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  • It was only the second time Fred had hung  out with his new friend Aubrey outside of  

  • school. Aubrey was essentially Fred’s first real  friend, the first person he really had to put  

  • everything he learned about being a good person  and interacting with others on the table for with  

  • something meaningful at stake. The two had just  come inside from biking around in the driveway

  • Rushing from the door to the living room  couch, Aubrey excitedly said Fred, “Do you  

  • want to watch Star Trek?” “Do you like that show?”  

  • Fred responded with a neutral tone. “Yeah, it’s my favorite. It’s so good. Do you?” 

  • Yeah. Let’s watch it,” Fred replied. The two watched the show quietly for the rest of  

  • the afternoon until Fred’s parents came and picked  him up. Fred had in fact seen the show before,  

  • but he hated it. He wanted to be nicethough, which, as he understood it,  

  • meant putting othersneeds and desires in  front of your own and not upsetting people,  

  • and so, he put Aubrey first, avoided any  conflict of interest, and agreed to watch

  • At least once almost every time they hung out  thereafter, Aubrey put on Star Trek. Although  

  • Fred occasionally tried to sway the activity  a different direction, he never explicitly  

  • told Aubrey how he actually felt. Instead, by the  end of the school year, Fred just stopped hanging  

  • out with Aubrey altogether, secretly having  harbored the frustration that they rarely did  

  • or watched anything he wanted. Aubrey was deeply  confused as to what had happened, what was wrong,  

  • and why he suddenly lost his friend. When  he asked Fred, Fred was coy and dismissive

  • Several years later, in high school, Fred found  himself apart of several small friend groups.  

  • With the introduction of greater freedom, driver’s  licenses, and the pubescent lust for activity,  

  • Fred also found himself spending far more time  with friends outside of school than he ever had  

  • before. For the first time, he had to balance  plans and schedules between different people  

  • and between people and himself. Whenever he was  asked to do something, whether it was to hang  

  • out or do someone a favor, afraid of coming off  disinterested or making any of his friends upset,  

  • Fred’s answer was almost always a resounding  yes. Of course, since he always agreed, he often  

  • already had tentative plans with other people that  overlapped, which meant he often had to figure  

  • out how to cancel most of them. Throughout high  school, Fred spent very little time with himself,  

  • his hobbies, his interests, his schoolworkhis peace-of-mind, and so on. He often felt  

  • diminished and used, disproportionately doing  things other people wanted or suggested,  

  • secretly developing and harboring a resentment  toward many of his friends and family members.  

  • By graduation, he had lost some of  his friends due to his flakey nature  

  • and intentionally but seemingly inexplicably  broke ties with most of the rest.  

  • Many of them were somewhat confused  and upset by his sudden disappearance

  • A couple years later, during collegeFred found himself in his first real,  

  • serious long-term relationship with a girl  named Tara. The relationship was amazing. They  

  • connected with each other in a way Fred had never  experienced connection before. Tara was beautiful  

  • and sweet and funny and interesting and brought  out parts of him that he didn’t even know existed  

  • that made him feel alive. He soon fell in love  for the first time. As time passed, though,  

  • things began to fall apart. Tara often did things  that upset Fred. She would go silent for full days  

  • without responding to his texts, she would go out  with friends without ever letting him know when  

  • and where she might go, she would act and react  with very little patience, and she would often  

  • ask Fred for accommodations while neglecting  his own schedule and needs. By three years in,  

  • Fred no longer felt the same connection with  her that he once did. Who they were when they  

  • first met was not who they were now. Fred prided  himself on being a nice, easy-going boyfriend  

  • in a relationship void of fights, though, and  so, he rarely addressed things that bothered him,  

  • rarely pointed out Tara’s character flaws or  any of the issues he had in the relationship,  

  • and mostly avoided arguments in general. “We like never fight,” Fred said to one of his  

  • friends from college while catching up at a bar,  “I just don’t really like the way she treats me.  

  • She doesn’t seem to understand like whoam or where I’m coming from or what I want.  

  • I used to think she didor at least couldbut I don’t even know if she cares anymore.” 

  • “I mean, I’m not necessarily  trying to suggest anything,  

  • but have you at least thought about potentially  breaking up with her?” Fred’s friend replied

  • “I don’t know. Maybe. I just…I want to make  things work. I don’t want to devastate her,  

  • you know? I don’t know if she would  really be able to be okwith me.  

  • I don’t know. I’ll see how things go, I guess.” Fred stayed with Tara for over a year more. He  

  • tried to act as if everything was fine but found  himself unavoidably distancing himself more and  

  • more from her. The breaking point was when he  found out that Tara cheated on him. Even then,  

  • he stayed with her for a few more months. She  said her reasoning was she felt neglected and  

  • didn’t feel like he loved her anymore. He told her  he would try to understand and forgive her, but in  

  • actuality, he felt like ending more than just the  relationship. Not long after, Fred broke up with  

  • her, realizing how much of a fool he had been. It  was one of the hardest things he had ever done

  • Following college, Fred was out on his own in  the world, navigating the early budding prospects  

  • of his career. By twenty-three, he received his  first real job offer related to his career path—a  

  • digital marketing coordinator role for a mid-sized  e-commerce company. Fred eagerly accepted

  • In the office, Fred always put on his smiley face  and happily agreed to everything he was asked,  

  • even when it was outside the scope of his workoften offering to help or pick up any slack any  

  • time his manager or one of his coworkers askednot wanting to upset or disappoint. He rarely  

  • could help with most of what he took on, either  in terms of his ability or his time. In general,  

  • there was a deep crater of incongruency between  what he presented about his interest and ambition  

  • and how he actually felt about the work. Again and  again, Fred would over promise and under deliver.  

  • Secretly, he disliked his boss and  most of his co-workers. He despised  

  • how they treated and took advantage of him. Fred continued in this job for the following  

  • couple years despite it being well beneath  his skillset and upper management never really  

  • offering him a nearly equivalent opportunity or  compensation. Three years in, after he couldn’t  

  • take it anymore, he quit in what seemed like all  of the sudden without much of an explanation

  • Fred was perhaps one of the nicest people you  could ever meet. He always made sure the happiness  

  • and preferences of those around him were metHe never wanted to upset anyone. He was always  

  • willing to go with whatever anyone else wantedAnd so, when he was twenty-eight years old and he  

  • found himself alone, with very few friends, a very  short but complicated list of ex-girlfriends, and  

  • a strained, awkward relationship with his previous  colleagues and bosses, he was extremely confused

  • Having not had much of a social life, let alone  a relationship, in a couple years, feeling like  

  • he was on the brink of a life of total isolationFred decided to start dating again. He had little  

  • luck at first, but eventually, he met a very  unique, spontaneous, and extroverted woman unlike  

  • anyone he had ever met before, named Amina. While on a third date with her, the two sat  

  • at a picknick table in a park while the sun set  behind them. They discussed all sorts of topics,  

  • including more personal sentiments of  their lives and pasts, which was very  

  • uncharacteristic of Fred. He shared about his  old friends and jobs and even some of his exes

  • “I don’t know. It seems like everyone is just  selfish in this world. That’s definitely one  

  • thing I’ve learned. I feel like people  have just always taken advantage of me,  

  • of my niceness. I’ve been nothing but nice, but  I just get screwed over and over,” Fred said

  • That’s true. People are  definitely selfish,” Amina replied

  • A brief pause surrounded the twoAmina clearly having more to say

  • “I have to say though, upfront, if were  gonna potentially, you know, keep this going,  

  • I gotta ask something.” “Ok, sure, yeah. About what?” Fred replied

  • Are you the kind of guy who  is so hung up on being nice,  

  • he never really thinks about other people?” “What do mean?” Fred said,  

  • confused by the seeming paradoxical question. “Like, did you ever tell anyone you how you felt?  

  • Did you ever ask them not to do something? Did you  explain what was wrong and try to help resolve it?  

  • No offense, butit kinda seems like you always  just expected people to know how you felt and  

  • to treat you right just because you were nice.” Another brief pause filled the space between them

  • “I mean… I just don’t like arguing or being  mean or confrontational for no reason,  

  • especially when people should kinda  already know what’s right,” Fred answered

  • Yeah, but how does anyone know of a problem if  the problem is hidden from them? And why would  

  • anyone want to solve it if it benefits them, and  the other person doesn’t seem to care? I don’t  

  • think niceness is always kind. Because kindness is  not quietness, submissiveness, or self-surrender.  

  • I think it’s the willingness to confront and  deal with others and issues honestly and fairly  

  • for everyone’s benefit, even when it’s  difficult or uncomfortable for you,” Amina said

  • That’s true. I agree with that actually,”  Fred replied with a somewhat dip in his tone

  • Do you?” Amina replied laughing, “I’m just  saying, I’ve dealt with plenty of selfish  

  • people in my life, so I completely resonate with  where youre coming from. But some people are so  

  • concerned with not being selfish, they become itThey become so centered around being liked and  

  • perceived favorably, they never even consider  the consequences of their so-call niceness.  

  • Agreeing universally with everyone is not  necessarily a sign that you actually care  

  • about other people, but that you care about  what other people think about you. With no  

  • regard for how it affects them. How is that not  selfish? At least with straight forward people,  

  • you know where they stand and what the issues areMaybe their perspectives still aren’t always good,  

  • but at least they respect you enough to tell you.” The two looked at each other sitting on opposite  

  • sides of the picknick table as if Amina  was the antithesis to Fred’s entire life  

  • laid bare on the table in front of him. “Sorry,” she continued, “I didn’t mean  

  • to come off too forward there. I’m  just, you know, doing my due diligence.  

  • Less time to waste at this age, you know?” “Yeah, no, I get it,” Fred said with a laugh

  • So, are you around next weekend  at all? We should do something!” 

  • Fred paused. Then he said, “Yeah. Maybe we should  take things a little bit slower, actually.”

It was only the second time Fred had hung  out with his new friend Aubrey outside of  

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