snarlingcoyote
<font color=blue>I know people who live in really
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2008
- Messages
- 5,938
Hmmm, having a debate with a friend over a tactic I just used.
I volunteer with a charity and for the past year and a half have had a set weekend I work. My job is pretty stressful, so on that week, I usually wind up working about 15 extra hours Monday thru Friday just to make up for the fact I won't be working on Saturday. This week I had an event with this group Weds. evening, so didn't work and will have an event Sunday afternoon, so I was planning to work evening Saturday and evening Sunday, and did some really long stretches of work during the week.
At 10pm last night, the person who assigns the schedule - and that is her only responsibility as per this event, she does not attend and has nothing to do with anything else related to this activity which occurs every Saturday - sent out the schedule and my name wasn't on it. Now, I'm already committed to helping someone else set up for this event (I have an SUV and can cart things) and take down from this event, so I will spend at least an hour at start and end.
The person who assigns the schedule has pulled some very, very Mean Girl type tricks - she's in her late 50's but apparently never got past high school socially, I guess - on me in the past, but I've always just acted like I had no clue what she was doing and let it go.
This time, however, I was a little ticked and sent an e-mail out to everyone on the mailing list in a very, very friendly tone asking her to, in the future, let me know before 10PM the night before if I wouldn't be needed on my monthly weekend, as we all have busy lives and I really have to rearrange my schedule to make this event every month.
Now, my friend says this is passive aggressive. I hold that it isn't. I said exactly what I meant - I have a busy life and I have to rearrange my schedule to make this event every month and notice sooner than 10pm would be nice. I meant it to be a public comment so that she couldn't crawfish and tell the people who actually co-ordinate this event something different from the truth on why I wasn't there. (She did this once before last Spring, but sent the e-mail out in a timely manner, so it wasn't such a big deal to rearrange my life and talk to the co-ordinator.)
I was extraordinarily nice in tone in the e-mail, but very direct. If asked, I have no problem saying "well, yes, I meant it to go to everyone. I wanted everyone to know that I hadn't ducked my responsibility." I plan to tack on to it "I'm sure XYV just forgot it was my weekend, but I'll be there next month, don't worry!" which is entirely possible, in case she did just forget, and it lets her lick her wounds a little.
So is it or isn't it a passive aggressive manuever? I agree that it could be a passive aggressive manuever, but in this case it isn't, I didn't send it to everyone, oh oops. I sent it to everyone on purpose. The people who volunteer casually will see a friendly reminder email, people I volunteer with and the people who are in charge of the activity will know I didn't duck out intentionally. (I'll still be setting up and taking down, actually.) The person who excluded me will get a reminder not to forget I'm on the calender and will know that she has to own up to it and not blame me for not being there.
I volunteer with a charity and for the past year and a half have had a set weekend I work. My job is pretty stressful, so on that week, I usually wind up working about 15 extra hours Monday thru Friday just to make up for the fact I won't be working on Saturday. This week I had an event with this group Weds. evening, so didn't work and will have an event Sunday afternoon, so I was planning to work evening Saturday and evening Sunday, and did some really long stretches of work during the week.
At 10pm last night, the person who assigns the schedule - and that is her only responsibility as per this event, she does not attend and has nothing to do with anything else related to this activity which occurs every Saturday - sent out the schedule and my name wasn't on it. Now, I'm already committed to helping someone else set up for this event (I have an SUV and can cart things) and take down from this event, so I will spend at least an hour at start and end.
The person who assigns the schedule has pulled some very, very Mean Girl type tricks - she's in her late 50's but apparently never got past high school socially, I guess - on me in the past, but I've always just acted like I had no clue what she was doing and let it go.
This time, however, I was a little ticked and sent an e-mail out to everyone on the mailing list in a very, very friendly tone asking her to, in the future, let me know before 10PM the night before if I wouldn't be needed on my monthly weekend, as we all have busy lives and I really have to rearrange my schedule to make this event every month.
Now, my friend says this is passive aggressive. I hold that it isn't. I said exactly what I meant - I have a busy life and I have to rearrange my schedule to make this event every month and notice sooner than 10pm would be nice. I meant it to be a public comment so that she couldn't crawfish and tell the people who actually co-ordinate this event something different from the truth on why I wasn't there. (She did this once before last Spring, but sent the e-mail out in a timely manner, so it wasn't such a big deal to rearrange my life and talk to the co-ordinator.)
I was extraordinarily nice in tone in the e-mail, but very direct. If asked, I have no problem saying "well, yes, I meant it to go to everyone. I wanted everyone to know that I hadn't ducked my responsibility." I plan to tack on to it "I'm sure XYV just forgot it was my weekend, but I'll be there next month, don't worry!" which is entirely possible, in case she did just forget, and it lets her lick her wounds a little.
So is it or isn't it a passive aggressive manuever? I agree that it could be a passive aggressive manuever, but in this case it isn't, I didn't send it to everyone, oh oops. I sent it to everyone on purpose. The people who volunteer casually will see a friendly reminder email, people I volunteer with and the people who are in charge of the activity will know I didn't duck out intentionally. (I'll still be setting up and taking down, actually.) The person who excluded me will get a reminder not to forget I'm on the calender and will know that she has to own up to it and not blame me for not being there.

