Catty Remarks, Cloaked in Sugar

By: BettyConfidential (View Profile)

Her comment didn’t just sting me. Jellyfishers have a way of making us doubt ourselves or feel just plain stupid.

That’s the way I felt when my cousin Julie tripped up the stairs to my apartment after seeing my newest purchase, a green Toyota Tercel. Almost immediately, she told me that she and her husband had taken the exact same model for a test drive and found that it was “slow on pickup.”

“Was that your experience?” she asked me innocently.

At that point, I felt like strapping her into my new car and pummeling down the highway at ninety miles an hour. Risking a ticket would have been worth it, to scare the crap out of her and wipe that smug look off her face.

Jellyfishers will always be around in dark waters to sting us with their tentacles. The only way to handle them is to look them in the eye and say something completely disarming in return, such as “Thanks. Hope you feel better now.”

Another option, I suppose, is to avoid them completely as they wash up on the shore, and wait until the tide sweeps them away again.

Do you have tried-and-true retorts for women who try to beat you down with snotty words or catty comments?

By Jennifer Lubell

7 readers liked this story.
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Comments
posted: 12.31.2008
Kita
This habit of zingers is something that someone I thought was a good friend started doing last year and it keeps getting worse. I am so tired of it, so more and likely, even after 20+ years of friendship, this is a friendship I am about to let go and yes, I am grieving over it. The best thing to do is to get quiet and let it get awkward. Let the person review what they just said in their own head. OR You can take a small step toward them, hesitiate for a moment if they are on the phone with you and say "now wasn't THAT clever of you" or "are you learning to use your words, good for you!" with a tone for a child. Then move on like they did not say a *(&%$ thing of importance to you. Really, they did not say anything of importance. Whatever their problem is, really it is NOT about you.
posted: 08.26.2008
Michelle Kemper Brownlow
GREAT ARTICLE! The worst is the long-time friend (turned jellyfish) YOUCH! This is why I had all guy friends in HS and college. Life is too short for that $%^&*()_+!
posted: 08.11.2008
Bea Love
I have been known to launch my fair share of "zingers". But while reading this story it occured to me that every time that I have, it was in response to a feeling of needing to protect myself. Whether this was real or imagined,it leads me to believe that the cattiest of the catty are secretly the most insecure of us all. Having had this realization, I feel saddend by my own cattiness in the past and the way in which I chose to make myself feel better. Thanks for the story --I appreciate the opprotunity for growth.
posted: 07.27.2008
Melodie
Catty remarks, cloaked in sugar. Do you have tried-and-true retorts for women who try to beat you down with snotty words or catty comments? Oh please ,sombody please must have a way of dealing with these people??
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