victoriavictrix wrote:Makes me wonder if she has been trying to get into the "Kewl Kidz Klub" of Resin Snobs and has gotten the cold shoulder and is taking it out on you.
That wouldn't surprise me. People get really strange when they get influenced by that whole pack mentality thing that I've never really managed to (or really wanted to) grasp. The closest I've ever done is "this one person is nice and fun to talk to, I hope we can be friends". I've never done the "this group is kewl so I want to suppress everything about myself that isn't like them so that I can apply some 'I am part of this group' label to myself". But I remember seeing that kind of behavior, including one particulatly painful lesson in it in middle school. People can be bloody insane (from my perspective) when they get like that.
DollyKim wrote:But definitely never take an apology with an excuse, that's something manipulators do. She's either sorry or she's not.
I think I agree there, though with a habit of having different definition for 'excuse'. With my family the way it was, I always had layers of definitions there. Genuine apology, fake apology, excuses, and explanations. For me an excuse is understandable when paired with a sincere apology, an explanation isn't. It goes something like this: "Well, /sorry/, but I had a headache so I yelled ay you because you were there and yelling made me feel better." This is a fake apology, usually with a tone on the 'sorry' that really means that what they are really 'sorry' about is that, from their perspective, you are being 'annoying' and 'whining' about being unreasonably yelled at. The reason they give for their behavior does nothing to actually excuse what they did. There are things like Dammit Dolls or just yelling at walls. Yelling makes you feel better is an explanation, but not an excuse, for yelling at a person. Sometimes there's a sincere apology with an explanation, but only when it is a rare occurrence and the person knows their reasoning was wrong. Something like "I'm really sorry I yelled at you. I had an absolutely horrible day, but that doesn't justify taking it out on you." They acknowledge that the explanation does not make what they did right, that what they did was wrong and is something they are aware of as a mistake and will actually try not to do in the future, (If they keep doing it, the apology was never real in the first place and they're just a good liar. Beasically, like you said, a manipulator.) For me an 'excuse' is influenced by the idea of a 'doctor's excuse' to get out of school and the like. An excuse rather than an explanation shows some reason the person either couldn't help or has a lot of trouble with that particular behavior, especially true in cases of underlying medical or psychological condition. "I'm sorry I touched your freshly painted wall and smudged it. I didn't hear you about the paint being wet. I've had an ear infection recently and think it might have affected my hearing." This is a valid reason that excuses the person from most of the culpability for this and shows that even if they try they might not be able to help whatever happened from recurring, and that it might require support and understanding from others to make associating with them work. One online friend I've done RP with is nonneurotypical and had been kicked off of RP forums because she's a horror fan and doesn't always know where other people's squick-lines are when it comes to describing things like carnage or cannibalistic monsters or so on. She tries, but it's very difficult for her. She let me know this right from the start, and I understood it would be on me to be aware of my own limits and basically let her know if she got too close to them. We never had any problems. That said, I've gone off on a tangent (which is one of my own bad habits I haven't been able to curb. My mind needs to be on a leash or something, wanders off all the time.) But, yeah, people are either really sorry, or they're not. And you have to watch out for the latter, especially when it's a not-sorry that's a 'sorry you're annoying them about the thing they're going to keep doing to you just because they enjoy it'.
Hopefully, for some reason, whatever is triggering the sister's behavior resolves itself and she has some real apologies when she realizes how she's been behaving. If she does. People are complicated. At 32 it could be a lot of things. One that crosses my mind is that is an age when some people start to really grasp as more than an abstract fact that growing old is an actual thing that will happen to them. Maybe she's having some kind of "those kind of dolls are too much for younger people and I will look immature" phase?