It really is anybody's guess. I don't think you are wrong. You may be right. There is a chance that some of the pps on this thread might be right too.
FD response was close to my first thoughts too. I thought the woman is self-centered. I still think that someone that is routinely benefiting from these behaviors might be rather artful. Hard to say.
Just about all of the posts about social anxiety on this thread has leaned the complete opposite of this woman's behaviors. People have posted how they are very mindful of how they are perceived. Careful. Not a good analogy to the woman the OP was talking about. Sure behaviors could swing the other extreme but IMO the behaviors would not all benefit the woman or her family.That remains the tipping point for me.
Not knowing about customs/etiquette/norms or not caring? Who knows? Mental issues? Who knows?
It's not fair to rake FD over the coals for something that could very well be just a very rude person. There isn't enough information to definitively call it either way.
I agree.
There are people who have diagnosed/undiagnosed behavioral issues that can be perceived as outside the norm &/or rude. And for those of you dealing with it on a daily basis, you are certainly more sensitive to the issue and more open to the idea this type of behavior is something that can't be easily helped.
BUT ... you also need to realize that some people are just plain rude.
They don't have to TRY to be rude, they don't have to have a master plan or evil intent. They don't even need to have an excuse ready that gets them off the hook for their bad behavior.
Sometimes people are just rude because they have been raised in an environment that caters to their needs AHEAD OF ANYONE ELSE. They are the center of the universe and their behavior has no bearing on anyone else. Everyone else is just kind of there to orbit them. We are the props in their show.
They've not been taught and have not suffered any negative consequences because of their actions. After years of being put first and given everything they need to make their lives easier, later in life when they are adults their families just excuse the behavior so there is no way to learn this is generally not acceptable.
To them, not even considering how their actions might affect someone else is the norm. Why should they? Nothing bad happens by not doing so.
And for those of us who actually know what rude is and don't want to be rude by pointing out their rudeness, we keep our comments to ourselves or vent them on the DIS and they go about their business thinking all is well in the universe -- yes, the one of which they are the center!
