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| #Post#: 54868-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Taking too long to realize sympathy (not a solution) is wanted. | |
| (UPDATE #11) | |
| By: SnappyLT Date: July 23, 2020, 12:33 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Hi. Last month I wrote a post about relatives leturing me on the | |
| phone about something I have no control over. I didn't like | |
| being lectured. | |
| When I was on the phone tonight, I wonder if I did the same | |
| thing (sort of) to a different relative. Looking back, I think | |
| she just wanted sympathy and instead I asked why she hadn't | |
| taken the step needed to solve her problem. | |
| (I guess that's not exactly the same thing as lecturing someone | |
| about something they can't control - because she could control | |
| this if she really wanted to - but maybe it's similar because I | |
| told her something she didn't want to hear.) | |
| One of my relatives suffered an injury long ago that can make it | |
| painful for her to walk. She has learned that by having shoes of | |
| different heights she can reduce or eliminate the pain. She has | |
| purchased special inserts for many of her business shoes that | |
| work - she uses one of the inserts and discards the other one, | |
| and thus her shoes have her legs at different heights, and her | |
| pain is relieved. | |
| Only thing is, she has not gotten around to ordering special | |
| inserts to wear with the pair of casual shoes she always wears | |
| to walk her dog. So, walking her dog can be painful for her. | |
| She commented to me on the phone tonight that she was in pain | |
| after walking her dog. | |
| Looking back, I should have just told her how sorry I am that | |
| she is in pain. (Looking back, I suspect that's what she wanted | |
| to hear.) | |
| Instead, I asked about the special inserts. (She had told me | |
| years ago about how the inserts relieve her pain at work.) Well, | |
| she hemmed and hawed and said she hadn't gotten around to | |
| ordering ones for her casual shoes. | |
| (Looking back, I should have dropped the whole topic before this | |
| point.) | |
| Instead, oblivious, I said, "Well, do they make inserts in the | |
| shape of your casual shoes"? | |
| She replied they do. | |
| I continued, "Maybe you should go ahead and order an insert for | |
| your dog walking shoes, then it wouldn't hurt so much to walk | |
| your dog." | |
| That was the wrong thing to have said, clearly. She started | |
| telling me about how hard it is to work from home, and how I | |
| just don't understand how busy she is and how many different | |
| tasks she has to juggle... and she just doesn't have any time to | |
| order inserts for those shoes. | |
| And I finally realized I should have shut up long before that | |
| point. She wanted sympathy for her pain, not a solution to stop | |
| her pain. I was missing the point. | |
| So, I apologized. I said I don't know what it is like to have | |
| pain like she does, and I retired before the pandemic so I don't | |
| know what it's like to have to work from home like she does. And | |
| then I changed the subject. (Bean dip, any one?) | |
| I guess I am not particularly looking for advice; perhaps just | |
| comments on how other have handled similar situations in the | |
| past. | |
| PS- | |
| To head off questions. My relative earns a reasonable salary, | |
| and as far as I know she has enough money to buy shoe inserts if | |
| she wants to buy them. I know she does order groceries online, | |
| so she knows how to use a computer to buy things. It seems to me | |
| in the time she was telling me about her pain she could have | |
| almost finished ordering herself inserts online to stop the | |
| pain... | |
| Buit there I go again, missing that (I think) she wants the | |
| sympathy, not the solution. | |
| #Post#: 54873-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Taking too long to realize sympathy (not a solution) is want | |
| ed. | |
| By: Aleko Date: July 23, 2020, 3:12 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Well, we all know that what we want is often not what we | |
| actually need. Clearly she has got so depressed in lockdown that | |
| she just didn�t have the energy to go online and buy what she | |
| needs to walk the dog comfortably (and heaven knows most of us | |
| have been in that state at some time in our lives). She called | |
| you wanting a warm cosy dose of sympathy for her suffering, but | |
| instead encountered your sincere puzzlement that she hadn�t | |
| taken the easy obvious step that would solve it. If that impels | |
| her to just sit down at her computer and put an order through, | |
| you will have done her more good than you would have done by | |
| helping her have a good comforting wallow in her misery. | |
| Perhaps call her some time for a nice kindly chat about the | |
| difficulties of working from home and Life in General, so she | |
| doesn�t come away with the impression that you�re fundamentally | |
| not sympathetic. But don�t feel badly about your response. | |
| #Post#: 54876-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Taking too long to realize sympathy (not a solution) is want | |
| ed. | |
| By: Rose Red Date: July 23, 2020, 8:23 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| You're a fixer. I am too. It can be difficult for people like us | |
| to figure out if the other person wants a solution or just want | |
| to vent. | |
| It annoys me sometimes. I wish people will just come right out | |
| and say what they want. I guess all we can do is ask if they | |
| want us to take care of the problem. If they say no, just say | |
| "well, I'm here to listen." | |
| #Post#: 54877-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Taking too long to realize sympathy (not a solution) is want | |
| ed. | |
| By: Jem Date: July 23, 2020, 8:25 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I think it depends on the relationship but I know with my | |
| husband and I we simply ask each other or tell each other what | |
| it is we are looking for in a particular situation. | |
| For example: | |
| Me: "The check engine light is on in my car. Are you able to | |
| take it to the shop today?" | |
| vs. | |
| Me: "I had an awful day at work today. I'm not looking for how | |
| you would have handled this situation, I just want to vent about | |
| it." | |
| That way he doesn't have to guess what it is I am looking for. | |
| Or also: | |
| Him: "My back is really hurting me." | |
| Me: "Do you want some ideas to relieve the pain or do you want | |
| me to just be here with you?" | |
| or | |
| Him: "I was planning to mow the lawn today but cannot because my | |
| back hurts. Are you able to mow it for me?" | |
| #Post#: 54887-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Taking too long to realize sympathy (not a solution) is want | |
| ed. | |
| By: lakey Date: July 23, 2020, 1:02 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| A lot of us do this. I have a younger sister, and often I find | |
| my self giving her unsolicited advice. She's sixty years old. | |
| She can make her own decisions. It's a bad habit for me and I | |
| try to stop myself. | |
| #Post#: 54913-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Taking too long to realize sympathy (not a solution) is want | |
| ed. | |
| By: Victoria Date: July 23, 2020, 11:42 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I'm a fixer as well and I always have been. When I was much | |
| younger I drove away a friend who was in a toxic relationship. | |
| She constantly called me to complain about the latest thing her | |
| boyfriend had done, and I repeatedly kept trying to tell her | |
| that she needed to break up with him and that he wasn't worth | |
| it...which was true, but she eventually decided (after a breakup | |
| and reunion) that it was me she needed to break up with, because | |
| I "wasn't supportive of [her] relationship." By the time I was | |
| older and going through the same situation with my new best | |
| friend, I knew enough to offer sympathy, she eventually arrived | |
| at the conclusion that her boyfriend was a hot dumpster fire in | |
| her own time, and our friendship is intact. | |
| #Post#: 54943-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Taking too long to realize sympathy (not a solution) is want | |
| ed. | |
| By: peony Date: July 24, 2020, 9:53 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I have a great deal of sympathy for people who can't see their | |
| way through to a workable solution for their sufferings. I have | |
| a lot less for people who can relieve their problem with just a | |
| little bit of effort. Maybe that makes me a cold person, but | |
| really, don't go on and on about something to me if you can buy | |
| or find or do something in five minutes or less that makes that | |
| problem go away! Legit sympathy is fine with me, but fishing for | |
| artificially generated sympathy, no thank you. I don't have | |
| enough "spoons" for that. SnappyLT, I think you were fine. | |
| #Post#: 54985-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Taking too long to realize sympathy (not a solution) is want | |
| ed. | |
| By: Dazi Date: July 24, 2020, 7:37 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I'm a fixer by nature. I'm also rather direct, so I just flat | |
| out ah the person if they just need to vent or do they want | |
| solutions\advise. | |
| #Post#: 55078-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Taking too long to realize sympathy (not a solution) is want | |
| ed. | |
| By: Morticia Date: July 26, 2020, 12:40 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I get it. When people vent at me, it makes me feel anxious, like | |
| I'm responsible in some way. This makes me feel like they are | |
| putting me on the spot to solve the problem. Intellectually, I | |
| can look back and realise that is not what they were doing, but | |
| it's difficult in the moment. I think what I'm saying, from the | |
| comfort of the internet, is that I sympathise, but I don't have | |
| an answer. | |
| #Post#: 55205-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Taking too long to realize sympathy (not a solution) is want | |
| ed. | |
| By: JeanFromBNA Date: July 28, 2020, 2:30 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| BTDT, got many, many T-shirts. | |
| Sometimes, I'll ask people if they would like me to arrange for | |
| the thing to be done. | |
| I agree with Morticia's comments about anxiety. That's my | |
| initial reaction to a complaint, too. Followed by, "How am I | |
| gonna fix this?" I've learned over time that it's not always my | |
| problem to fix. | |
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