So bow to threats and blackmail huh...
If he did a day’s work and thought he was getting paid for it… meh, pay him? It’s not like the ‘friend’ hasn’t put himself out and not done the work at all.
So bow to threats and blackmail huh...
I just had 2 missed calls at work and a message saying he will come to my house.
I said the following:
I’m at work until Wednesday and can’t answer calls.
I’ve already made my position clear — I won’t be paying and I’m not discussing this, or the reasons why, any further.
Do not come to my house.
I’m not spending any more time or energy on this.
He replied saying this:
Its gone way past the money, cya Wednesday.
I replied:
If you come to my house on Christmas Eve when I am spending time with my family, I will be ringing the Police. This is the last time I will message or reply.
I feel physically poorly and im shaking with anger.
There's also practicalities though - is the amount worth the general stress all of this is causing? Seems a lot simpler and easier to pay the money and be done with the friendship rather than getting into responding to messages and now potentially dealing with police etc. over it - at least it would to me. I'd rather get rid of the stress of another message and more calls etc.So bow to threats and blackmail huh...
There's also practicalities though - is the amount worth the general stress all of this is causing? Seems a lot simpler and easier to pay the money and be done with the friendship rather than getting into responding to messages and now potentially dealing with police etc. over it - at least it would to me. I'd rather get rid of the stress of another message and more calls etc.
You don't solve being bullied by giving into the bully.There's also practicalities though - is the amount worth the general stress all of this is causing? Seems a lot simpler and easier to pay the money and be done with the friendship rather than getting into responding to messages and now potentially dealing with police etc. over it - at least it would to me. I'd rather get rid of the stress of another message and more calls etc.
aye you're right. the more i think about it this really is just a '**** off' and move on conversation and should have been from the outset.Dont do either of these, long format messages aren't it. Obviously your cutting him off or paying him. If your cutting him off, theb dont reply and let him come to your door. Tell him then, or phone him up and tell him.
If you want to stay friends, submit and send over the cash.
Its that simple. Do not send massive texts, thats weird.
Yeah, that's fair - I'm basing it solely on the fact that he's asking for the money because he did some work - he isn't asking for it in return for not saying something for instance where there's no clear end to it. This sounds like it was for a specific task and doing it would end it.You don't know if his blackmailing would end there.
Similar to the above, it sounded to me like it's because of a specific task that he's looking to get 'paid' for. If this was a general "Pay me or I keep bothering you" without anything behind it whatsoever, then I'd agree with you both that there's no way of knowing that it would actually end it. It sounded from the thread that it would end it to me - but I could be wrong.You don't solve being bullied by giving into the bully.
Now you see, that is the exact point where i'd go around his place and ask him to explain exactly what he means to my face.I just had 2 missed calls at work and a message saying he will come to my house.
I said the following:
I’m at work until Wednesday and can’t answer calls.
I’ve already made my position clear — I won’t be paying and I’m not discussing this, or the reasons why, any further.
Do not come to my house.
I’m not spending any more time or energy on this.
He replied saying this:
Its gone way past the money, cya Wednesday.
I replied:
If you come to my house on Christmas Eve when I am spending time with my family, I will be ringing the Police. This is the last time I will message or reply.
I feel physically poorly and im shaking with anger.
You don't solve being bullied by giving into the bully.
It's clearly not about the money now - the guy even said that. It's about his former friend exerting control over him and their friendship. Even without that, you can't force someone to do something they don't want to do.Yea but, look it from the other perspective. Rightly or wrongly this guy feels like he's been stitched up, you could quite easily flip that around and say don't give in.
For me personally I have enough stress in my life and I'm busy all the time. To have the additional concern of protecting my house/family... I just don't need that. It's partially why I pay my TV licence as well. I know I could fight it and not pay, but I don't want someone turning up and talking their way into the house with one of my kids/wife. If I get an ebay/facebook scammer I behave differently if they have my address. Whilst it may all be talk, I couldn't live with myself over £120 when I can just pay that to make it go away and enjoy xmas. There's nothing wrong with dealing with things that way even if it doesn't tick the OCUK alpha box.
The problem with this guy is he's an ex friend and was close. Crazy, motivated people like that, have your friends and family close as well and can wreak havoc.
Why not consider paying him quietly, bite your tongue and move on. Just send the money electronically then block him?
It's clearly not about the money now - the guy even said that. It's about his former friend exerting control over him and their friendship. Even without that, you can't force someone to do something they don't want to do.
OP has said he isn't going to pay and the nutcase has threatened him with a visit to his home. No way i would be rolling over and paying now.
All those saying pay - it's gone beyond that now.
OP has said he isn't going to pay and the nutcase has threatened him with a visit to his home. No way i would be rolling over and paying now.
even after his threats? etc I'd still go with 'here's your £120, bye'
even after his threats? etc I'd still go with 'here's your £120, bye'
