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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

If feeling used, don’t foist it to friends, too



 (The Spokesman-Review)
Carolyn Hax The Washington Post

Dear Carolyn: I’m dating a man who works in information technology, is a brilliant artist and photographer when he chooses to be, is great with kids, has a B.A. in history, has no debt and minimal expenses, and hates his well-paying job.

So he’s finally decided that he wants out of his career. He has no idea what he wants to do instead; he just wants to make the same money (right off the bat), and not hate what he’s doing. This morning, before work, he suggested that he get his resume together and have me e-mail it out to all of my friends.

Something felt really wrong about this to me, and I said so. I feel a little exploited. He was very hurt and confused that I felt that way.

He hasn’t sent his resume in to any employment agencies or even submitted it to other jobs that I know of. Am I being stingy? – Girlfriend and/or Employment Agency

Only if that’s the new word for having integrity.

Some people – including your boyfriend, I imagine – would see his idea as “networking.” But since he hasn’t so much as clicked a mouse on his own behalf, you suspect he’s using you to avoid having to make any real effort himself, and you resent it. Totally reasonable position.

A position that I suspect you’ve been forming since long before he achieved career crisis. A brilliant artist “when he chooses to be?” Nice eye-blink editorial there.

Anyway. Because you feel exploited, you’re actually obligated not to send out that e-mail; it would be wrong to foist upon your friends anything you didn’t appreciate having foisted upon you. Stand your ground. If only chain e-mailees were so considerate.

Dear Carolyn: I have a friend with whom I have been close for almost a decade – best friends even. Recently, though, he blows off promises, is never available and is all about himself. It’s gotten to where I really don’t want to hang out with him any more, and I feel like we’re not really friends, just kind of acquaintances. I feel bad though about blowing him off in return, because over the years he’s been there when I really needed him. I try to talk to him to find out if something is going on but he says no. At what point do you call it quits with a friend, and to what length do you give them room to be a snot, for old times’ sake? – K.

Any chance he’s depressed? Cancellations and self-absorption are two familiar signs.

Just a thought. Regardless, his never being available means you don’t see him anyway, which means there’s little immediate, practical difference between calling it quits and giving him room to be a self-absorbed snot. Right? So, why not – next time the phone doesn’t ring, call it “giving him room.”

For your part, call when you want, and don’t when you don’t.

Emotionally, it makes sense, too. You don’t know whether you’re ready to quit on the guy, so use his absence as an opportunity and don’t force a decision. Either he’ll get over himself and he’ll come back – at which point your stay-or-quit feelings will probably make themselves plain – or he won’t and you’ll have your answer, without any messy decisions.