this post was submitted on 23 Jul 2023
7 points (100.0% liked)

Moving to: m/AskMbin!

23 readers
5 users here now

### We are moving! **Join us in our new journey as we take a new direction towards the future for this community at mbin, find our new community here and read this post to know more about why we are moving. Thank you and we hope to see you there!**

founded 1 year ago
 

Maybe this has been asked a million times (I didn't find it... links and useful search queries are appreciated). But how should I deal with a toxic friend in a group?

I'm sure this situation is very common.

More details below, you could just skip it :)

We are a large group 7-11 friends ages 20-30 (group A). The group is very nice, and I am the common friend with all of them. After the summer the group will be 5-7 friends (the others return home after 6 months), with the toxic friend and his girlfriend in the group. The rest of the friends were friends for longer.

The toxic is very subtle. I know him for 8+ years, I didn't like him at first but I don't remember why. Recently I have seen his subtle manipulative behavior with another circle of people (group B), somewhat larger and "less friends". He took the lead a long time ago, decreased meeting frequency by a lot.

[Edit: This paragraph is hard to understand, try to improve it]
This is an unsorted list of things (very broad) that I recently noticed:

  • He is blaming others for things not going well.
  • He blames other people for his own actions.
  • Instead of working as a group, he works only with a friend and he does not report any kind of progress, we are "guilty" for not taking initiative.
  • When a task has to be done, he asks very open-ended questions that nobody can answer in the chat. One of the persons that could have answered was outside the group because she was his ex and he didn't want to be in the chat with her. We had to forward messages back and forth between them, communication was a big issue, we hardly met in person this year. Then he blames that nobody answers his questions.

We said everything in the previous paragraph to him, we are "personally attacking him". The person that he blames the most for things not going well is her ex.
For rest of the group (except him and his friend), the bad atmosphere is his fault. We work well together, if someone doesn't have time to do something, someone else does it. We meet regularly, etc.
From now on we will be taking the lead so hopefully thing will go better. (He resigned willingly, as everything is falling apart from his point of view).

The issue remains with my group of friends, I'm good friends with the others, but I don't want to find myself in shitty situations with them.

Some time ago, in a smaller group 3-5 friends (group C), ages 20-25 I detected toxic behavior with one of the friends (always wanted the group to follow his plans). I didn't know how to handle the situation, so I showed up less with them using working on (group B) as an excuse, as I didn't want him to feel bad.
Just seeing the group less backfired with him being a very active member in group B just to keep the friendship with me.... Luckily he improved a lot recently, but we are still not so much friends as we once were.

Now talking about the toxic guy I'm currently asking:
I thing he is not ok and I'm a bit worried. Maybe he needs help, and if something like this happened to me, it would feel very bad if friends just vanished.

There is a lot of advice in the line of "you are not responsible for others feelings" and to avoid toxic people, this is what I followed the first time that I found myself in this situation. I'm not sure anymore how to deal with this.

I've you have read so far, thank you a lot :)

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I think your first course of action would be to bring this up with other members of your friend group and see how they feel. Have they also noticed this behaviour? Do they have any ideas how to deal with it? It will be easier to help this person if you work together. Just make sure you don't seem like you're ganging up on them. Maybe you can approach them with your concerns and then another friend can bring it up separately some time later. If you want to help always approach with kindness and love.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Thank you, this seems reasonable.

Since my focus was mainly on group B, apart from his actions on group B, I didn't notice anything and I don't know how to check if he is really ok or not. If I ask him he says yes, and when he says no, he blames his ex and group B.

I don't want to criticize his work on group B, I'm very uncomfortable talking about people that are not present.

I'll think how to do it, but it is hard since there is no "red flag" but a lot of tiny ones.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Heads up toxic people often used peoples kindest traits against them. Your worry for his well being, so he'll forever be miserable enough for you to worry about it but never donanything to get better. It's just to distract your from your own discomfort. your uneasiness talking about his behavior to other people, that means you'll not get a second opinion and stay isolated in your confusion, and it works you already wonder if you're the problem.

Your kindness is probably why he follows you to other groups and starts belittling and criticizing you. He knows you will do what he wants and give and give as much as he wants to take. You did start to talk about it tho and start to break out of the role he assigned you.

Guy seems to be big on emotional abuse. I see plenty of red flags there but they are hard to see if you don't study up on how emotional abuse works.