WillowMarie
Silver Member
The other day, I had another disagreement with my best friend. He made dinner for me at my house. I told him I was challenging myself to just sit on the couch instead of trying to help or busy myself with other stuff like cleaning the kitchen/dining table or cleaning out/filling the dishwasher. I have a hard time relaxing when someone else is doing something for me, and I noticed he is able to do it when I am making dinner, so had challenged myself with that. :P
So at one point he is looking for an item, I think it was a basting stick. I described from the couch where it should be, most likely in the spatula/spoon drawer, if not, check the two drawers to the left which had the measuring cups and other miscellaneous things. After he checked just the spatula/spoon drawer, he asked me if I could help him find it. I was teasing him, what's the magic word?? Which was please because politeness is a big deal to me. He got quiet and I wasn't sure if he heard me, but I knew that he did because he looked frustrated. I didn't say anything to give him space because I knew he was getting upset about it. (I realized he has triggers of his own that set him off, like when he feels like someone is trying to control him or tell him what he should do.)
So this is where things get fuzzy because I was pretty dissociated, but either I mentioned, what's going on you look frustrated, or he mentioned he really could use the basting stick and that he was upset because I refused to look for it and he saw it as that I didn't want to help. I reminded him he had a choice, he could just say please and I would help out and that I wanted to. His response is that he didn't need to say please and that if you say please all the time, it loses its meaning. (That doesn't even sound logical to me, just a load of crap!) I kept repeating that it was about respect for me, that it is important.
And also since I have explained to him in the past that I get triggered, and sometimes my reactions may be bigger than normal because it hits something deep from my childhood, he was rationalizing it as to what was happening. He was saying he wasn't my dad right now and that he respects me. I told him I am not even that upset right now (I wasn't, more frustrated at how upset HE was getting!) and I said he seems to be getting more upset that I am. I ask him if I can tell him what I have noticed (which I have mentioned to him before) which is that he gets "triggered" in situations where he feels like people are trying to control him, that maybe he was the one making a bigger stink about it. He didn't respond to that.
Later that evening before he left for work, he told me that saying please shouldn't be a big deal to me and that he cares and respects me a lot, so it is not necessary saying the word and that doesn't mean he is being disrespectful to me. I didn't respond since he needed to leave for work, but I can't stop thinking about it. My instinct is to tell him that I deserve people saying please to me all the time and if he can't respect that, I just won't do stuff for him if he can't say it. For me, it isn't something special, it is common courtesy, even if the person knows you respect and care about them.
I guess I just wanted other peoples opinions because I always second guess myself and don't know where to lay down my boundaries or what to fight for. I always wonder if I am reacting because of trauma and how I was treated. I know respect is a huge thing for me because my dad didn't respect me or what I had to say. So when I argue with this friend, it is a trigger within itself because my dad would say he is right, I am wrong, and he didn't care/shut up if I pointed out it was truth I was right. Things with my friend are great, except when we argue and I also wonder if it is healthy for me because his argument style is so close to my dads because he is stubborn (and we are BOTH stubborn which doesn't help), except he doesn't yell/get into rage, like my dad. It just feels like I am always the one saying, okay, maybe I reacted too much, but he never gives.
Thank you for any feedback. I was going crazy yesterday with these things flying around in my head and my therapy appointment isn't until tomorrow. :P
So at one point he is looking for an item, I think it was a basting stick. I described from the couch where it should be, most likely in the spatula/spoon drawer, if not, check the two drawers to the left which had the measuring cups and other miscellaneous things. After he checked just the spatula/spoon drawer, he asked me if I could help him find it. I was teasing him, what's the magic word?? Which was please because politeness is a big deal to me. He got quiet and I wasn't sure if he heard me, but I knew that he did because he looked frustrated. I didn't say anything to give him space because I knew he was getting upset about it. (I realized he has triggers of his own that set him off, like when he feels like someone is trying to control him or tell him what he should do.)
So this is where things get fuzzy because I was pretty dissociated, but either I mentioned, what's going on you look frustrated, or he mentioned he really could use the basting stick and that he was upset because I refused to look for it and he saw it as that I didn't want to help. I reminded him he had a choice, he could just say please and I would help out and that I wanted to. His response is that he didn't need to say please and that if you say please all the time, it loses its meaning. (That doesn't even sound logical to me, just a load of crap!) I kept repeating that it was about respect for me, that it is important.
And also since I have explained to him in the past that I get triggered, and sometimes my reactions may be bigger than normal because it hits something deep from my childhood, he was rationalizing it as to what was happening. He was saying he wasn't my dad right now and that he respects me. I told him I am not even that upset right now (I wasn't, more frustrated at how upset HE was getting!) and I said he seems to be getting more upset that I am. I ask him if I can tell him what I have noticed (which I have mentioned to him before) which is that he gets "triggered" in situations where he feels like people are trying to control him, that maybe he was the one making a bigger stink about it. He didn't respond to that.
Later that evening before he left for work, he told me that saying please shouldn't be a big deal to me and that he cares and respects me a lot, so it is not necessary saying the word and that doesn't mean he is being disrespectful to me. I didn't respond since he needed to leave for work, but I can't stop thinking about it. My instinct is to tell him that I deserve people saying please to me all the time and if he can't respect that, I just won't do stuff for him if he can't say it. For me, it isn't something special, it is common courtesy, even if the person knows you respect and care about them.
I guess I just wanted other peoples opinions because I always second guess myself and don't know where to lay down my boundaries or what to fight for. I always wonder if I am reacting because of trauma and how I was treated. I know respect is a huge thing for me because my dad didn't respect me or what I had to say. So when I argue with this friend, it is a trigger within itself because my dad would say he is right, I am wrong, and he didn't care/shut up if I pointed out it was truth I was right. Things with my friend are great, except when we argue and I also wonder if it is healthy for me because his argument style is so close to my dads because he is stubborn (and we are BOTH stubborn which doesn't help), except he doesn't yell/get into rage, like my dad. It just feels like I am always the one saying, okay, maybe I reacted too much, but he never gives.
Thank you for any feedback. I was going crazy yesterday with these things flying around in my head and my therapy appointment isn't until tomorrow. :P