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[personal profile] jay
Dredged up from a conversation still going on in a month-old entry of mine...

[quote from [profile] bikerscum:]
Why does it devalue to you a sincere offer to babysit if you know that similar offers are made to others?

(grin) it doesn't! That's not my context. My context is: if offers to babysit are made to others, but not to me, then *I'm* devalued (not the offer) with respect to whatever set of others, in the network of the person making the babysitting offers. In a connectionist sense, my link-weighting estimate is reduced.

If the given person makes babysitting offers to a stranger-with-kids he's just met, but I'm supposedly a close friend of his and he's never offered (or refused my past request), then my estimation of the value of my friendship in that person's eyes is placed lower than that of someone he's just met -- i.e., practically zero.

In a third-grade context... (grin)

If mommy gives all the other kids a cookie but won't give me one, that means that she must love all of them more than me... If she gives one to the new kid that just moved in down the street, but not to me, then she must not love me at all, because she doesn't love the new kid at all (and I'm even less important that he is, because he gets a cookie and I don't).

That's over-simplified, but how I feel about symbolism... especially for publicly-displayed things. The "cookie" may be unimportant in itself, but as a token it conveys information about the state of a given friendship or relationship.

Date: 2003-09-13 08:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] princeofwands.livejournal.com
First off:


It took some time to decide to include that though, and then considerably more to find a phrasing that expressed my stuff while not being an attack on you. I'm glad that you've chosen also to take it that way.

But I don't view relationships of whatever sort as decoupled from others... I see them as interconnected. And if I'm assessing "how is the friendship with R going?", I have no independent, absolute metric for assessing R's actions and behaviors where I'm concerned. All I have to go by is how R's behaviors around me compare to those towards others in his/her network.

Again - maybe we were socialized on different planets.

When I'm assessing "how is the relationship with R going?", I ask myself - first about my feelings about R. Do I look forward to seeing R, to making plans, to keeping up on zir life? Or do I dread those dealings? Or do I just not care? Am I too (much or little) emotionally involved for my own taste? What content of my life am I comfortable sharing details about with R? And am I comfortable with that level?

And then I ask myself how I interpret R's attitude and actions toward me on about those same criteria. I wonder then if our expectations of one another are in line with what we have (and have expressed wanting) to offer.

And if I'm happy (again - I tend to measure my own fulfillment in terms of happiness, YMetricMV) with my answers to the above then all is well. And if I'm not, then it's my job to do something about that. Almost always starting there by expressing my perceived disconnect to R and going from there.

And so, when R and I try to [go out] once a month, if I notice that R is now [going out] with S not just the once a month they'd been doing, but now weekly. I don't perceive that my relationship with R has been devalued. Now - if it turns out that from the change in R's frequency of [going out] with S that R is significantly less available to see me, then I might have an issue with R - about our change in interaction and how that relates to my expectations of our relationship. But that's about me and R and not related to S.

It sounds to me that you're interpretation is to note that you and R are on pretty good terms, and try to [go out] monthly, and that you perceive that R and S are on about the same terms as similarly ranked (though I'm not sure how one would go about categorizing this, or choosing to order it - let alone attempting to do so for other people's other relationships) types friends. But if R and S start [going out] on a weekly basis instead - you might start to feel devalued by R. Especially if you notice that R's friend T has also moved from a monthly to weekly frequency of [going out]. (Or U, V, W, and X, too - if my model is too prone to special case interpretation with only one or two friends.)

But I wonder - why are you setting your expectations based on other people's other relationships rather that on your own wants and interactions?

Date: 2003-09-14 02:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] brian1789.livejournal.com
Again - maybe we were socialized on different planets.

(grin) maybe... I've said before that we seem like opposites, yin/yang in our socialization.

I ask myself - first about my feelings about R.

That's a key difference between us -- I find my own feelings to be unreliable and not very trustworthy. External inputs are more valuable to me.

Am I too (much or little) emotionally involved for my own taste?
I would mostly ignore my own feelings/taste, and look instead on how that degree of emotional involvement was affecting R and those around R and myself....

I tend to measure my own fulfillment in terms of happiness, YMetricMV

(nods) I place less importance on my own happiness, as we've discussed before. Duty, obligations to others, external impacts or validation all loom large for me.

I don't perceive that my relationship with R has been devalued.

Since your value of that relationship is driven internally -- by your own happiness with R -- I can see that whatever happens with S is of little importance to you (unless it affects R's availability or attitude towards you personally).

how one would go about categorizing this, or choosing to order it

Usually, I just ask R how R sees our friendship or relationship. Then I subsequently compare with those others to whom R refers similarly.

why are you setting your expectations based on other people's other relationships rather that on your own wants and interactions?

Again, my own reactions to my own wants and interactions are untrustworthy and unreliable. People's other relationships can be observed with more objectivity, I think. If R is going out three times a month with R, that's observable. My own feelings about my interactions with R are likely to be hard to describe (and change frequently).

Date: 2003-09-14 02:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] brian1789.livejournal.com
Make that, "If R is going out three times a month with S"...

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