We have seen this problem before, but perhaps it’s worth
another go. The problem is simple. It is not even complex. A woman has a new
boyfriend. Her friends have subtly pointed out that they do not like him. They find him "tough to like. They seem to find him grating. Apparently, what the letter writer calls “direct
candor” strikes many other people as rude. She writes to Carolyn Hax and asks for enlightenment.
The letter writer, who calls herself Guest Rubbing on Hosts likes her boyfriend for his insensitive and crude
remarks. Her friends do not. She does not know what to do. She suggests that
she might try to buffer the problem with her friends, but she does not want to
tell her boyfriend not to be himself.
Pause for a moment over that remark. If being himself means
being rude, crude and lewd, doesn’t this suggest that she sees his bad manners
and lack of decorum as a winning quality, and also as who he really is? If said
boyfriend is not capable of controlling his distemper among other people, then
he is acting on a stage, reciting his lines, with no real sensitivity to
audience reaction. This does not speak well of him. It does not make look like
a good prospective mate. If he rubs his girlfriend’s friends the wrong way, how
does he treat managers, colleagues and co-workers on the job?
My boyfriend and I are going to visit some
friends who have invited us to join them at their lake house. A few months ago,
my friends told me that my boyfriend is "tough to like." I realize
his sense of humor isn't for everyone, but his direct candor — while harsh — is
one of the traits I find attractive about him.
I'd like to buffer any difficulties with my
friends, but I don't want to tell my boyfriend not to be himself, nor do I look
forward to telling him he isn't completely liked. Any suggestions on how to
approach this?
— Guests Rubbing on Hosts
Hax correctly points out that GRH
should not buffer anything at all. If the boyfriend’s entertaining personality
is socially disruptive, she would do better to find a new boyfriend. And she
ought to revise her own standards about what is and is not a good quality in a
boyfriend. If his character is bad, he is a bad bet.
Hax explains:
When
you are with someone, the combination you create has to stand or fall on its
merits, and that includes with your friends, your family, your home life, your
professional life, your personal habits, your hobbies, your values, your goals,
all of it. It’s not always going to be perfect, obviously, but if you have to
exert a special effort to curate scenes and manage personalities and schedules
just to keep the whole thing from blowing up, and if you’re already
explaining/excusing/justifying yourself and your interest in him, then you’re
going to exhaust yourself — especially over time — and sow resentment on both
sides. Special orchestration is a sign that something is Not Going to Work.
Quite right, I say.
One commenter suggested that perhaps the
friends would grow to like him, but that seems farfetched. If GRH has to make
that much of an effort to cover for her boyfriend, her friends will cease inviting her. Their suggesting that he is
difficult to like is a euphemism for: he’s insufferable.
She should take a
hint, and understand, as Hax says, that she will soon have to choose between boyfriend and friends. It’s an unpleasant choice, but in most
cases, she should choose her friends. If the boyfriend’s main value is as
entertainment, making a life with him seems like a bad idea. If he rubs your friends the wrong way, think of the way he rubs strangers.
3 comments:
It would help to have a tangible example of what exactly he says this is regarded at blunt or rude. It's such a sliding scale these days, and with the victim culture in full swing, I an sometimes astonished at what people deem offensive. But even truth can be said with decorum. I think all of us who live in reality have to temper what we say for the audience we are with. People who cannot, or will not, make these slight alterations for context are going to learn the hard way the high cost of their imperiousness. I trip to the social isolation ward is sometimes a bracing tonic.
Her boyfriend might be an aspie. She should check that out.
He's probably on the spectrum. I agree with Ubu – I'd like to see an example or two of his tactlessness/bluntness and some context. I'd also like to know more about her friends. Likely, he's the wrong guy for her, but I have to believe that this would end up as unpleasant for him as it would for her. I think some truth is called for.
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