Originally posted by much2learn
Actually I was in the process of ending the relationship.
Later you say there was no LTR or STR--which means, you were acquaintances who went on a few dates--there really wasn't anything to end, IMO.
I had sent her an email explaining to her that her behavior really wasn't acceptable. It was not an ugly email, I just felt compelled to call her on her inconsistencies between her words and her actions. It was never a LTR or even a STR, just we had known each other for a few weeks and twice I had tried to get up with her, and twice she had circumstances which prevented her from doing so (maybe legitimate maybe not, but never did she counter-offer, and we all know what that means.)
<shakes head> yikes. Ok, sure, it made you feel good to do that. And talking all night long with girl on the phone sure feels great to an AFC--your judgment is not working right on this.
To her--and to every friend she talks to--you became a confirmed, certifiable freak--weird and/or psycho. I suppose I gotta give a stab at saying why...
We occasionally (on this forum) go over why telling them off in situations like this is a bad idea---I haven't felt I quite figured out why I feel it's a gut-level bad move to do in the past, but maybe I got it now:
It reveals that you're not socially adept at reading situations or acting appropriately. That is--she gave subtle clues---read: TEST!---that social losers or the clueless won't pick up on (proving their loser-ness or cluelessness) while more socially adept types will pick up on it and gracefully drop it. That needs repeating: you gracefully drop it. This shows class to them.
Pointing out her unacceptable behavior (I didn't get that she really did anything unacceptable from your post, btw--unless she did more than what you posted about...) -- is tightassed and graceless. It's really not your place, IMO. Her being evasive or flakey are all common things--we may not like them, and they may fall short of direct, adult communication, but it's quite normal.
In fact, I'm beginning to think it's the primary form of communication we use---subtext, hints, body language, tone of voice, behavior, action, etc. Not direct declarations.
And most people expect you to understand or pick up on this perfectly valid form of communication. If you don't, people find you clueless and an annoyance. And they're right, too.
That's the test you failed with that e-mail, even if you did read her lack of interest clearly. The proper response would've been to quietly drop it and next her.
It's interesting that she never denied or tried to argue any of the reasons I gave her as to why she won't be hearing from me again.
You wanted a debate? She simply wanted to end any contact with someone going weird on her---which, btw, she probably felt quite relieved at not hearing from you again.
This event would, incidently, absolutely propel her into going off on how weird and bizarre you are to all her girlfriends. I hope for your sake that your social circles don't intersect in the least.
All she seemed able to come up with was "what right do you have trying to make me feel guilty".... again, an amusing response when all I really did was explain the inconsistencies between her words and her actions.
She's right.
Since the relationship is over I really don't care what she thinks. I'm not going to argue with her over whether or not I was trying to make her feel guilty. But I suspect that she isn't the first girl to use this argument, and I want to be prepared for the future when no doubt I will probably face it again.
Keep pulling this stunt and you will guarantee you will encounter it again and again.
So, how should one react when a girl pulls this?
Not the way you did---I'm completely with DeeZy on this.
Just next'em without the pyrotechnics, Ok? Be gracious about it, quit playing Miss Manners---that's it!---that's how you're coming across---as a prissy, humorless and clueless Miss Manners. Sorry dude, that's just how it appears. Get the self-righteous stick outta your tail and read between the lines and respond appropriately next time. Then you won't ever have to deal with the "how dare you make me feel guilty" line again.