Alla wrote:
Mindslave wrote:
Guy friends are more likely to stick around for the long haul. I don't blame him for going out with the mutual frenemy, cause I would have done the same thing. His idea of betrayal is different than yours, so until you talk to him about it, it won't get solved.
Even if they have known that male friend for only 1o days? I mean, this guy is not a close male friend of years.....this guy can barely be called a friend. And this friend of ours demeaned me about my professional credentials (a doctoral candidate (me) versus a menial worker (the male friend)).
I'm mentally putting this thread together with the thread in the General forum about people not respecting the knowledge base of those with PhDs and making a guess about what happened. Correct me if I have guessed wrong. My guess is that this mutual friend said something wrong that you knew the correct answer to because of your degree. You tried to correct him and got into an argument with him about who was right. The argument centered around his not believing you even though you told him you had a PhD in the field. He didn't believe you anyway and the argument raged on. Your boyfriend tried to break it up. He didn't get you two to see eye to eye but that didn't stop him from going out and enjoying some socializing with the friend.
If this is somewhere close to what happened, I think your boyfriend did the right thing in trying to mediate. And believe it or not, I also think it was fine for him to socialize with the guy even though you and the guy were still angry with each other. If it had been a major thing, like if the guy had slapped you or called you a @#$#@@, that would be different (although it was still proper for him to try to mediate). But it isn't fair to your boyfriend to ask him to cut contact with people who disagree with you...even if you are right! If the argument was about the subject you have your PhD in, I assume you were right. And I can see how it would be incredibly annoying for somebody to disbelieve you regardless of your PhD and insist that they are right even so. But in the larger scheme of things it is trivial and your boyfriend should not be required to abandon anybody over it. In fact I wouldn't advise you to abandon the mutual friend over it either. "Agree to disagree" is a good policy.
So no. I wouldn'ty break up with him. The attempt at mediation speaks well of him. The fact that he didn't abandon a friend simply because his girlfriend had an argument with that friend
also speaks well of him. He sounds like a good guy.
Last edited by Janissy on 03 Jan 2011, 4:41 pm, edited 3 times in total.