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Dear Margo | 08/27/2009 11:00 pm

Dear Margo: A Personality Makeover, Courtesy of a Jerk

A woman contemplates whether she should break up a friendship before she’s a bridesmaid … Margo Howard’s bright advice
Margo Howard

A Personality Makeover, Courtesy of a Jerk

Dear Margo: My best college friend and I stayed really close after graduation. A year and a half ago, she broke up with her longtime boyfriend for a new guy, and that’s when the trouble started. Even though I couldn’t stand the new beau, I let it go because I didn’t think it would last. Well, they just got engaged. I feel like she’s a different person. They spend nearly every waking moment together (they live together, work together, go to school together, etc.), and she thinks he’s wonderful. I think he’s smug, combative and immature … and since she’s been with him, she’s picked up those traits, too. They no longer seem like two individual people, but one giant two-headed, judgment-spewing hydra, and I can’t even stand to visit her anymore. Anytime we make plans, I have to assume he will be part of them, and if he doesn’t like something, then she doesn’t either — even if she liked it in the past. As much as I think he’s a giant ninny (and horribly unattractive to boot), I’ve been as supportive as possible since she decided he’s the man for her.

She’s asked me to be a bridesmaid (the wedding is next summer). If things keep going this way, I’m not sure we’ll even be friends then. I’ve never had to break up with a friend before, but I don’t know what else to do. If this kind of weirdness were happening in a romantic relationship, I would have ended it months ago. I don’t want to lose my friend, but I’m afraid we’re headed for a fight. Is it better to "break up" or "take some time off" now? I know this sounds terrible, but if we’re going to end our friendship, I’d like to do it before I get too involved in the nuptials. Is there any way to salvage our relationship? — Vexed in Virginia

Dear Vex: You sound pretty solid to me, and if she stays with this chap, there probably is no way to salvage the friendship. I think the thing to do is to respond to her invitation to be in the wedding by saying you’d like to put that decision on hold, and then tell her how you’ve found her to be a changed personality. This will allow you to give her your honest opinion, and that, in itself, may be the kiss of death. I suspect you have lost your good friend to the male part of the giant two headed, judgment-spewing hydra. — Margo, regretfully

Philosophy ‘R’ Us

Dear Margo: Having just come out to my father, who was not thrilled (I am finishing high school), the whole ordeal gave me something to think about. Maybe you don’t have an answer for something like this, but what makes people homophobic? I know this probably isn’t the kind of stuff you normally deal with — psychology more than problems — but I would still appreciate any kind of answer you have to offer. — Out and Curious

Dear Out: There are really a lot of answers and no answers. Sometimes homosexuals themselves display homophobia. It offers a form of deniability and likely incorporates a degree of self-hatred. Sometimes extremely religious people (often evangelical fundamentalists) feel this is what the Lord commands, though it’s hard for many of us to imagine God-given instructions to hate. And, as is the case with many prejudices, some people just need to feel superior to or better than someone else, and gay people fill the bill, along with other minorities. Often, I think, there is no reason except ignorance, maybe a rotten life that demands a target and a heart the size of a navy bean. — Margo, psychologically

***
Dear Margo is written by Margo Howard, Ann Landers’ daughter. All letters must be sent via e-mail to dearmargo@creators.com. Due to a high volume of e-mail, not all letters will be answered.
COPYRIGHT 2009 MARGO HOWARD
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

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176 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Cindy Marek
Letter #1: Margo is spot on. Unless your best friend wakes up and ditches the guy, it’ll continue…and likely get worse. They also sound mutually obssessed; that itself is creepy. "Birds of a feather (them)." Since you’re no longer a bird of her feathers, I’d take flight. Cherish the friendship you did (past tense) have, with its happy memories, and realize that people come and people go. If you don’t begin distancing yourself now and immediately, the situation will "blow." Bowing out as gracefully as possible, continuing on with your life (and being willing to be there for her if/when she ever wises up) are your best options.
By Cindy Marek on 08/28/2009 8:47 am
Cindy Marek
Letter #2: I’m a straight person married 16 years. I don’t understand homophobia either. It seems some folks feel "the right" to dictate human sexuality and to try and enforce "the norms." People can be very weird about sex and its impulses. A now-former friend lost my friendship recently when she worried that her college daughter’s new roommate "might be a lesbian" because that girl’s Facebook pic apparently showed her wearing a pin-stripe suit, similar in cut to a man’s suit. I couldn’t believe my ears. Sad.
By Cindy Marek on 08/28/2009 8:53 am
Scarlett Ohara Mitchell
You "broke-up" with a friend because she made a negative comment about a picture on facebook? I have friends that make statements that are "unbelievable to my ears" occassionally and I could not imagine calling off our friendship based on our differences of opinions. Sorry to focus on this one statement out of everything written. I guess the bottom line is if you don’t want to be friends, then don’t.
By Scarlett Ohara Mitchell on 08/29/2009 9:57 am
Pdr de
I have a sister-in-law who has had a very difficult life and two losers for husbands (my brother being the second).  However, she’s taken all this anger, hatred and frustration and put it in an Obama basked calling him the Devil President.  I’ve gotten one group e-mail after another full of lies and innuendos and outright accusations and I’ve repeatedly asked her to stop sending them, that we needed to keep politics out of our relationship.  She honored my request for a couple of months and is now sending the wretched stuff again.  She lives two states away and I haven’t seen her since the week my brother died three 1/2 years ago.  I’m very sorry for her that she’s so unhappy, but she’s bathing in her anger, luxuriating in it, taking it to bed with her and hugging it protectively to her bosom during the day.  I find it too difficult to maintain a relationship with someone who isn’t willing or perhaps isn’t able to lay the hurt and anger aside and open her mind and heart to good, to the beauty around her.  I am, reluctantly, letting the relationship go. 
By Pdr de on 08/30/2009 11:00 am
Pdr de
…the Obama basket… Sorry!
By Pdr de on 08/30/2009 11:00 am
jessica pellar
Sounds to me like she broke up with her friend because her friend was crazy, judgemental and/or a bigot. but i am focusing on one statement
By jessica pellar on 09/02/2009 7:20 pm
Janelle B
Cindy - now I think you’re running the danger of being…homophobic-phobic?  If there is such a thing?  Margo speculated that one of the causes of homophobia might be the desire to feel superior to somebody, are you looking too hard for an excuse to feel superior to homophobes to the point of going on a witch hunt for them?  I have massive amounts of sympathy for the prejudiced treatment that homosexuals receive in our society, and I condemn homophobia as wrong, but, you ended a friendship just because she made a speculation as to someone’s orientation?  That’s human nature.  As humans we are curious about others and we love to talk about each other and speculate about each other.  Not saying it’s right, but it’s perfectly natural.  If she saw a picture of a girl dressed in a way that seemed to go along with lesbian norms, and she speculated that maybe the girl might be a lesbian…so what?  She didn’t say that she hates the girl because of it.  Or did she?  If she was freaking out and trying to get her daughter pulled from that room, over a pinstripe suit, then I may understand your position.  But if she was just gossiping about who might be gay, then, let it go!  Certainly not worth ending relationships over.
By Janelle B on 08/29/2009 10:34 am
Tracy  Reed
I think the keyword in her post was ‘worried’…her friend was worried about the potential lesbian living with her daughter.
By Tracy Reed on 09/01/2009 2:10 am
Christine L.

Cindy, I understand what you’re saying. I too would be shocked and saddened if someone I thought I admired and respected (as I do all my friends) might in fact be narrow-minded and bigoted. I don’t know if I’d totally cut off the friendship, but I would certainly think about it hard and try to investigate what she really thinks. Personally I just couldn’t be friends with someone if the possibility that they’re homophobic/racist/etc. was always weighing on the back of my mind; I just don’t like to associate with people like that, they make me sad.
By Christine L. on 08/30/2009 12:15 am
Christine L.
whoops…apparently I bolded the text and didn’t notice
By Christine L. on 08/30/2009 12:16 am
Cecile Tunstead

I think letter writer 1  was never really a good friend in the first place if she would want to dump her friend just because she does not like her boyfriend. 

The letter writer sound horribly judgemental - evidenced by her comment on the boyfriends looks.  She says she’s been supportive, but then goes on to say she is going to "Break-up" with the friend just because she doesn’t like the BF - how supportive is that? 

 She says he’s "smug, combative and immature" but did not give any concrete examples why she thinks that - so we can’t really be sure if that is true.  And what is wrong with loving your boyfriend so much you want to spend time with him - especially in the early days of a relationship.

By Cecile Tunstead on 08/28/2009 9:09 am
Robbie Hutchison

Cecile:

 I’m sorry, but you don’t seem to have a lot of experience in this type of situation to be commenting on it.  I have had to do this to a friend, and it was horrible.  I don’t think LW #1 needs to give examples.  Sometimes, you just have these feelings.  My 21 year old friend is in a long-distance relationship with a 16 year old and they break up 4 times a day.  I finally had to dump her because I couldn’t stand the drama.  It’s not being a bad friend, it’s refusing to be party to a complete train wreck.

 You also ask what is wrong with spending a lot of time together.  There’s nothing wrong with spending time with your significant other, but spending every waking moment together is terrible.  I know this for a fact, since my husband and I worked together after our marriage.  We both recently went to new jobs because seeing each other 24 hours a day was awful.  Our relationship has improved drastically since that decision.  Also, you say "especially in the early days of a relationship"…if it was that early in the relationship, they probably wouldn’t be engaged.

LW #1 has valid feelings that most of us can relate to.  If you read the other comments, you’d see that many support Margo’s advice to dump the friend and fast.  You’re lucky you’ve never had to deal with that, but forgive me if I say that you seem just as judgemental as you accuse LW #1 of being.  You claim that she can’t have been supportive.  If they are engaged, chances are they’ve been together for a long time…the LW has probably been supportive that entire time.  She also states that the friend’s SO is involved in all the plans they make, meaning she gets no time alone with her friend, and that her friend has become an entirely different person.  Who better than a friend to realize this?  You said that she is dumping her friend "just because she doesn’t like the BF", but that doesn’t seem to be the case.

Please do not point fingers by calling the LW judgemental when the shoe fits just as well for you.

 To LW #1, I feel your pain.  I’ve done it.  It was horrible and caused a lot of drama, but my friend eventually realized I was right and came back around.  Our friendship will never be the same, but we are on amicable terms.  I hope this can be the case for you as well.  There is no easy way to do what you need to do…just ask your friend if you can see her without the boyfriend tagging along, and tell her how you honestly feel.

By Robbie Hutchison on 08/28/2009 6:03 pm
Cecile Tunstead
OK - I’ll give you that one .  I have never been in this situation before, and I was one of the first to post therefore did not have the benefit of everyone else’s widsom before I commented either, so it was just my first glance gut comment.  Maybe if I’d have dwelled on it longer I would not have been so quick to judge.  Just one thing though -  I have been with my significant other for 24 years - anything less than 5 years together to me IS "the early days".
By Cecile Tunstead on 08/28/2009 7:28 pm
Nancy Pea

robbie, why are you only amicable? it seems like if she came back, got the point and did what you wanted, you would be happy. but it sounds like you also are still being judgemental yourself because your "only" amicable. i have a friend of 28yrs and we have fussed, fought and broken up several times (one for 4yrs) during our friendship. but we always make up (it’s always over something stupid and somebody doesn’t want to bend). she has put up with me with my tangents for horrible men and my disapearing with them for a while when the relationship is new. being a true friend we have always gotten back toggether happily or not at all.

why bother to be friends again if it’s only amicable. sounds like a waste of breath to me. if you truly are good friends again, you will get back together fully and not push each other away. there should be no "i told you so’s" or whatever. it should be on common ground and with the understanding that EVERYBODY makes mistakes and when they are in the mistake, it’s very easy to be blinded by it. believe me I KNOW!

By Nancy Pea on 08/28/2009 11:22 pm
Cecile Tunstead
LW2 - i am sorry your coming out did not go better.  Some people are just small minded.  I think sometimes when fathers react badly to their sons coming out it is because they think it will reflect on their own masculinity - which is BS!
By Cecile Tunstead on 08/28/2009 9:12 am