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- This topic has 7 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 6 years, 5 months ago by Anonymous.
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June 29, 2018 at 1:12 am #214663AnonymousInactive
Hello everyone. I had some toxic friends in the past and the friendship ended very badly. They werre constantly laughing about my insecurities and they made me had insecurities about flaws i didnt know i had.
They blame me for creating the toxic friendship because when the friendship was ending i talked behind them, when in reality, the toxic friendship started the moment they kept laughing about me when they knew it hurt.
I feel bad because i know i may did things wrong, im not perfect, but nothing justifies the fact that they laughed about me when they knew it hurt me. They just keep lying and thinking its all my fault. Luckily i wont see them never again but it just hurts.
June 29, 2018 at 5:10 am #214687InkyParticipantHi grace,
The good news is there are 7 billion people on the planet. At least some of them would be likely friends for you. Meaning these toxic frienemies will be diluted in the greater goodness you would receive from humanity. You just have to make a CHOICE. Hint: it is better to be alone than to be with people who make you feel bad.
Choose Good People,
Inky
June 29, 2018 at 8:24 am #214709ShreyaParticipantDear Grace,
I do admire your strength of acknowledging the fact that even you might have done some wrong things. It’s completely fine. At times, all of us have lied or spoken something negative about someone behind their backs. But the best part is, even if you had done it, you have realised it and were strong to admit it to yourself. We are neither our actions or our thoughts. Because all of us can learn and grow out of them.
Take Care.
June 30, 2018 at 2:19 am #214777AnonymousGuestDear grace:
Once they repeatedly laughed about you (“constantly laughing about my insecurities… kept laughing about me when knew it hurt”), they were not your friends, not the way I define friends.
You then talked behind their backs (“I talked behind them”).
It was wrong of them to laugh at you. On the other hand, the fact that you talked about them behind their back is not necessarily wrong. Let’s say you warned the next person about the individuals who repeatedly and cruelly laughed at you, so they have the opportunity to not get hurt, that is a good thing.
You wrote that you feel bad because you “did things wrong, I’m not perfect”- we all did and do wrong things and we all are not perfect. My policy: do no harm to others, best I can and protect myself from harm by others, best I can. This means ending harmful relationships, and seeing that I am respectful and assertive in my communications with others. Respectful and truthful, at the same time.
anita
June 30, 2018 at 5:18 am #214805ShreyaParticipantDear Anita,
I agree with you. Healthy relationships is all about telling as well as receiving no gracefully. It’s better to be assertive rather than aggressive! 🙂
June 30, 2018 at 6:37 am #214821AnonymousGuest* Dear Shreya:
I like the way you phrased it, that healthy relationships are about telling and receiving No gracefully.
What I see in the way I was and the way people are is that most people are a combination of acting passively and aggressively, sometimes passive, other times aggressive; when aggressive, either overtly aggressive or covertly aggressive (“passive aggressive”), but hardly ever assertive. It is so because acting assertively is a skill that needs to be taught to children, and when not taught, it is a skill that still needs to be learned.
anita
June 30, 2018 at 10:31 am #214837ShreyaParticipantDear Anita,
Yes I completely agree. Acting assertively is a skill that needs to be developed. From my own experience, I have learned that practising assertiveness during times of pain and anger is not that easy, especially when the person in front of you seems to be very provocative. Thats the reason why before any confrontation, one needs to prepare himself/herself for all the possible outcomes. I had recently confronted a girl and as I was prepared before hand, tackling the situation became much easier and I was finally able to stand up for myself.
July 1, 2018 at 3:41 am #214889AnonymousGuest* Dear Shreya:
An excellent testimony to the need, in some circumstances, to be prepared for all possible outcomes before confronting a person assertively. I still feel uncomfortable at times asserting myself with a person who is not confrontational and even motivated to please me. I have to remind myself that the discomfort I feel, that fear of punishment, is an early experience activated, that of being punished for stating something I wanted.
anita
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