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JaniceParticipant
Thank you, this helps me a lot and gives me validation to what I am feeling and how I choose to distance myself in reaction to the distance that was placed upon me and my son by both her and her son. I will probably read over again and again the points you make in this last post because it touches on exactly what my problem is, letting him choose his way of dealing while allowing me to choose my way as an adult who has more experience with true friendship. Because I do not want to welcome that boy into our home, at least not right now, unless he comes to realize that he betrayed a friend (my son), who, even after the betrayal, continued to try to keep the friendship going, but was still cast aside without regard to the impact of the hurt it all truly caused.
JaniceParticipantYes, good point. I will bite my tongue every time I feel like saying something about it to him. So how do I hold my head high and interact with the girl, his no longer best friend, and their parents as I see them all the time at school sports events and such? And do I welcome that friend to our home if my son wants him to sleep over or something? I am also very hurt that his mother kind of backed away from our friendship. I’m pretty sure she felt bad about what happened but never said anything, just stepped back and didn’t contact me all. Now I’m stuck trying to make small talk at soccer games, but it’s killing me inside as my feelings were hurt as well, from his mother’s separation from both me and my son.
JaniceParticipantAnita, I know you are right, but unfortunately those lines of separation were already crossed last spring, and even now, though I am trying hard not to say anything further about my feelings. I did share my feelings with him a week ago, and he got angry at me. That’s why he won’t talk to me about it at all and says he’s fine. He asked me not to mention it to him anymore. So I know you are right and I SHOULD HAVE kept my feelings separate. I think he was assertive at first, telling them how hurt he was and asked them to stop repeatedly, but they didn’t stop, and the girl systematically worked at convincing him that since they cannot help how they feel about each other, he has no right to try and stop them. Then he became passive, and I think he bottled up the feelings. He is still “friends” with the guy, but they never get together outside of school anymore at all, no hanging out whatsoever, while previous to all of this, he and another best friend, the 3 of them, like brothers, spent most weekends sleeping over each others houses and such. Now he’s kind of cut off from both of them, because their parents are very good friends and now we are the “outsiders”.
I’m not sure whether he is telling the truth and that he really has no problem with it all now, or whether he is just being a people pleaser so as not to seem weak anymore. He did actually use those words, that he is being friends with him (and cordially friendly to her) because he doesn’t want to show weakness. I don’t know whether that’s a healthy attitude. And I do not want him to take from this experience that it is ok to betray your best friend and carry on with their ex girlfriend. They are 15 years old. We are talking about teen crushes, not falling in love where you have to accept that people are meant to be together. Teen love comes and goes and I don’t think it’s kind to carry on like that with a what used to be best friends ex. I don’t want him to think that was ok, despite the girl making him believe that it is ok. I would like to think he would stand by his friend and not act on a crush simply because a friend is more important at this stage in life.
JaniceParticipantI’m sorry I posted the above in the wrong place. I’m brand new here and just got mixed up.
JaniceParticipantLast March my 14, almost 15 year old and his girlfriend broke up. Immediately afterwards, she started flirting with his best friend, who I happen to be friends with his parents, his mother in particular. His best friend began flirting right back. My son was overcome with jealousy. They would snuggle on the bus ride to away tennis matches. They go to a very small school, so this was in his face everyday, and they carried on without regard for him. He came up with all kinds of attempts to get her to pay attention to him, and to stop. He begged them to stop. He ended up threatening suicide to her, and she called me to let me know. But they kept on flirting and professing their attraction to each other. I tried a therapist for him, and she suggested that he let his friend know how he felt, hoping the “bro code” would go into effect. But it didn’t. My son didn’t go about it the right way. He had a snap chat conversation with his friend telling him he almost killed himself over her, and asked him to stop. Then asked him to just date her so they could get it over with and break up. He was so confused, and jealous and had nowhere to turn. He felt that no one was loyal to him.
The girl convinced him that he would have been jealous no matter who it was and that it made no difference that it was his best friend. I know that would not have been true. It would have been different had it not been his best friend.
Then, at the spring prom, the two were hot and heavy dancing and making out and my son saw it all. Like I said, it’s a very small school. He ended up actually crying at the prom, a 15 year old teen, crying because his ex girlfriend and his best friend were carrying on. 2 weeks later, a classmate had a party and tried to prevent my son from coming because the other 2 would be there together. My son said he was over it and the classmate then said, great, then come on. But he needed a ride, and the girls mother refused to give him a ride. The following night a bunch of teens went to see a teen band, and again the 2 of them were there, all over each other right in front of my son. Another parent told me what she saw and was astounded by what his best friend was doing to him.
Time went on and school let out for the summer. My son seemed to start having fun and made another friend who thankfully took his mind off of things, but still tried to be friends with his former best friend, who then seemed to kind of ignore him, or avoid him. And the mother, who I hung out with and talked to all the time never once contacted me over the summer. Now they are all back at school. My son seems to be doing fine, though I’m afraid he’s built a wall around himself. He is trying to be friends with the guy and the girl and says he has no feelings for her at all, and that he’s fine with the 2 of them being together.
But I am hurt that the mother never once contacted me over the summer. We are nothing more than cordial with each other now, and I have this resentment hanging over me. I cannot look at her or her son the same way, knowing how badly hurt and humiliated my son was at the time. The 2 do not appear to be officially dating, but clearly still carrying on, flirting, hugging and kissing. It’s as if they won’t “date” in honor of my son, but they carry on as if they are. I have to remain cordial, and I do not want to discuss with the other parent as she clearly doesn’t want to. My son will not let me talk about the situation with him at all. There’s a homecoming dance soon, and I’m so afraid it will bring up the old pains when my son has to witness them all over again. Is he really over it? Or did he just shove his feelings down because the girl manipulated him into believing that they’ve done nothing wrong.
How do I get over this horrible feeling of hurt and betrayal that I feel?
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