T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1043.1 | A friend? | BAGELS::MICHAUD | Time to Nuke Massachusettes | Fri Jul 20 1990 13:06 | 4 |
| Tom's not really a very good friend is he? If he was he would be
honest with Ted? and let hm know about things.. I get this funny
feeling that Tom and Ted? will not be talking with each other for
very much longer!! Just my opinion!
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1043.2 | | HEFTY::CHARBONND | ain't no Prince Charming | Fri Jul 20 1990 13:32 | 12 |
| "The city where we live
might be quite large
but the circle is small
why not tell us all
and then all of us will know"
'The Circle is Small' Gordon Lightfoot
Funny how people think they can hide something that's glaringly
obvious. What does Tom think Ted is going to do when he finds
out the truth ? Shake his hand? If you can't be upfront about
your relationships you're not ready for a relationship.
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1043.3 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Fri Jul 20 1990 13:58 | 17 |
| If Tom is strongly attracted to Lisa, then, as a friend of Joe's,
Tom should consider holding off on the relationship until Joe has
had a chance to deal with his own catharsis. Once that is
accomplished, if he were a real friend he would approach Joe and
ask him of his feelings about it. Of course that would depend on
how deep there friendship really is. But as it stands, my personal
opinion is that Tom is a self satisfying jerk, with no regard whatever
for his "best" friends feelings. If he thinks he can pull of a
"secret" relationship with Liza that Joe will "never know about".
All I can say is the truth always comes out, sooner or later someone
who knows them both will say something and the results will be very
devistating for Joe.
IMHO of course.
Skip
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1043.4 | My opinion | COMET::BOWERMAN | | Fri Jul 20 1990 14:09 | 35 |
| In my opinion Tom needs to tell Joe that he is seeing lisa. When Joe
finds out one of the first auwful feelings he could have is that
Tom is telling her everything. Even if hes not the feelings of
disloyalty are strong and he is likly to think the most stupid
things first if he gets to the angry/betrayal mode.
If every one knows then Joe has the opportunity to get support
from a more comfortable (to him)source and the possiblility of
Tom losing a friend by the time Joe comes to terms with his
feelings about the breakup are slimmer. By keeping the relationship,
reguardless of how small an issue it seems now, a secret, It could
be blown up all out of proportion and be bigger that if he gets used
to the idea and uses some other source for the sounding board everyone
needs to have to get through grief.
Grieving involves a lot of emotions and anger is one of them. Tom
has put himself in the center of a situation that could lose him
a friend. He may feel that it is worth it. Joe should be guided
to use another friend for a listening ear. I believe Tom should
let Joe know just because they are friend. Being friends is not easy
and it requires looking at what is best for them also and weighing
the hurts. I would rather have my friend know from me than find out
and be more hurt because I kept it from them.
RE.4
I just assumed that he would continue the relationship I relised now
that if it were me trying to comfort a friend I would not agree to
go out with his/her ex til after I had discussed it with the friend
involved. I had a friend once try to get me to date one of the men
she had been dating and wanted to stop seeing. I declined.
Something just doesn't feel right when I think about this situation.
janet
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1043.5 | | SEMA::NEWFIELD | | Fri Jul 20 1990 18:51 | 1 |
| these name have been changed to protect the innocent. Just an FYI
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1043.6 | Asbestos shield in place...FIRE! | SUPER::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Sun Jul 22 1990 18:50 | 33 |
|
Just give me a moment to adjust my armor...there...
I agree [I'll get the easy part out of the way first] that Tom should
tell Joe. Probably not foir the same reasons...I think he should so
Joe does not run the risk of being embarassed at a later date by things
he may have said to Tom.
But...[be gentle, it's new armor]...why do people think there is some
'goodness' rule about not dating a friends *EX*girlfriend? What is she,
chattel? Did he have a 12 month lease or something? Did Tom sign a
'Agreement not to compete' clause?
Yes, I know you all think I am callus b**...but hold on here. Just
because Jane Doe dates a man for 12 months it doesn't mean that no one
they both know should ever date her when she stops dating man #1. What
does Tom being Joe's friend have to do with his feelings or hers?
She is *no longer* dating Joe...this is not a case of 'cheating' [ahhh,
I hate that word. They are both free adults if legal age...right? Why
should they not see each other if they wish.
And as far as telling Joe...I reallt think it is none of his business
whom Tom dates and whom he does not. The only reason I think he should
be told is as I mentioned at first...because of a possible conflict of
trust. And that could be done as simply as "Joe, I'm sorry, I don;t
think I can talk to you about this in the futre. Please don't
continue." Just because they are friends doesn't mean they have to live
inseide each other's hip pocket.
I think tom is getting a bum rap.
Melinda
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1043.7 | more stuff | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Mon Jul 23 1990 13:01 | 6 |
| Sandy,
looks like your getting some good mileage out of this. Seeing
that this topic shows up in the Singles notes file. ;-)
George
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1043.8 | | BRADOR::HATASHITA | | Mon Jul 23 1990 20:24 | 12 |
| I've been both a "Joe" and a "Tom" with slight variations.
As a "Joe" I had to understand that life is too short and happy
relationships are too rare for you to harbor resentment because
of a bruised ego.
As a "Tom" I had to allay my guilt and fear and proceed openly and
honestly while keeping in mind that the relationship was between
myself and the woman. The rest of the world could accept it or
go hang gliding.
Kris
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1043.9 | more stuff | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Tue Jul 24 1990 11:37 | 11 |
| I am glad and so should be all involved, that our original love birds
are not married and Tom is not messing around with this guys wife, that
is if she is/was. I think that Tom should give Joe the respect and
leave this woman alone. If she is doing this to Joe, and Tom and Lisa
get involved with something seroius. With the charater signatue of Lisa
she may start messing around with some other men when she gets tired of
Tom, Joe, Frank, Bill what ever. I think BOTH parties soundly say to
Lisa to buzz off. She sounds like she is 'A' moral. We are suposingly
to promigate monogumas relationships? Not here with this love triangle.
George
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1043.10 | Bad Karma... | TJB::WRIGHT | Anarchy - a system that works for everyone.... | Tue Jul 24 1990 12:09 | 13 |
|
Purely from personal experience:
Dateing a friends ex, especially if it is a good friend, is bad magik.
It only gets worse when the relationship was long/involved and the breakup
caused a bit of trauma...
My personal advice is to duck and cover when all this comes out into the light..
grins and luck,
clark.
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1043.11 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Tue Jul 24 1990 12:38 | 11 |
|
Isn't it normal that two best friends might have the same interests and
that a person that appealed to one would appeal to the other. I don't
think this sort of triangle is unusual. It's certainly a standard in
the realm of fiction.
The only problem here is that the "original" suiter is not aware of the
new arrangement. That's the only deception that I see and I do think
that should be corrected. I don't think the woman is "off limits" just
because of a previous relationship. liesl
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1043.12 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Tue Jul 24 1990 12:46 | 5 |
| I have been in a triangle like this and when the dust settled I was
out a good friend and a woman, who I felt wasn't worth it at all.
She is out there in space someplace, perhaps messing aound with someone
else's husband or what ever. Who knows.... I have never seen this
close male friend agian.
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1043.13 | Just be open | PARITY::R_ELWELL | Dirty old men need love, too. | Tue Jul 24 1990 14:04 | 9 |
| No time to read all the replies, but........
Nothing wrong with Tom dating Lisa, but he should tell Joe now, rather
than have Joe find out another way, later..............
I don't really think Tom and Lisa are wrong. All three of them are
adults, and...........
....Bob
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1043.14 | | ARRODS::CARTER | Pyurdedbrilyant! | Wed Jul 25 1990 08:58 | 19 |
| re .9 & .12
Hang on a minute! Just cos you had a bad experience I don't think you can
condemn Lisa in the way that you do - you don't even know her!
What you are saying is that this woman is doing something wrong cos she got
a new boyfriend two months after splitting up.... so what?
The only A-moral thing is that Tom is letting Joe make a fool of himself...
Joe should be told, then if he still wants to confide in Tom then fine...
maybe Tom and Lisa should tell Joe together?
Xtine
ps. who was Ted?
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1043.15 | right | PARITY::R_ELWELL | Dirty old men need love, too. | Wed Jul 25 1990 14:00 | 5 |
| re .14
agreed, and better worded than .13
....Bob
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1043.16 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Jul 25 1990 15:54 | 38 |
| Well, from my point of view... it breaks down to several things.
1) the strength of the relationship/friendship between Tom and Joe
a) is it strong and open enough to survive Joe finding out that
Lisa is dating Joe? In some of the personal experiences sited
earlier, the friendships did not survive.
2) the morality of the girl asking to date someone she knows to
be her former "lover's" best friend.
a) this hinges on just exactly what the relationship was.
Personal experience shows me that sometimes one of the
two have feelings that the other just does not realize
nor respricates.
Example: I was very much in love with a girl once who
only thought of me as a friend. Once she realized what
my real feelings were, she stopped seeing me because she
she felt it would only hurt me more, to continue in the
relationship the way it was.
3) The morales of people are obviously different in this situation.
I personally would wonder how close a friend my best friend really
were to go out with the girl in the first place, knowing how I felt
about her. But then again, I wonder if (becasue I can't really
say one way or the other) If I felt a strong attraction/desire to
know a girl who'd been involved with my closest friend, would I
ignore those feelings and forget about it? Hard to say... I might,
deciding that my friendship was too important to risk jeapordizing
it. Or I might decide that my personal right to possible happiness
was worth the risk to my friendship. I can't honestly answer that
question because I'd never been in the situation, I know how I would
like to answer it. But, I learned a long time ago that even a persons
personal morals are subject to change once faced with reality.
SKip
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1043.17 | anybody got a stone? | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed Jul 25 1990 17:42 | 15 |
| < question because I'd never been in the situation, I know how I would
< like to answer it. But, I learned a long time ago that even a persons
< personal morals are subject to change once faced with reality.
<
< SKip
That's certainly one of the lessons life has taught me too. It's
amazing what can happen when love (sometimes even just lust) enters
the picture.
What seems so morally right when you aren't one of the parties involved
becomes a lot more confusing when it's *your* heart feeling the emotions.
As a Persian poem puts it "The eyes know a hundred tears, and the soul
knows a hundred sighs". Judge not..etc and so on. liesl
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1043.18 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Jul 25 1990 18:40 | 21 |
| Thanks leisl, the reason I entered my last reply is that I made
my first one based on my own morals as they stand at this moment.
Then I stopped and started to think seriously about the situation
and tried to put my self in both of their's position. Finally I
realized that I couldn't make judgement on them because I kept coming
up with... "But what if you REALLY liked the girl? Wouldn't it be
worth the possible damage? Could you like her enough to risk it?"
I reminded myself that as a friend of his, I would have been exposed
to her and been able to evaluate her during there relationship.
Forming opinions and values about her. I realized that there have
been a couple of circumstances in my past when I'd met a friends
girlfriend when I thought to myself "Gee, too bad she's attracted
to him instead of me." I never allowed myself to persue the thought
further, but I wonder if I'd been continually exposed to her, and
then learned that she had stopped seeing him and was interested
in seeing me... what would I do? It's hard to say. It would depend
on the situation and the reality of it at the time. It's something
to be considered when making a reply here.
Skip
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1043.19 | expanded re-hash | PARITY::R_ELWELL | Dirty old men need love, too. | Thu Jul 26 1990 12:40 | 12 |
| Probably a re-hash of whatever I said before, but if Lisa isn't
dating Joe any more, for whatever the reason, ther is nothing wrong
with her dating Tom, however that started. Joe is going to have to
accept that, because Tom and Lisa have a right to date. They shouldn't
have to throw away what could possibly be a very good relationship
simply because it might bother Joe, who at this point doesn't have
a relationship with Lisa any more. If Joe is mature he should be able
to understand this, and handle it. But they should tell him soon, and
let the chips fly where they may. But the sooner they do it the sooner
any healing that is needed can take place.
....Bob
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