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Emotional reaction to see old best friend

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  • #293167
    Botanical95
    Participant

    Hi guys!

    Just had a question regarding an experience I had last night.

    As I was scrolling through Instagram, I was watching a friend’s instastory of a few friends hanging out (after doing a bible study). I wasn’t able to make it tonight due to going to my psychotherapist. I didn’t feel bad about missing out on it as I would try to get to the next one. 

    I noticed that during the video, a particular person was in the background, and I got so annoyed! I was asking myself “uhhh why is he there? Wish he would just go away”. I was able to  that I had an emotional reaction and after a few minutes, it went away. It was quite intense feeling. 

    So for context, myself and this person haven’t spoken properly in months. He would have been someone who I would have called one of my best friends last year. I went to psychotherapy last September as a result of the lost of friendship and its impact on me. We recognized in counseling that I was taking 100% responsibility for the end of it and that I had to give some over to him. I sent an email to him last summer a month after we met up and explained my side of the story and he just disagreed with it (it is what it is). I’ve been feeling 150% better in myself and even grateful for the situation to learn and grow myself from it from last summer to now. He said some things last year that was quite personal and unnecessary from the situations that happened last year and I feel my gut has been saying “nah, don’t try to be close with him again”. Throughout the year, I wasn’t really comfortable talking to him, as it felt the situation overall was just pushed under the rug. The few times we talked, it was just jokes and I always left feeling “I really wished I didn’t engage in that” (this is just feeling like I’m there for a laugh and chuckle and not as a friend, or the way we were before I guess). 

    I rather not have this reaction to him, even on someone’s instastory or in person. I am aware I need to do some inner work myself so I’m just wondering if others had been through something similar, and how to work through it yourself. I plan to bring it up next week at counseling but I would be interested in hearing other examples to start the process or additional things to help. We attend church together with a college group and every two weeks, we may see each other (not in the summer). I was praying for restoration of the friendship when I blamed myself for everything, but since going into counselling I don’t really think I want to have much/any contact with him anymore.

    #293173
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi Botanical95,

    I’ve been there, it’s awkward, and there’s not much we can do about it.

    Time will make it a smidge better. And the more you see him as a mere acquaintance, the less you’ll miss him as a friend. You may even question your judgment when you were younger as to why you picked him as a friend. Bonus, you’ll get to see him treat people the same way he treated you, or hear other people complain about him!

    Keep in mind that the way he was with you is the way he will be with everyone he eventually gets close to.

    It may help to take a break from that church. Give YOURSELF a vacation from him without waiting for summer.

    Best,

    Inky

    #293181
    Botanical95
    Participant

    There have been times (only really looked at in counselling) where I am asking myself why it was ok. For my birthday last year at dinner with another friend, he jokingly held a stance in an argument (was not a big fan of conflict).  After awhile of it, I had to leave the restaurant to calm down and had thoughts of going home at that point. He also even said that he likes “weak people”. Even questioning him on that he never gave a reason for that statement.

     

    We wont be seeing each other over summer as the church group has ended, so I’m not too worried.

    #293183
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Botanical95:

    Our brain holds hundreds of thousands of neuropathways, I am guessing about the number, maybe more. Some of the neuropathways, or connections between neurons in our brain, hold dry memory, such as the structure of a molecule of water, and other connections hold emotional memory.

    When you watched that instastory, the image of this former friend reached your brain and activated an emotional memory connected to his image, that memory rushed to your awareness and felt intense.

    I suppose you were surprised it happened because you resolved some things regarding this former friend in therapy, correcting your assumption of guilt, and you felt much better as a result. I believe the reason you felt that rush of anger at him and whatever other emotion that was activated is because the experience you had with this former friend is not isolated in your brain. It is connected to other experiences with other people. And those were not resolved yet.

    Most of our relationship-type emotional neuropathways are formed during our Formative Years, the years of our childhood, while interacting with the people in our childhood.

    Our emotional memories are not isolated memories, the are connected in webs of neuropathways. So you resolve one part of that web, and then you find out there is more to resolve.

    Sometimes leaving a place or a group will give you the relief you need, avoiding a particular person. But if a certain distressing emotional experience repeats itself in different locations, different people, then better resolve the reactivated issues, one by one, patiently.

    anita

     

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