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#206414 - 08/04/10 03:41 PM
Re: Taking Advantage
[Re: Anno]
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Registered: 09/09/08
Posts: 779
Loc: American living in Germany
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I agree.
_________________________
A friend is a gift you give yourself. -- Robert Louis Stevenson
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#206504 - 08/05/10 02:50 PM
Re: Taking Advantage
[Re: Edelweiss2]
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Member
Registered: 06/27/05
Posts: 2561
Loc: Alabama
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Good for your friend!
_________________________
Dee "They will be able to say that she stood in the storm and when the wind did not blow her away....and surely it has not.....she adjusted her sails" - Elizabeth Edwards
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#207307 - 09/02/10 11:56 AM
Re: Taking Advantage
[Re: jabber]
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Registered: 11/04/08
Posts: 601
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My advice would have been a little different. Actually, I think what your friend did was kind of awful. Did she want the girl gone or did she want her to pay her own way? I see no reason to 'pretend' to be nice when you are actually asking someone to leave. Just do it already. But even if your friend resented it, she allowed her stepdaughter to come into her home as a guest. It's her own fault for letting someone take advantage of her. The time to change things should have been before she showed up or before she got in the door.
I just think that once you let someone occupy a bedroom, particularly if you have done it in the past, you have extended your hospitality and the other person has a right -- even if that person is a user -- to think things will go as they have in the past. If I went to someone's home thinking I was a guest and my hostess demanded money for my stay, I'd be out of there in a shot. But I'd be mostly angry that she changed the 'rules' on me without telling me ahead of time.
Yeah, I'm glad your friend finally stood up for herself, but she did it in about the worst way possible. I think she really should have just refused her entrance in the first place and told her the truth. I know she doesn't like the girl, but she really missed her chance to give her some guidance about being a guest and taking advantage of people. Quiet words might have still left her unhappy but might have stuck in her head. Now she will just think your friend went a little crazy -- after all, she did let her in -- and threw her out, and won't think about her own behavior at all.
Edited by Ellemm (09/02/10 11:58 AM)
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#207311 - 09/02/10 03:22 PM
Re: Taking Advantage
[Re: Ellemm]
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Boomer in Chief
Registered: 03/11/10
Posts: 3212
Loc: Illinois
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Wow! I'm not going to try to speak to the past, the situation which led up to the step-daughter leaving, as that is in the past now...
What matters now is really how things will progress in their relationship going forward. It sounds to me like the stepdaughter will "virtuously" tell everyone that her step-mom went off her rocker in her presence, and even thought she "did nothing to cause it," she was kicked out.
Meanwhile the step-mom is feeling proud of herself for finally taking action, and no longer feeling like a doormat...
The challenge is going to show up when the time comes -- and it will -- that the two of them need to communicate with each other or be in each other's presence for some reason. Could be a family illness, could be a family event such as a death or a wedding.
The fact is, IMHO they were both wrong in their actions and reactions. I predict there will be "blood," hypothetically speaking, before things finally get ironed out.
I suspect that the only way to avert this is for the step-mom to call the step-daughter now, and "eat a little crow" by apologizing for her "bizarre" actions --even though I am sure she feels no need to do this, because in her mind she is in the right -- and invite the step daughter for a chat so they can "iron things out now, before things fester and get worse between them."
They ought to meet in a neutral zone -- such as a restaurant or park or other public space where they can talk -- and the step-mom needs to tell the step-daughter how she feels taken advantage of. And then use the "detente" as an opportunity for a "teaching moment," where she explains to the step-daughter how proper house guests behave.
I'd do it now, so that peace can reign in the family and the hurts on each side don't have a chance to grow larger fueled by time and distance.
Not sure others will share my feelings, but that's my two cents worth, gained through growing up in a periodically dysfunctional family. (Didn't we all, to some degree?)
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#207312 - 09/02/10 03:45 PM
Re: Taking Advantage
[Re: Anne Holmes]
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Member
Registered: 12/30/05
Posts: 3027
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Looking at the issue from the girls point of view.. she borrows clothes..gets off with it... she uses a car...stays out late...gets off with it..its the small details that add up to a whole relationship..mutual respect sows seeds for harmony
if the final blow up came out of the blue she may be totally unaware that she has been taking liberties.. so its stalemate and like Anne I feel that its the future that matters.
looking at a topic from all sides can aid clear thinking.
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#207334 - 09/02/10 10:59 PM
Re: Taking Advantage
[Re: jabber]
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Registered: 11/04/08
Posts: 601
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I don't know these people, of course. I have no idea if chatty's friend really never wants to see the girl again or just wants her to be a more considerate guest. I don't know if they have some level of friendly relationship, even if it's not ideal, or if they barely tolerate each other.
Like Anne says, though, they can only go forward. How they do that is up to them.
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#207348 - 09/03/10 09:17 AM
Re: Taking Advantage
[Re: Ellemm]
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Member
Registered: 02/17/05
Posts: 10032
Loc: New York State
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#208137 - 10/03/10 10:08 AM
Re: Taking Advantage
[Re: chatty lady]
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Registered: 11/04/08
Posts: 601
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Of course your friend has every right to end a poor relationship and to refuse to let someone take advantage of her, but I hope your friend speaks up about things that are bothering her in future.
In fact, I'm not certain it's all that gracious to be seething inside over and over and not saying something. I lost a long-standing friend over this issue when I discovered that she had been keepng a big secret from me. (Her husband got angry with me over a minor remark I made but no one ever told me about it until a chance encounter left me shaken after he started shouting at me.) If I make someone angry, please tell me. Don't pretend that everything is all right and then leave me wondering if you (general you) ever tell the truth. All she had to do was tell me I owed someone an apology and I would have been over there in a flash. Now I don't trust either of them; they were never going to tell me. What else have they never told me?
The other relatives need to do the same thing, though: stop the freeloading now. Sometimes you can't make people better but you can stop them driving you crazy, so I'm sure your friend did what she needed to do for her peace of mind.
Edited by Ellemm (10/03/10 10:12 AM)
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#208143 - 10/03/10 02:44 PM
Re: Taking Advantage
[Re: Ellemm]
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Registered: 11/04/08
Posts: 601
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Sorry to respond to my own post, but I did want to mention that I can well understand how nice people put up with far more than they should -- until they finally say, "that's it!" It's a shame when kindness isn't repaid.
Edited by Ellemm (10/03/10 02:45 PM)
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#208890 - 11/09/10 10:16 PM
Re: Taking Advantage
[Re: jabber]
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MustangGal
Unregistered
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Chatty, you're friend needs to mare up and kick that little filly out of the pasture!
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