i hope yall are noting what she's like when she really doesn't want something. She straight-up tells them no.
She's not a fool, stop saying she's getting manipulated. The only true aspect to that is within the fact that Yse is not human.
That logic doesn't hold up at all if the premise is, for instance, that Yse is being horribly deceitful in the first place. (I have reserved final judgement on Yse for now, mind, but I disagree with your premise here)
Also, in this instance a total apples-to-oranges comparison—between how she reacts to social pressure from someone she currently considers a friend, versus from another village girl who was gallivanting around flirting with her boyfreind back when they were together?
Furthermore, the evidence so far is that she's definitely concerned about both social pressures and about maintaining some independence for herself. A whole bunch of the series has been her compromising between the two. The idea that she's going to be totally immune to manipulative machinations because she sometimes puts her foot down just doesn't really seem to hold up. :/
Except perhaps (and here I'm going to be a godawful pedant, so by all means stop reading if that irks you, as I know it does many people), actually, for the bit where I'm saying it's illogical to definitively conclude that she's not getting manipulated, based solely on the predicate that she will definitely reject things she doesn't like.
I think I could possibly map out why that it incorrect, in strict logic, given reasonably-held axioms about the meanings of things involved, e.g. "manipulation". That could arguably advance it beyond the realm of mere opinion.
@pokari
As i said that's your perspective.
I'm sorry but your logic isn't human nature. If human beings were rlly logic and rational, things would be much easier.