I’m not much into Facebook; hardly needs saying really. My Facebook Friends number fewer than my actual friends, and they are a small and elite group, rarely penetrated by a stray outsider, so it was something of a surprise to find that I had been sent a Friend Request.
Now, at least, this request did come from someone I knew. Once. He was someone whom I went to secondary school with. We last spoke over 40 years ago. We were never exactly friends, but neither were we mortal enemies. I was thrown into something of a quandary. What do I do? Accept his hand of friendship extended across the decades, or reject it?
My instinct is to reject it. But that seems rather harsh; a bit hurtful. I don’t really want to be his friend, but nor do I want him to go away with his tail between his legs, feeling like he has been spurned. Asking for friendship puts you in a vulnerable position, and I don’t want to exploit this vulnerability.
But to accept him to the inner sanctum would seem like lowering my standards; potentially opening the floodgates to all kinds of the most loosely-associated flotsam and jetsam of life, and when I am not incontinent when it comes to my Facebook Friends, why would I want to do something like that?
What to do?
I have read the rules of Facebook. If I were to reject him, he wouldn’t receive notification of that fact but, he also wouldn’t be able to send me another Friend Request for a year.
In my indecision, I have simply left his request hanging; Friend Request pending. But perhaps this is the worst of all worlds: trapped in a friends’ limbo.
In an ideal world, he never would have contacted me in the first place; not presented me with this dilemma.
Like a Roman Emperor in the Colosseum, my hand hovers between two opposing movements: thumbs up; thumbs down. Accept; reject.
What to do?
© Simon Turner-Tree

Simon Turner-Tree finds himself in two minds.
Simon Turner-Tree is author of This Pedestrian Life.

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