I completely have a problem with being compassionate - although it does depend what mood I'm in, and how I feel about the person involved (sometimes how I feel about them on a given day). It doesn't even always have to be trivial stuff.
Example - hub told me today about somebody's pet dying - normally my reaction would be compassionate. Because I wasn't in the best mood, and the person involved is somebody who I don't like, and who blanks me completely whenever she's within about 20 feet of me, my reaction was 'So?'.
You can imagine how sympathetic I can sometimes be when it's somebody stressing about getting to the supermarket before it shuts, or that their online grocery order has arrived with fish fingers instead of sponge fingers...
TLight - while I think what he said was ambiguous, and could be read either way, if it's stressing you, it's not worth it. Trusting your instincts is the best thing you can do in any situation like that (one day I may actually learn to follow my instincts when they scream out to walk away from a client).
sharky, there's a person I know who reminds me of the ankle person... a while ago now, a I was part of a big group of people having dinner - the restaurant wasn't coping well that night, because there were another couple of big groups in, so the food was late (they gave us a discount on the bill as an apology). However, there was an issue with a couple of us regarding blood sugar - or I should say with one of us (me) who has low blood sugar, and one who was using a 'drop in blood sugar' to gain attention, because she wasn't the centre of attention (I'm reliably informed by some people at her end of the table - I was at the other end, thankfully, because I'd likely have gone postal at her).
Anyway, my blood sugar dipped (my low blood sugar is from two periods when I didn't really eat - the first time when I was small and not really interested in food, the second when I couldn't afford food). I realised what was happening, then asked hub to please get me something with sugar in it quickly (I realised I couldn't have stood up) - he did, that was that, shortly after I was fine. The person sitting next to me had no idea I'd had a problem. She the person in question) said that her blood sugar had dropped and she needed to eat - somebody at the table immediately offered her his full-sugar (untouched) drink, but she refused, and started tantrum-ing and crying. Her other half, decided not to talk to the staff about the delay, but expected hub to do it for him. And then he stormed out leaving her weeping and complaining (loudly) about how she needed food or she was going to pass out, etc, etc.
Now yes, logically, it could all fit in, and it could have been a blood sugar drop making her unreasonable, because it does affect people differently (I just shake, wobble, fall over). But because it was somebody I didn't like anyway, because I'd managed to deal with no fuss, and because several people told me, independently that it was an attention thing, and that she has no problems with blood sugar, I have zero sympathy for her, and determined to avoid wherever possible. Also, bit of a crying wolf thing - the chances of me believing anything from her in the future, pretty low.
I do have sympathy over her other half storming out, sort of, although if hub had done that to me, I'd have been annoyed not upset.:x3: