Don't be a doormat
You consider yourself a trustworthy friend, loyal and dependable. You try your best to be helpful and generous to the friends you make. You invest much time and effort in a friendship. You’re always around to listen. Because of this, you’re the person your friends run to during times of crisis. You eventually become the one individual who is always there to help.
But occasionally, you
meet a friend who is incapable of reciprocating..
You may encounter
someone who will only look for you when you’re needed. But when you’re the one
in need, this friend will offer some convenient excuse not to be there. There
is always something more important than you. You are never a priority. And even
when you’re together, your friend constantly insists on getting his way. You’re
forced to follow whatever your friend wants and you give whatever he needs.
Your wishes remain secondary.
Despite this, you
continue to hope that this friend will realize how well you treat him and that
he should give some time and effort back. But this friend never does. In the
end, you eventually feel drained. And when your usefulness to this friend has
run out, you may find yourself discarded and forgotten.
Sometimes the desire
to feel accepted makes a person vulnerable to abuse. This is especially the
case with lonely individuals. Opportunistic people will see this weakness and
may come to exploit it.
No comments: