Home→Forums→Relationships→Questions about friendships
- This topic has 4 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 8 years, 11 months ago by Anonymous.
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November 30, 2015 at 6:16 am #88542JoeParticipant
Hey all, I just wanted some thoughts on the following questions;
Have you ever been in a friendship where after a while, you just don’t enjoy spending time with that person anymore? Did you feel as though the friendship has run its course, you felt as though you no longer had anything in common? Did you feel as though it felt your growth was stunted when around that particular friendship?
What did you do about it? Did you decide to continue the friendship despite the fact you felt unhappy about it? Did you try avoiding that person until the friendship died, or did you take the honest approach and tell that particular friend that you no longer felt compelled to spending any more time with them?
I’ve recently gained insight as to why some of my friendships from secondary school ended – we had moved on to different 6th form colleges. I naively assumed we would continue to be friends and I tried to stay in touch with them but they just wouldn’t respond. I was hurt and bitter for a long time but now I realise we are all on different paths and it’s okay for people to move on. I don’t stay in touch with my school friends any more but I’m not bitter about it anymore – they are moving on with their lives, they have jobs, some have children, responsibilities, and I’m trying to move on with my life. I think it gets to a point where the friendship is based on nothing more than nostalgia – catching up with a person just to reminisce about the good old days (or just laughing about how much we hated school and disliked certain people) I mean, there’s only so much you can remember and talk about, right?
A few of my current friendships are turning into the same ones I had with my school friends before we went our separate ways for good – based on nostalgia. My friends are sometimes like “Oh, remember such-and-such…?” We were friends through university but I don’t feel as though the person I was back then is no longer the person I am now. I’m just not that bothered about parties or rock concerts or getting absolutely paralytic on nights out. People just bombard me with the same old rubbish “You’re still young! Don’t be sad! Come on, have fun! You’re so sad for not coming with us to this nightclub the other night and dancing like an idiot (I’ve done that before, do I need to have my entire life validated by dancing like an idiot in a nightclub one more time? *sarcasm*) Sometimes they remind me of mistakes I’ve made, my shortcomings, people I did not like…This is why now I understand why my old friendships might have ended.
Every time people invite me out to do things I don’t particularly want to do (due to lack of interest on my part or because I can’t afford to do it) I always feel pressurised to saying ‘Yes’. I just need to learn to say ‘No’.
Any thoughts on this? Have you been in a similar situation before? If so, what did you do about it?
November 30, 2015 at 6:38 am #88543AnonymousGuestDear J:
I think it is about how you define “friendship.” Someone who is not a total stranger? Someone you used to have fun with? What is a friend? I think the definition changes with one’s level of maturity… evolution is the word I use. Once you define what “friendship” and a “friend” is for YOU,in the PRESENT, then you got it. What was friendship and who was a friend in the past, if you matured and evolved (at any age) is not going to be friendship/ friend now (unless the friend matured and evolved along similar lines).
I have become very selective over time. My definition has dramatically changed. If you would like, define friendship and friend as it is true for you now.
anita
November 30, 2015 at 12:30 pm #88555InkyParticipantHi J,
Even as a slightly older adult, friendships fade and/or change. They are situational friendships. You can’t get mad when they end, they just do sometimes.
And yes, I’ve had friendships where I had to end it. It was more awkward as a stable, grown adult, to do it. Meaning I couldn’t blame it on anything like school, moving, etc. I just tried to cool it. But then the other person got mad.
“ARE WE NOT FRIENDS ANYMORE?!”
(No, b/c you’re crazy)…. Many stories with that one, many, many stories…
But what you don’t want to do, especially with women is “Talk about it”. It solves nothing and only makes things more Weird, IMHO.
I don’t know when she stopped contacting me, whether it was after I yelled at her not to give her DD’s inheritance away to charity or when she stalked me at my father’s house when we tried to sneak out of our own house (yes, you read that right) so we could enjoy a holiday in peace!
Sorry for rambling,
Inky
- This reply was modified 9 years ago by Inky.
December 29, 2015 at 1:18 pm #90862jockParticipantI just noticed this thread of yours J, and I think it is a very relevant theme for me too.
Feeling guilty for friendships fading away, for not staying in touch. I mean I could have a lot more friends now, if I made that effort but I just think we have less in common now, (different job, different city)
But I want to especially relate this to my family of 6 brothers. My parents have passed on.
I sometimes think, if we didn’t have the same parents we would never become friends in real life. We are all so different, have different perspectives on life and it widens the older we get. I don’t really feel close to any of them. It is only our shared memories that keep us together and blood relations. I would like to sever at least one of those ties, but it is not practical because of family reunions. If I think about it now, I never had much in common with this particular brother at all. Yet he forced his world view on to me, when he was younger, and even now gets wound up occasionally and becomes dismissive of anyone who dare disagree with him.December 29, 2015 at 6:25 pm #90873AnonymousGuestDear Jack:
This is the oldest brother you are referring to. Still dismissive at times, probably triggers in you old wounds. Wouldn’t you like to kick his ass just once (I suggested it in a previous post but got no reply). I mean, just once. And hard. Right there, in front of everyone, you eat half of your dessert during the next Family Reunion, stretch your right leg, get up, leisurely walk to him and kick his ass. Then go back and finish your dessert.
This is the first time I promote violence on this forum but it is only ass kicking. And only this one time.
anita
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