or your friendship. It's simply that her mind was so overloaded with the way she was feeling that she had to try and make sense of it or she would feel like she was losing her mind.
2. She may have taken what you said far more seriously than you did, and it may have been a much bigger deal to her than it perhaps should have been, due to her state of mind, exactly because she thought a lot about your friendship. As I've said elsewhere, the people that hurt the most are the ones that you're closest to. And if you're in an emotionally vulnerable frame of mind, where anything anyone says is taken negatively (when normally it wouldn't bother you), then for someone close to you to be percieved to have hurt your feelings... magnify the normal effect by a factor of ten and that's how much it matters. It's like being stabbed by your soulmate.
As I said, emotions aren't rational processes, and fuelled by being down to start with, they can reach astronomical levels of intensity and meanings are assigned to actions that, at any other time, wouldn't be given a second glance.
Because of this, maybe that length of time was simply her wanting to retreat from the whole world, who she thought were all against her. And, unfortunately, that 'world' may have included you. That doesn't mean that she considered you less of a friend... but exactly the opposite.
I think that, in the cold light of day, it's easy to realise that getting upset was ultimately an irrational thing to do, and baseless. But when emotions are running high, the notion of whether you should be getting upset at something is usually relegated to the 1% of the brain that isn't taken up with the other 99% screaming
"Oh, God, that hurt! Why would he say that? I must be a horrible person... useless... worthless... no one cares... everyone hates me!"3. She didn't think that she should say anything to you because she knew how stupid it would sound if she admitted that she'd been hurt by things that she shouldn't have been. Add to that the fact that you never say anything to her when you've been hurt... maybe she just thought that was how the mechanics of your friendship worked. That when something bothered you, you just don't talk about it. And because of that, she was hesitant to say anything to you because of the way she felt about what you'd said.
I don't know exactly what you said that she took the wrong way, but one other thing is... when people begin to feel bad through what others say, often they become like rabits caught in a car's headlights... too stunned to say anything by the thought that it's happening at all. Like "WTF? How could xxxxx say that!?" And that shock is usually enough to stop the person saying "Stop it" or anything like that because they're too busy trying to assimilate the fact that it's happening at all. It ends up being like a bad dream that you can't wake up from.
I don't know this person, Nate, but I do recognise the signs of how she was feeling, and those are just a few ideas as to why based on the times I've felt like that myself. I may be completely wrong about everything... but don't be so sure that her reaction is because she isn't as committed to the friendship as you are. It may be totally the reverse, and the way she's acting is exactly because she considers you such a close friend.
QuoteYes, that's exactly how I feel. Whenever I get invited places by friends, I go (if I have the time). But whenever I invite people and they say they're coming, then don't show up and text me about how tired they are and maybe next time, I take it as personal rejection. Same thing goes for when they just flat out reject me in the first place. I feel as though I shouldn't feel that way based on what you said though, I've never seen the difference before your question.
It's not likely to be a personal rejection against you, honey. Sometimes people don't want to do things because they're not in the mood, or because they don't feel well, or they have other plans or whatever. That absolutely doesn't mean that they think any less of you, or won't want to do somthing with you the next time you ask them. It just means that you may have caught them at a bad time. I'm sure you have those yourself, right? When you just want to be by yourself and chill or something? Have a little 'Nate Time'?
Friendship is good, and hanging out with friends is a great thing. That's undeniable. But you, and others, have lives outside of that friendship. And it doesn't have to be an all-consuming thing where every time you don't do something then the entire friendship is called into question. I mean, if it starts being every single time then yes, I would agree with you that something might not be right. But the odd time when someone just isn't in the mood to do something, they aren't rejecting you for asking, sweetie... only what it is you're asking them to do. Which isn't the same thing at all. It doesn't mean they think any less of you. *hugs*
QuoteI don't have problems saying no to people, I just have problems separating my saying "yes" as "yes I'm doing it because I'm your friend" or "yes I'm doing it because I want to." That's where I get hurt because my yeses are usually meant the first way.
I think a good step is to make your affirmatives lean more towards the second way, Nate. Do things because you want to, not because you feel you have to in order to keep the friendship going. Ask yourself if you really want to do what someone's asked you to. If the answer is no, then say no. Just like people don't think less of you as a friend by saying no to something you want to do... they aren't automatically going to assume you don't want to be friends with them when you choose not to do something they want.
You're an individual, honey, with a mind of your own. And you can choose what you do and don't want to do. Plus, if you do things because you want to then you'll have a lot more fun doing them than you would if you think you've been left with no choice. And so will the people you do them with. So when you do decide to do something then you'll know, and they'll know that you're doing it out of genuine desire and not out of a sense of obligation. That will mean more to all of you.