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November 18, 2015 at 5:03 am #87828JgoldParticipant
Hi friends,
I currently share a house with my friend and we both have our own rooms. She is very nice – sometimes when she returns home, she would knock on my door and ask me how my day went. These sometimes turn into long conversations where she would be telling me about what happened to her or she would be asking me about what I did, how was it, etc. This is very nice of her however sometimes I just want to have me time. On times like that, how should I hint to her that I just want to rest without being rude?
J
November 18, 2015 at 5:26 am #87829InkyParticipantHi jgold,
How about a social pre-emptive strike? LOL
YOU be waiting for her when she comes home and ask her how HER day’s been! (In the kitchen or living room ~ a common area you can leave).
After 15 min. or so say, “Well, want to get back to my book/work/Netflix Marathon!”
If she traps you in your room ever, you can always leave the room to go to the bathroom/get something in the living room/kitchen. Then say, “OK, going to bed/chill out/take a shower”.
Good Luck!
Inky
November 18, 2015 at 6:09 am #87831JgoldParticipantHi Inky,
thanks for the idea about the social pre-emptive strike! Never thought of that.
If she traps you in your room ever, you can always leave the room to go to the bathroom/get something in the living room/kitchen. Then say, “OK, going to bed/chill out/take a shower”.
And I’ll try that! I’ll a really bad liar so I’m nervous about mucking up. But I’ll try.
J
November 18, 2015 at 7:32 am #87832InkyParticipantBut saying “OK going to chill out” isn’t a lie. 🙂
You’ll be fine! 😀
November 18, 2015 at 8:31 am #87838AnonymousGuestDear jgold:
You can tell her that you sometimes need me time, that sometimes you don’t feel like talking and you need to be alone. That is the truth. It is probably true for her too. Sometimes she needs me time as well and sometimes when someone wants to talk to her, SHE doesn’t feel like it.
So you tell her your truth at any one time. If she asks, so “How do I know when you feel like talking and when you do not?” Then you answer: Ask and I will tell you. You can also say to her: “I definitely, almost always, do not want to talk after this particular time or day, so you protect yourself from interruptions from this time to that time each day.
Be assertive, not passive (talking to her when you don’t want) and not aggressive (that would be calling her names, telling her there is something wrong with her and that she shouldn’t have the desire to talk to you… these are examples)-
Just assertive- honor yourself and her. But yourself first.
anita
November 18, 2015 at 8:59 am #87839LoveAndLiveParticipantHi jgold,
I can absolutely relate to your situation. I live in a hostel and my best friend (who is not my roommate) comes knocking often and even though she’s one of the most caring people I’ve known, sometimes her visits are so long that it ends up feeding on a lot of my productive time and I have been looking for a solution to this problem for quite a while. Though I have not been able to solve this problem completely, what I do these days (and, it works sometimes) that whenever I’m doing something and she comes for a chat, I talk to her and between a line or two try getting back to what I was doing earlier, which subtly sends across the message that I was ACTUALLY doing something important. Or I just keep bringing up my work or yawn and just subtly try to tell her that I need my time. I have avoided any confrontation with her simply because she’s my best friend and I don’t want to hurt her feelings (she might not be able to take the truth in her stride). But, since you’re facing this problem with your flat-mate with whom you have to live, I think it would be a nice idea to tell her directly about your need of space. Hope this helps!
Good luck,
KaushambiNovember 18, 2015 at 9:31 am #87841AnonymousGuest* Dear Kaushambi:
If being telling a person directly that you need space is a good idea in case of telling it to one’s flat-mate, why is it not a good idea telling it to one’s best friend? Isn’t it an even better idea to tell it directly and otherwise be honest, assertive and respectful with a best friend than with a flat-mate? BEST friend should be where the very best part of you, your honesty, your honoring of yourself, that best part of you, should be … celebrated by you and by your best friend.
What do you think?
anita
November 18, 2015 at 10:25 am #87846LoveAndLiveParticipantHi Anita,
I do actually agree with you. That is what a best friend should ideally mean. And, many a times I do tell her things directly and she understands. Though, in this respect, I have wanted to tell her directly many a times about my requirement of my own space. But, since I know her quite well, I do understand her reasons for coming to me so often and I also realise that she cares for me way too much. I might express my disagreements to her over things we discuss, our differences in opinion are quite a few though it has never affected our friendship in even the minutest way. But, well, this is one thing about which I have thought of confronting her over often, but have eventually chickened out at the idea. She may not mind other things, but there is a possibility of her getting very hurt and I know she means well all the time and don’t want her to be hurt. Perhaps, my fears are unfounded. Perhaps, it is only a shortcoming on my part. I am some what non-confrontational by nature. And she’s a bit of a conventional kind of person and in our culture telling someone to not come to you house (room, in my case) can be considered rude. Also, my friend being a people’s person does not get the concept of alone time, which I being an introvert need very generously.
The reason I advised to let things be cleared out between flat-mates is because I hardly ever face such issues with my room-mates for the simple reason that I have maintained a strict distinction between friends and room-mates. I don’t hang out with people I live with. I share a very warm relationship with my room-mates and somehow I find it easier to be even brutally honest with them. I’m not saying that they don’t get hurt. Perhaps they do, but I feel when the other person isn’t very close to you and there aren’t too many emotions in the way, pragmatism works a little more easily, and I do speak strictly for myself. So, even when I know that my room-mate probably did not quite take my words very well, she will get over it soon, because at the end of the day there’s no fear of a relationship getting bruised. That’s solely my point of view.
Also, my subtle messages have worked a bit and she does understand my need of space and is slowly mending her ways. Though, I may have to tell her things directly some day. Though a part of me hopes that the day never arrives and things get sorted earlier, but if at all it must happen, I would eventually have to figure out the politest possible way of putting this across. Even people closest to us sometimes do get hurt by things that we do or say, isn’t it? I’m only trying to avoid that!
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