- Messages
- 54,308
Exactly!
That is just crazy and obsessive. Sounds like they haven't been married long enough to go completely insane though. lol lol
Tom you're doing damn fine by my calculations.
Only one of the three is married, that's my buddy who I spend the most time with.
The other two are only girlfriended, one of them is in a living together situation with his better-half. The only time I see him is when she's at work and we aren't.
The other two don't count as married then. The other obsessive girlfriends are just jealous of whatever time they can't spend. There needs to be some air between the two of them for goodness sake.:eusa_doh:
Yeah, you'd think they'd wanna at least get out of the house sometime. We used to go on double-dates now and then, but that seems to have died off, too.
Another thing that seems to be disappearing is double-dates and such. You don't really see people on such outings around here.
I think it's also hard when you are a couple to hang out with non-coupled friends and vice versa. Someone ends up being left out (either the spouse or the friend) or feels uncomfortable if it is the three of you. Of course, it's perfectly acceptable to have friends who aren't coupled, but a lot of couples just have difficulty working it out.
This is especially true if the couple's time together is really limited and therefore they want to hang out with each other every chance they get because otherwise they might not be able to spend time together because of work or other commitments. If you're part of a couple, it's easier to hang out and still get quality couple time. Nobody wants to make anyone feel like a third wheel.
:eusa_clapHey Tom this is kind of how I figure friends,A friend will come down and bail you out of jail,a good friend will be sitting right beside you helping you figure out what to tell the wife and in the mean time helping plan the next outing.Just my opinion.
I know you're speaking in generalities, but I have a specific story that I felt was kind of rude.
I had a New Years party on New Years Eve, and it was a fairly big deal, big turnout and all that. My best friend was the first person to tell me he'd be here, made the plans weeks in advance and all. It was very important to me that him and Sam were coming. They seldom make it, because she always has plans and he has to do what her plans consist of.
I got a call at the last minute that she decided she wanted to do something else and they couldn't come.
I know that story seems like it's going nowhere, but I just think that the whole social scenario of making plans/promises, keeping them, etc, has really been diluted. People seem to forget that if you make a promise to be somewhere, that the other person has probably made food and accommodations for you. It never seemed to happen to my folks in social situations, when I was a kid, but has become more and more prevalent in my own life over the past few years.
Changing of the times or changing of our lives, I'm not sure.
You beat me to it! I thought exactly the same as i read that scenario. The guy should've stood up for himself. They could have each gone to their respective parties or hit up both. Two people in a relationship, so why is only one person getting her way? Compromise.Well, that's just rude. And not to insult your friend, but he surely could have said to his girlfriend "Look, I said we're going to this party, so if you don't want to go it's fine, but I'm planning on going." I'd fault him for being weak willed as much as I'd fault the girlfriend for being bossy.
I rarely back out of a social commitment unless I'm sick or have something really really important to do. Like, for instance, work. Even then I do my best to keep my social arrangements.
They could have each gone to their respective parties or hit up both. Two people in a relationship, so why is only one person getting her way? Compromise.
I am very sorry that you had to experience such inconsideration, Tom, and from your best friend to boot.
Well, that's just rude. And not to insult your friend, but he surely could have said to his girlfriend "Look, I said we're going to this party, so if you don't want to go it's fine, but I'm planning on going." I'd fault him for being weak willed as much as I'd fault the girlfriend for being bossy.
I rarely back out of a social commitment unless I'm sick or have something really really important to do. Like, for instance, work. Even then I do my best to keep my social arrangements.
All the guys I know say 'how high' when their girlfriends say 'jump.' It shouldn't be that way, or vise versa. What happened to working together?
This one is a huge one with me, and lately it has weighed heavily on my mind.
I have friends that are less becoming so because they seem to view me more as what I've discovered is called a "backup friend." Despite my own busyness, with being a single parent to small children, full time school, and part time work, I make efforts to stay in contact and to get together. Even if it is for just a short meeting for coffee and a movie, lunch, or what have you, I really look forward to fulfilling those plans. I understand cancelling for legitimate reasons as life happens.
However, more and more, I get flaked on. Here will come the day of said plans and the "friend" will either cancel with some excuse, or send a quick text a couple of days prior stating they had forgotten they had plans for being out of town! I've even had one not call at all, but then I discovered she instead went to lunch with a group of coworkers for one of their birthdays. The very same coworkers about whom she'd rant to me. That same person never answers her phone either, but hits the "ignore" button on me when I call. I have stopped making plans with the people that do this (because it was more than a once or twice thing), those that I thought valued my friendship as I did theirs.
It's all a bit depressing and I feel like I am the last of a dying breed.
Soon to disappear: grown-adult signatures on our nation's currency.
Our new Treasury Secretary, ladies and gentleman, coming soon to the lower-right-hand-corner of paper money near you.
The ability/desire/want to focus on driving while driving a motor vehicle. It infuriates me to share the road with those who would rather text/read/lookie loo/converse on a phone or with a passenger and not focus the majority of their energy on driving safely. I am pretty certain it has gotten much worse over time as I seem to remember a time when people were only preoccupied with their car radios.
Soon to disappear: grown-adult signatures on our nation's currency.
Our new Treasury Secretary, ladies and gentleman, coming soon to the lower-right-hand-corner of paper money near you.