![]() |
Message from an old friend
I want a little feedback on this problem, if anyone would like to comment. Facebook is a way to connect to your old acquaintances. I do not wish to call anyone that I have not seen for twenty years.
There is this guy I have not seen in twenty years nor his sister. That time when I saw them was at a funeral for a mutual friend. To make a long story short, this past year my niece passed away and four months later her father, my brother, passed away also. This guy who is one of my Facebook friends is aware of this because I posted it on Facebook. This guy private messaged me to call his sister because she has health issues. I have not seen or talk to his sister in over twenty years. What would you do? I find it strange and inconsiderate for him to do this as he is aware of my loss. |
So sorry for your losses. Ignore him.
|
I understand why this would bother you as it would me too. Get off social media...it isn't worth the stress.
|
Quote:
PM him back and say, " Still feeling my loss. Too soon for me to get involved in others problems. Sorry." , then block him from your account. This sounds to me like maybe he sees you as a sensitive soft touch for money. If you haven't seen either for 20 years, then you are not that close. No call here. |
Three very good answers.
|
I do not see how it would hurt to reach out and discuss your mutual grief.
However if you do not want to do it, dont do it. |
Facebook.....need anymore be said!!!
Publicly expose your personal information? Live with the result. |
Is this guy being inconsiderate, maybe but most likely not , after all you are having some kind of connection through Facebook. The sister may be like many as they get older who seem to think the past was always better , for some it might be , but mostly it’s just the past. I’m sorry for what you have gone through and everyone processes grief different, but maybe a call to his sister may help her with a minute or two of forgetting about her health issues by talking about for her were sweet moments , maybe it will help you or maybe not , the choice is yours to make
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
This is exactly why I don't use ANY social media's.
|
Well, I am only on FB for connection to my family which is spread all over the country. So, I simply set my profile to ONLY allow my friends to see or communicate with me. Problem solved.
|
Quote:
Sorry for your loss. The answer for the other person lies elsewhere, don't feel bad for a second. You did the correct thing by asking for advice on here. It's one of many resources when you need a helping hand. :pray: |
Quote:
To the OP...ignore everything. |
Quote:
This is social media also. There is a risk with social media. |
Unfriend him on Facebook
Quote:
Good luck. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I have a Facebook account, that is just for the family. Even my details on that page are false., but our kids and friends know it is me. There is enough real information about everyone floating about on the internet, without adding more to it unnecessarily in my humble opinion. Regarding OP's problem, I agree with what was suggested in earlier post, and just unfriend the person. Seems easiest way out, without actually giving other person a straight refusal. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
If I got off Facebook, I would lose my Gary Larson, Dilbert, Amateur Guitar, and other valuable groups and my family connections! No way!
|
Quote:
|
Living your life on social media will only result in hacks and scams. There are those out there that will take advantage of every opportunity to scam you.
|
Quote:
|
Tell the person why you don’t want to get involved in the situation- you’ll sleep better at night knowing you didn’t run from the issue by”unfriending” him….
|
Quote:
For those that came into the internet when AOL ruined it, you wouldn't see this it just seems like a huge social party - the internet was never a huge social party, it in fact, was a place of information that was far more accurate and far less littered than it is today. Now everyone has to document their life like it matters to the world - trust me it doesn't all you are doing is helping the hackers. Quit worrying about all that and just do whatever you want to do - that's it |
Facebook
Quote:
|
Whats the bug deal? Unfriend and block them both. They don't need to know your business.
|
Quote:
|
My family is also spread across the country. We have a private family Facebook group where only the members can see what is posted.
|
Here's the thing about FB, just because you posted something doesn't mean the post went to all your friends' FB feed. You are assuming he knows about your loss, but he may not.
|
Vain-Book would be a better name
Facebook should be called Vain-Book. People post the most inane things about themselves as if anyone cares how busy the supermarket was, that you were stuck in traffic, a photo of what you had for lunch, really stupid jokes, yet another photo of a grandchild (or dog), your new ___ (insert car, house, whatever), the weather, your personal opinions of whatever, yet another selfie, etc. The vain among us seem to enjoy seeing just how many "Friends" they can accumulate whether or not they ever actually knew them (or cared about them). Then there is that someone from 50 years ago. If a person wasn't important enough to you to keep in touch for years and years, why would you give a crap about them now. Everyone seems to trying to outdo everyone else in the vanity race. I am opting out (right after I post a photo of myself typing these comments).
"People speak well of the man who does not speak too much of himself." - Epictetus (l.c. 50 - c. 130 CE) "One reason why birds and horses are not unhappy is because they are not trying to impress other birds and horses." — Dale Carnegie, 1888-1955, author/lecturer |
I understand both sides and the ultimate decision is yours and only yours. But, you never know what a kind word can do for someone’s spirits. Think about a smile from a total stranger and how it makes you smile. Your attitude is contagious and you may just be or have the words that this girl needs to hear. It’s only a few minutes of your time for a person who is battling something we cannot understand. Again, this decision is only yours but think about it.
|
I stay in contact with several of my childhood friends. I find it very satisfying
|
Responding: A Life Choice. Giver or Taker.
“I watched them tearing a building down, A gang of men in a busy town. With a ho-heave-ho and a lusty yell, They swung a beam, and the side wall fell. I asked the foreman: "Are these skilled-- And the men you'd hire if you had to build?" He gave me a laugh and said: "No, indeed! Just common labor is all I need. I can wreck in a day or two What builders have taken a year to do." And I thought to myself as I went my way, Which of these roles have I tried to play? Am I a builder who works with care Measuring life by a rule and square? Am I shaping my deeds to a well made Plan, Patiently doing the best I can? Or am I a wrecker, who walks the town Content with the labor of tearing down?” |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Thank you all for your kind suggestions. It was most appreciated. |
Those that live near a waterfall do not fear its roar
Kristina Lerman, a principal scientist at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering Information Sciences Institute (ISI), and her team have found that for most social media users, their feeds expose them to a biased representation of reality.
Recently published in the scientific journal “Nature Communications,” their research paper “Friendship Paradox Biases Perceptions in Directed Networks” highlights how the structure of modern social networks leads to perception bias, or the fact that a person’s connections often skew their perception of how prevalent a trait or belief is in society. Lerman’s paper shows that when popular people engage in an activity or possess a certain trait, perception bias causes others to perceive this trait or behavior as much more prevalent than it actually is. “An individual’s perception of a trait is shaped by its local prevalence among his or her friends,” the paper said. “Any trait that is correlated with popularity is likely to be misperceived.” Lerman and her team didn’t make this discovery by accident. Their new paper builds upon Lerman’s previous research into the structure of social networks. Her past work, which focused on proving certain structural qualities of these networks, laid the foundation for this new study of perception bias. Perception bias can apply to something as trivial as having red hair or as significant as opinions on vaccination. |
Quote:
"What would you do?" is not the proper question. Choice, is self responsibility. We will not need to live with the result of the choice. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:37 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Optimisation provided by
DragonByte SEO v2.0.32 (Pro) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.