Gym "friend" drama, need opinions

Options
AllOutof_Bubblegum
AllOutof_Bubblegum Posts: 3,646 Member
Ok, so I don't usually do this dirty-laundry-online thing, (truly! I swear, lol) but I really want to know what others would do in this situation. Sorry if it gets long, I want to make sure I include everything that might sway an opinion one way or the other.


I met a lady, let's call her Anna, who works out at my gym, and we hit it off almost immediately. Same sharp wit, biting sarcasm, snarky sense of humor, both married and mothers of young kids, we both love the gym life and being bad@$$ girls in the weightroom, etc. We became super close friends, we traded off on babysitting each other's kids, texted and Facebooked and Snapchatted each other constantly, planned out gym schedules so we'd show up at the same time, all the makings of a best friend.

Here's a little backstory so y'all can understand what was going on.

We had this love-each-other-to-death relationship going on for about 6 months. Around a year ago, Anna told me she started drinking and selling weight loss shakes for a popular direct-supply "health food" company. Now...I HATE MLMs. They truly infuriate me. I think they are predatory and vampiric and shady as hell, and I feel that sales and profits of weight loss shakes in particular depend on the ignorance and desperation of overweight people who just don't know any better. Being a college nutrition major, seeing these shakes take the place of real food just gets under my skin in a way that I can't even articulate. R e g a r d l e s s, she was my friend, and after telling her I didn't really agree with it at all, I just sort of rolled my eyes at it and let her do her thing.

Fast forward a few more months, and Anna just can't seem to stop raving about her shakes on Facebook and Instagram, and to contact her if you're ready to make a change! Ughhhh, SMH. So whatever, I did my best to not let it annoy me, because what harm was it doing, really? It truly made her happy, so I shelved my irritation as best I could, knowing it was my problem, not hers.

On of Anna's online posts said something about how eating "junk food" was now a thing of her past, and instead of eating "processed, chemical-laden garbage", she reached for her [insert company name] shakes! I commented on it and was like, "Wait, how "processed" is that shake mix you drink every day? It certainly didn't grow from a tree, so why is that so much better than like a box of Goldfish crackers?" My whole point being that "processed" =/= "bad". Well, if I'd had any idea of the sort of sh!tstorm about to take place, I never would have bothered making any comment at all. Anna immediately deleted my post from her feed, and sent me a direct message, demanding that I "NEVER talk *kitten* about her shakes online, EVER again."

I was extremely taken aback, but I apologized anyway for having apparently crossed a line and said I'd stop. I guess that wasn't enough for Anna, though, because the next thing I knew she'd deleted me from her social media accounts. Over the next few months I'd sent a message or two to her, asking if she wanted to meet for playdates, etc, and she would say, "sure, let me check my schedule!" and would never follow through. Just being really passive-aggressive. I texted her a few months later, and asked her to put everything out on the table, because not knowing where we stood was worse than pretending to still be friends.

Our paraphrased convo went something like this:

"You are acting really distant. Are we still friends?"

"I think you're really cool, but I don't think I can hang out with you, because I just can't trust you to not disparage my business."

"I'm sorry for making you feel like I was disrespecting you. It wasn't intentional. I was only trying to offer perspective, but if you don't like it, I won't do it anymore. But pretending like nothing was wrong and letting me think we were still friends was really hurtful."

"Honestly, I thought you'd get over it. I figured you'd be like 'Fine, **** that *****!' and forget about it."

Me: 'Um, No? I loved you, I would never do that to a friend."

She didn't answer. A number of hours later I said,

"Ok, well, I have my answer. I have enough self-respect than to go chasing after people who clearly don't want me in their lives, so I guess this is it. No hard feelings, and my door's always open if you change your mind and want to talk."

That was almost a year ago. Since then we've seen each other at the gym, but she pretty much looks through me and pretends I'm not there. Which I've learned to be ok with. Sometimes friendships just don't work out, and I get that.

Well, this morning we ended up walking to the gym door together with our kids, who were very happy to see each other. Anna and I made polite small talk, and we went our separate ways once inside.

NOW I got a Facebook friend request from her later this afternoon.

I seriously feel like I'm being screwed with. I want to keep my word that if she ever changed her mind I'd be open to patching things up, but after months of being treated like I'm nothing, I don't know if I feel that way anymore. She dumped me so fast, it was astounding. No remorse, no deep thought, just straight to the chopping block and *axe*. I loved her face to freakin death. But shame on me, I'm just not feeling up to getting my feelings jerked around again like a marionette the next time I might say something that threatens her. But I feel like if I ignore or deny the request it will make things even more awkward when we see each other at the gym.

What's the high road to be taken, here? I don't want to play into anybody's games, 8th grade was such a long time ago. I'm not looking to go back.

Thanks for reading.
«13

Replies

  • toned_thugs_n_harmony
    toned_thugs_n_harmony Posts: 1,001 Member
    Options
    if she's gonna cut you off over expressing an opinion on a damn shake, just think of what she'd do when you actually have a real disagreement...not worth the friendship. I'd respectfully decline. And by respectfully, I mean that I'd send her an informative message letting her know that I don't need friends like her.
  • NEOHgirl
    NEOHgirl Posts: 237 Member
    Options
    I agree with Alarmed, I'd accept the friend request. You might be able to salvage a different friendly relationship, but it will never be the one you previously had with her, as your trust in her is legitimately damaged beyond full repair. If nothing else, it might open the door for the kids to spend some time together, but again, I'd keep her at a cordial distance.
  • kbmnurse
    kbmnurse Posts: 2,484 Member
    Options
    To long, sorry.
  • snowflake954
    snowflake954 Posts: 8,399 Member
    Options
    After what happened your friendship will never get back to what it was. She may really need the money from her business, or she was sucked into the hype. She may be getting out of it and that's the reason she's coming back. Whatever, everyone makes mistakes. I'd slowly work her back in, but not overdo and just play by ear and see how it goes.
  • klkarlen
    klkarlen Posts: 4,366 Member
    Options
    I would accept the request, knowing that the relationship will not be the same as it was, and see what happens from here.

    I had something similar happen between me and a close friend, except it wasn't business, it was a man that "broke us up". Years later she did make contact, and we never spoke about what happened between us, we are not as close as we were, but we can share fun memories of the times before that now.
  • Motorsheen
    Motorsheen Posts: 20,492 Member
    Options
    Ok, so I don't usually do this dirty-laundry-online thing, (truly! I swear, lol) but I really want to know what others would do in this situation. Sorry if it gets long, I want to make sure I include everything that might sway an opinion one way or the other.


    I met a lady, let's call her Anna, who works out at my gym, and we hit it off almost immediately. Same sharp wit, biting sarcasm, snarky sense of humor, both married and mothers of young kids, we both love the gym life and being bad@$$ girls in the weightroom, etc. We became super close friends, we traded off on babysitting each other's kids, texted and Facebooked and Snapchatted each other constantly, planned out gym schedules so we'd show up at the same time, all the makings of a best friend.

    Here's a little backstory so y'all can understand what was going on.

    We had this love-each-other-to-death relationship going on for about 6 months. Around a year ago, Anna told me she started drinking and selling weight loss shakes for a popular direct-supply "health food" company. Now...I HATE MLMs. They truly infuriate me. I think they are predatory and vampiric and shady as hell, and I feel that sales and profits of weight loss shakes in particular depend on the ignorance and desperation of overweight people who just don't know any better. Being a college nutrition major, seeing these shakes take the place of real food just gets under my skin in a way that I can't even articulate. R e g a r d l e s s, she was my friend, and after telling her I didn't really agree with it at all, I just sort of rolled my eyes at it and let her do her thing.

    Fast forward a few more months, and Anna just can't seem to stop raving about her shakes on Facebook and Instagram, and to contact her if you're ready to make a change! Ughhhh, SMH. So whatever, I did my best to not let it annoy me, because what harm was it doing, really? It truly made her happy, so I shelved my irritation as best I could, knowing it was my problem, not hers.

    On of Anna's online posts said something about how eating "junk food" was now a thing of her past, and instead of eating "processed, chemical-laden garbage", she reached for her [insert company name] shakes! I commented on it and was like, "Wait, how "processed" is that shake mix you drink every day? It certainly didn't grow from a tree, so why is that so much better than like a box of Goldfish crackers?" My whole point being that "processed" =/= "bad". Well, if I'd had any idea of the sort of sh!tstorm about to take place, I never would have bothered making any comment at all. Anna immediately deleted my post from her feed, and sent me a direct message, demanding that I "NEVER talk *kitten* about her shakes online, EVER again."

    I was extremely taken aback, but I apologized anyway for having apparently crossed a line and said I'd stop. I guess that wasn't enough for Anna, though, because the next thing I knew she'd deleted me from her social media accounts. Over the next few months I'd sent a message or two to her, asking if she wanted to meet for playdates, etc, and she would say, "sure, let me check my schedule!" and would never follow through. Just being really passive-aggressive. I texted her a few months later, and asked her to put everything out on the table, because not knowing where we stood was worse than pretending to still be friends.

    Our paraphrased convo went something like this:

    "You are acting really distant. Are we still friends?"

    "I think you're really cool, but I don't think I can hang out with you, because I just can't trust you to not disparage my business."

    "I'm sorry for making you feel like I was disrespecting you. It wasn't intentional. I was only trying to offer perspective, but if you don't like it, I won't do it anymore. But pretending like nothing was wrong and letting me think we were still friends was really hurtful."

    "Honestly, I thought you'd get over it. I figured you'd be like 'Fine, **** that *****!' and forget about it."

    Me: 'Um, No? I loved you, I would never do that to a friend."

    She didn't answer. A number of hours later I said,

    "Ok, well, I have my answer. I have enough self-respect than to go chasing after people who clearly don't want me in their lives, so I guess this is it. No hard feelings, and my door's always open if you change your mind and want to talk."

    That was almost a year ago. Since then we've seen each other at the gym, but she pretty much looks through me and pretends I'm not there. Which I've learned to be ok with. Sometimes friendships just don't work out, and I get that.

    Well, this morning we ended up walking to the gym door together with our kids, who were very happy to see each other. Anna and I made polite small talk, and we went our separate ways once inside.

    NOW I got a Facebook friend request from her later this afternoon.

    I seriously feel like I'm being screwed with. I want to keep my word that if she ever changed her mind I'd be open to patching things up, but after months of being treated like I'm nothing, I don't know if I feel that way anymore. She dumped me so fast, it was astounding. No remorse, no deep thought, just straight to the chopping block and *axe*. I loved her face to freakin death. But shame on me, I'm just not feeling up to getting my feelings jerked around again like a marionette the next time I might say something that threatens her. But I feel like if I ignore or deny the request it will make things even more awkward when we see each other at the gym.

    What's the high road to be taken, here? I don't want to play into anybody's games, 8th grade was such a long time ago. I'm not looking to go back.

    Thanks for reading.

    When will this be made into a feature film?
  • Fuzzipeg
    Fuzzipeg Posts: 2,298 Member
    Options
    Sometimes people get too close, too fast. Sometimes people get drawn in to something which in imv, worse than junk food, chemical drinks, assumption from what I have seen over here. (a friend of mine died because she used something like that too much, 30 yrs ago) You gave her so much of your time, she was close to your family. Its sad, its life unfortunately. Do what you know is right for you. True friends are hard to find, not convinced she was one.
  • everher
    everher Posts: 909 Member
    Options
    Alright, here's my humble opinion:

    This seems like a whole lot of drama for someone you really didn't even know that long. I would accept the friend request, remain cordial, but other than that would not instigate a friendship with her further. I do think you didn't have to say anything about her business, whether you agreed with it or not, but I also think she way overreacted.
  • km8907
    km8907 Posts: 3,861 Member
    Options
    I would accept, only because you said your door was open. You don't have to talk to her and it'll make gym time less awkward.
  • Motorsheen
    Motorsheen Posts: 20,492 Member
    Options
    km8907 wrote: »
    I would accept, only because you said your door was open. You don't have to talk to her and it'll make gym time less awkward.

    This.

    Why not?
  • WillLift4Tats
    WillLift4Tats Posts: 1,699 Member
    Options
    You said your door was always open... Accept the friend request, but don't initiate further contact or anticipate that she wants more than cordiality because of your kids. It's just Facebook. Unless you curate your list so it's only close friends and family, being her "friend" on social media isn't a big deal.

    I was going to say the same thing. Accepting her request doesn't automatically put ya'll back to where you were pre-argument. Don't reach out, let it be. And maybe unfollow her because spamming MLM is yuck.
  • KyleGrace8
    KyleGrace8 Posts: 2,205 Member
    Options
    Accept the request and keep her at a distance. That was a huge overreaction on her part. Or tell her off. I really can't decide which. But...since the kids like each other I'm leaning on being cordial for their sake.
  • jkwolly
    jkwolly Posts: 3,049 Member
    Options
    Yeah, good time to cut those cords.

    Getting older, I realized I like having people around me that I want around me. I don't have time for BS anymore.