MemberSix wrote:
Greentea wrote:
Sora, I used to be like that. My structured mind says "A friend of a friend means it's my friend that has to relate to them, not me." But nowadays I know better than to ignore them, it's considered impolite.
A mild understatement, if ever I heard one.
It's considered extremely hostile - or at best, very strange not to acknowledge someone who's spoken to you.
I often pretend I haven't noticed them, if it's feasible. If I'm forewarned we might meet somebody then I'm usually fine. It's the shock that I hate. I'm also very "couply" - i.e. two's company, three's a crowd. It's too complicated with three.
Quote:
I do tend to tune people out, albeit unintentionally, especially family members.
I find family members hard to come to terms with. Didn't exactly help when one of my partner's relatives went ape and tried to physically attack her
Some of them I think I behave fine with, though I can't say I ever really look forward to meeting them. It all makes me feel very guilty, but I just can't feel that sense of "duty to make the effort" somehow, which seems a ludicrously invasive concept.