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Friends with debatable manners
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<blockquote data-quote="AppleCori" data-source="post: 728305" data-attributes="member: 16024"><p>My daughter was in the hospital last year, and was put on Prednisone. She blew up over night, literally. I was there the day before, and came back the next morning, and she looked totally different: bloated, face round and puffy ( moon face describes it well) whole body puffy. I was shocked. </p><p></p><p>She definitely wouldn’t have wanted any pictures taken at that time. </p><p></p><p>Your friend was very insensitive to your feelings. Her insistence on taking pictures after you asked her not to was very pushy and controlling. Is this a pattern of behavior with her?</p><p></p><p>I would tell her how I feel about the pics (hurtful) and if she won’t listen, I would probably back off the friendship a bit. </p><p></p><p>Intensivity in the beginning is one thing, but continuing to invalidate your feelings points to something else entirely, and it’s not good.</p><p></p><p>Apple</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AppleCori, post: 728305, member: 16024"] My daughter was in the hospital last year, and was put on Prednisone. She blew up over night, literally. I was there the day before, and came back the next morning, and she looked totally different: bloated, face round and puffy ( moon face describes it well) whole body puffy. I was shocked. She definitely wouldn’t have wanted any pictures taken at that time. Your friend was very insensitive to your feelings. Her insistence on taking pictures after you asked her not to was very pushy and controlling. Is this a pattern of behavior with her? I would tell her how I feel about the pics (hurtful) and if she won’t listen, I would probably back off the friendship a bit. Intensivity in the beginning is one thing, but continuing to invalidate your feelings points to something else entirely, and it’s not good. Apple [/QUOTE]
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