• _dev_null@lemmy.zxcvn.xyz
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    1 year ago

    Yeah, I really didn’t like my buddy’s girlfriend. I could see right through her, and she was changing by buddy for the worse. She was convincing him that his image was shit, and it really damaged his confidence. He’d change his outward appearance for her, dropped his entire lifestyle, but she had abandonment issues so wasn’t ever happy with any partner.

    Turns out she was a narcissist, like bonafide. What went down next:

    1. She graduates college with a STEM degree, while having freeloaded in his house her entire senior year (his mortgage)

    2. She breaks up and moves out of nowhere, this several months after she insisted on all the other roommates get kicked out to “take it to the next level”

    3. He goes suicidal, makes two attempts, but finds another lost soul to have a fling with, which starts to bring him out of the depression

    4. Ex-girlfriend finds out about new fling, drops by house at 1am after having left the club (driving drunk, I’ll add)

    5. Makes a huge scene out front of his house, I’m there for my “shift” on suicide watch, she ends up kicking me in my fucking kidney while I was squatting and smoking a cig

    6. He ends up depressed again, 3rd suicide attempt and he doesn’t survive

    7. I’m a pall bearer at 25 for my best friend since 8th grade

    Fuck that bitch.

    • lady_maria@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      I’m so sorry for your loss. I can’t begin to imagine what kind of horrible person does that kind of shit to anyone, let alone someone who struggled so much with their mental health.

      It sounds like you were a great friend to him.

    • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Fuck. Thats enough internet for tonight. I wish guys would just buy a guybrator for < $200 and lose the retarded damaged bitches.

    • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      She breaks up and leaves him, he goes suicidal?

      Sounds abusive and manipulative.

      Ex girl shows up drunk and makes a scene, and friend goes into a full depression?

      Your friend was not rational, no disrespect intended. Can’t blame the girl.

      • _dev_null@lemmy.zxcvn.xyz
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        1 year ago

        No, he wasn’t rational. As evidenced by getting suicidal over a relatively short lived romance (a couple years?). It was years in the making though, becoming co-dependent on this girl, who really didn’t give a shit about him at all.

        When they first split, we could tell he was slipping into some type of psychosis. I immediately got his parents involved, along with the rest of his support network. We talked him into starting up therapy, let his direct boss know what was up, got some HR paperwork rolling so he wouldn’t lose his job trying to get mental help (two 3-day suicide watches on a psych ward).

        Before the night of her assaulting me, I was actually on talking terms with her, and even enlisted her in trying to get my buddy’s head back on straight. He was calling her 5-10 times a day, leaving “take me back I’ll do anything” type messages. We had asked her to please not answer or call back anymore, letting her know she hadn’t done anything wrong, and it was him that was sick.

        But she wouldn’t let it go, she would periodically answer the phone, and talk to him hours on end. Giving him hope that they’d get back together. And then ignore him for several days. We even offered to pay her and for her to go see his therapist, so she could get professional advice on how to helpfully deal with such an obsessed and mentally unwell individual; she refused. But what she didn’t refuse, was to keep answering that damn phone and edging him along. She seemed to like the control, and in a fucked up kind of way, the attention.

        In court, when she was being held to account for her assault on me, she claimed that she had attacked me in order to get him to hate her. She said she figured I was the person he next loved the most, and she wanted him to gravitate back into my sphere, away from her. But that’s not what she was screaming that night. She called the other girl a slut (the other girl locked inside the house), and how my friend was a piece of shit for having cheated(!), and that the other girl would leave his sorry ass too.

        She lied right there in court, stared me straight in the eyes after too, brushing away her fake tears. She was convince that everybody had bought her story, and that she was the victim in it all.

        And then the prosecutor called into evidence a recording I gave to him when he had first contacted me as the affected victim in the case. The recording? A voicemail that she had left me within the first several visceral days after my best friend’s suicide. When the funeral was still being arranged – and it was a big one, my buddy had so many loved ones in his life given his age – my buddy’s mom asked me to call the ex and let her know she didn’t want anything to do with her, and that she wasn’t welcome at the funeral.

        Her response to all that in the voicemail, having been forbidden from the funeral, now being played in front of everyone in the courtroom?:

        You fucking piece of shit, I don’t want to be at that goddamned funeral anyway, no way I want to see his dead bloated body! He was a piece of shit just like you, good riddance and I hope he’s in hell!

        Those fake tears burned right off her ugly face real quick, you could see her grinding her teeth, turning beet red with seething anger. Finally, the bitch had to shut the fuck up.

        So yes, you’re right, he was not rational. But I respectfully disagree that there isn’t at least some degree of blame that she deserves.

        (And sorry if it sounds like I’m dumping on you, I’m not meaning to. It’s been a while since I’ve been able to vent about it all. Such drama, it occasionally bubbles up, will always be a tattoo on my soul.)

        • FilthyHookerSpit@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Did she ever end up getting charged for the assault? Such a terrible person, I find my self hoping there was some kind of consequence to her actions(also RIP best friend, you deserved better)

        • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          All good dude. Sounds like you are a good friend. She may have been just as fragile as he was, letting her emotions rule, not knowing what to do. Man if everyone had friends like you maybe nobody would kill themselves. But lots of people have friends like themselves, too.

      • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Unless you have been with someone like that you don’t get it. They break you down until you feel worthless so when they leave you have nothing.

        I dated someone like that took me months to get to the point where I could even accept a pity date. Was so convinced that I was hideous.

        • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Been there. Just saying she obviously had her own problems. He kept calling her, she kept answering; they were both told to let the shit go. It’s a hard world out here. Everyone is looking for something.

  • xkforce@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My great aunt’s husband. I had a bad feeling about him the moment I met him when I was a kid. Turns out he was a paedophile that got two of his granddaughters pregnant and was sent to prison. He died a few years ago and the family held a wake for him and I had to explain why I wanted nothing to do with him. WTF.

  • Zipitydew@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Yes. Customer. Was clearly smooth talking con man others aspire to be. No one else believed me. Or questioned how he was going to set up the kind of construction operation he claimed to run. Literally weeks after moving to the area.

    Boss took the bait. Even introduced the guy to other friends and customers. Guy promised them all a bunch of work but needed down payments for materials. Vanished about a month after the checks cleared.

  • RecallMadness@lemmy.nz
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    1 year ago

    Met a guy at a house party that everyone seemed to like. Had some interesting stories, but he mostly came off as a self obsessed dickhead.

    He later became pretty noteworthy in the industry he worked in.

    10 years on from when I met him, turns out he’s at best a serial sexual assaulter, and a serial rapist at worst.

  • Shambling Shapes@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    Russell Brand and the recent revelations that he’s abusive and probably a rapist.

    He gave me danger vibes from the very beginning, all the way back to 2008ish. I was actually surprised when it broke news this year; I had assumed he’d been caught way earlier and was already through the “apologizes” / stays off social media for 6 months / comes back “enlightened” / media forgets about his crimes cycle.

  • nicolasfields@lemmy.mlB
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    1 year ago

    There was this guy I met at the dog park who talked nicely to everybody, especially to the ladies. He would be the kind to always greet you, offered to share his snacks. He seemed to always be at the center of the conversation.

    He tended to orbit around my now gf and for a long time he forcefully sticked with us, all good there at the beginning. But as soon as I started going out with her his behavior changed. Instead of being a direct ass to me he tried to monopolize my girlfriend’s attention, being overly attentive, stomping over me when I was talking, always trying to dominate the conversation.

    Now, his true color started to show when I confronted him when he was trying to impose his lifestyle on others.

    He attempted to get a mutual friend to drink with him, which is by no means bad, the problem was than this mutual friend was a recorying alcoholic.

    He tried to coherse her by using social pressure, saying that you should enjoy (which is true, but he doesn’t get a say in how anyone else “enjoy” THEIR LIVES), but I standed against it. The few times we drank together I was able to keep her from overdrinking, sooooo he started to invite her without acquaitances.

    Long story short:

    1. He got our mutual friund hooked again to the point of losing her job.
    2. I untintentionally got the best of him, such as “women are less value than the historical sites they destroy in feminist rallies” and regarding his own girlfriend who doesn’t want to have kids “she is to young to know that”. He once asked this out of nowhere “how old do you think they are?”, whes referring to two teenagers who were clearly 15 at best.
    3. It turns out that majority of the dog owners dislike this guy. But, no one ever said anything because we all thought he was well liked in the cammunity.
    • Susaga@ttrpg.network
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      1 year ago

      There’s a thing called the Abilene paradox. A family is hanging out when one of the suggests having dinner in Abilene. It’s a hot day and a long drive, but nobody wants to be left out, so they all agree. After a terrible dinner, they all reveal their frustrations at the event when the person who suggested it notes that it was the first thing they thought of, as they thought everyone else was bored.

      Thus, everyone sits in wonder at how they all convinced each other to do something nobody among them wanted to do.

      It’s fun how often that includes hanging out with someone.

      • ChicoSuave@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Abilene paradox doesn’t exist. That’s a failure of communication and a benign dishonesty with each other. State you’re bored and check the room before making everyone go on a journey. Get to an understanding before making plans.

        • Susaga@ttrpg.network
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          1 year ago

          You have fundementally misunderstood the paradox.

          Person A wanted to please person B and suggested a given action. Person B assumed person A wanted that action and wanted to please them, so they agreed. Nobody wanted the action, nobody was forced to take the action, everyone had a chance to deny the action, nobody even necessarily lied. People wanted to please others and everyone did something nobody wanted to do.

          Yes, it is a failure of communication. Specifically, it’s a false consensus, where everyone misunderstands the opinions of the wider group. Even more specifically, it’s the Abilene paradox, where everyone acquiesces to the misunderstood desire of the wider group.

          In the specific context of the OP, nobody liked the guy, but everyone thought everyone else liked the guy. They didn’t want to openly insult someone everyone liked, so everyone kept quiet, so nobody realised nobody liked the guy and nobody told him to go away. It’s the paradox in action.

          • ChicoSuave@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I guess I still misunderstand because it still sounds like no one asked any questions about why or whether it was of interest. Mindless following is only a paradox when sensibility is regained and someone asks basic questions.

            No one should ever mindlessly follow a group. That’s how people follow GPS into a lake when common sense should alert them far before catastrophe.

            • Susaga@ttrpg.network
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              1 year ago

              You want others to like you. You want others to be happy. You put your own desires aside for the benefit of another. It’s not mindless, it’s selfless.

              You make an assumption about a person, and they never give you cause to doubt your assumption. It will take you a long time for you to think your assumption might be wrong. After all, they agreed to it, so they must enjoy it, right? And they invited you to do this thing they like with them, so you don’t wanna bring the mood down by refusing.

              It’s obvious in hindsight, or from a third person omniscient perspective like we have, but in the moment? It happens. It shouldn’t, and that’s why it’s a paradox.

              See also: Peer pressure, false consensus, “Don’t rock the boat”

  • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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    1 year ago

    My mom did, it was Jared Fogle while he was visiting the elementary school she works at a few years before the arrest, we all know what happened.

      • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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        1 year ago

        As the other person said, he’s a pedophile, and that’s… putting it nicely. The dude was a nightmare that abused his fame and status to abuse children all over the world.

        There’s a documentary on … I think curiosity stream and probably some other platforms that’s worth a watch if you’re into true crime. Totally crazy

          • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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            1 year ago

            I just remember her saying he seemed different from how she expected… I remember her saying he seemed kind of … either rude or just off and specifically remember she was surprised he didn’t complement the big banner the kids painted for him.

            It’s not like she knew from that he was a pedophile or anything, it’s just in retrospect… “Dang mom you were sniffing something out about his character”

      • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        You might know him as Subway’s former pedophile spokesman. Kinda surprised none of the other replies mentioned Subway. Like the sandwich shop, if you’re too young to know the reference. He lost a bunch of weight, supposedly by eating subway sandwiches (South Park had another take but didn’t predict what was really going on), so subway hired him for commercials and a tour. They later regretted this.

  • Changetheview@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Of course. I’ll just speak generally instead of specific stories.

    Judging people based on their charisma alone is a terrible approach. Many likable people are great, but others just say what they know other people want to hear. People pleasers that will always choose the popular option, not the “right” one… And some people can be very talented at using manipulative tactics to gain support even though they spread a lot of pain. The classic popular bully.

    The reverse can also be true. Some extremely uncharismatic/unpopular people are amazing at heart. And can be trusted to do what’s right even if it’s unpopular.

    That’s why it’s best to not make knee-jerk or immediate judgements. Listen to your gut, pay attention to details, and try not to let the opinion of others influence your opinions or decisions too much.

  • Skybreaker@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    About 10 years ago we lived near this family that were friends with our family. The couple was a little older than my wife and I but not by much. The wife and my wife liked to hang out, but whenever I went over to their house, it seemed like the husband was very flirtatious with my wife. No huge red flags or anything, just joking a lot and laughing a lot and seeming interested. I didn’t really say anything to my wife, but I always had a bad feeling about the dude. I think she thought he was just being friendly. We moved away from there for many years but ended up moving back about 3 years ago. We didn’t really live in exactly the same area, so my wife and the other wife chatted from time to time, but didn’t really hang out. She did call my wife though when her husband started cheating on her with someone from work. He apparently was very open about flirting with other women and when she found out he wouldn’t stop seeing/sleeping with the girl from work. She told my wife that he told her he always regretted that they had as many kids as they did (4) and that it was her fault. So, turns out all my bad feelings about this dude ended up being true. The really crazy part is that the dudes wife still won’t leave him, even though he is basically openly cheating at this point. It’s sad. He’s such a loser.

  • AggressivelyPassive@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    The new boyfriend of a friend of mine.

    She thought, he’s super nice, then told me he was jealous of me, because I’m a man befriended with a woman. When we met, he seemed constantly worried about not seeming beta, weak or somehow “unmanly”. She thought he’s just a bit nervous.

    Yeah, turned out he was absolutely ready to rape her, stalked her after she broke up and sent her “presents” over two years. Really really pathetic little guy.

  • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I knew the guy vaguely. He was a relative by marriage to a friend of mine so I had seen him. He applied for work where I was and his story didn’t really add up. If you read between the lines it sounded like he was fired for stealing. He was very extroverted and could crack a joke so people liked him. I didn’t.

    I recommended not hiring the guy but we did. Stole stuff, picked fights, was lazy, did this “game” where he would take something of his coworkers and hide it. Eventually mouthed off to our main supplier, right in front of all the underlyings. So yeah no raw materials and the plant shutdown for a week.

  • garbagebagel@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My sister’s ex. Though a lot of her friends had the feeling, he sure as hell charmed her and my parents. Dude was a manipulative cokehead who stole thousands from her. She’s fine now but fuck that guy.

  • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    Yea, one was arrested for sodomizing his adopted child. The other one was arrested for showing himself to a minor

  • LostAndSmelly@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My mother in laws friend was a roided out prison guard who had zero empathy. He was very kind to people but just could not understand when anyone had a hard time with anything. I fixed his computer and he refused to pay me because it looked easy so he figured I wasn’t really working.

    When his wife asked for a divorce he strangled her so hard it broke her neck. He then held her under water in the bath tub for almost an hour just to be sure. Then he tried to end himself by jumping off the second story of their house but survived with a back injury.

    MIL actually showed up to court as a character witness. He spends most if his time these days in “protective custody” because a lot of the other inmates know him from when he was a guard. We still get letters from him and he is still a dickhead.

    • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      If someone is nice that doesn’t know you they want something. Which most of the time is fine, maybe all they want is to not feel lonely. If it isnt crystal clear that what they want is that or something like that be on guard. People aren’t very open with strangers passes the age of 4 years old.

      If someone wants to include you in any kinda deception get out of the situation.

      Be aware of any attempt to size you up. Are they trying to figure out how much money you have, are you the type to go to the cops, do you have any easy blackmail routes. “Oh what kinda work do you do?” Is a classic.

      It all comes down to sex money or loyalty. Anyone trying to go after you wants some combo of the three. The person who is not attracted to you, doesn’t care what fancy toys you have, and will only tell you about their religion/cult/whathaveyou if you ask about it is the one you can trust.

      Lastly “let me talk it over with my wife” is pretty much going to get you out anything. Anyone being honest will be fine with that answer to pretty much any suggestion. If I invite a friend to say a BBQ I want him to bring his wife if I am going to try to sell you the Eiffle Tower I know it is just that much work scamming two vs one.