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iccarus
· 4 years ago
· FIRST
miscommunication, some people find it hard to articulate what they want to say.
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purplepumpkin
· 4 years ago
It is indeed the case, but knowing that hardly makes me feel better about what I did.
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iccarus
· 4 years ago
understandable, don't dwell on it, as long as you apologise and explain you were told the wrong information, but don't drop names
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parisqeen
· 4 years ago
Just send a follow up email explaining you were misinformed and to save the previous email for when he recovers (I hope he does, I'm sorry he's sick)
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purplepumpkin
· 4 years ago
I think I'm going to do that. Not really a need to save this email unless a litteral miracle happens though.
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Edited 4 years ago
parisqeen
· 4 years ago
Don't dwell on it too much! I'm sure he appreciated you thinking about him to begin with, it's nice to get a 'get well' message regardless of the accuracy.
xvarnah
· 4 years ago
I mean, you didn't DO anything but congratulate someone you thought had improved health. I'm sure if you say it was a misunderstanding they'll understand
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guest_
· 4 years ago
I’m with the others. If you follow up and apologize, explain to them that there was a miscommunication and you thought they were better- but you hope they get well soon- any reasonable person is going to be fine with that. Or- there’s always a chance by the time they are up to checking emails they’ll have such a full inbox they’ll blow through and won’t even notice the date isn’t right for a welcome back. Either way I’d apologize and explain- and not worry about it.
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