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Trying To Get Over Past Broken Friendships

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  • #163810
    Kelsey
    Participant

    Nearly two years ago, I had a falling out with my two best friends. Well actually, they were more my best friends than each other’s, but eventually I ended up being the third wheel in the trio. Some examples: being intentionally left out of plans, ignored, all that. It all came to a head one evening, nasty words were said, and it just ended (I was the one to pull the plug). Years of friendship were over. However, I had a great support system afterwards. My family and other best friends were great. But it really affected me as a person going through it, and it took months for the shock to wear off. Yet nearly two years later, I cannot seem to get over it. I think about them all the time, but I don’t regret that I ultimately pulled the plug. At the rate it was going, that would have happened unconsciously anyway. I just don’t get why I can’t seem to kick them out of my head and move on. If they pop up on my social media from time to time, I freeze. I think it makes it worse that I go to university with one of them too. I still resent them and know they were “bad,” but for some reason I can’t seem to get over my dislike for them. I know the wise response will be to bury the hatchet and just have a final conversation for closure, but that is some dangerous territory I would never consider. So, has anyone else been through a bad friend breakup and still constantly let it nag them over time?

    #163860
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear bana00:

    I had plenty of things nag me over time. Understanding what happened helped me with coming to some peace of mind about certain things. Would you like to elaborate on what happened, how your two best friends turned against you?

    anita

    #163934
    Kelsey
    Participant

    Hi Anita,

    Thanks for your response. I’ll gladly give the backstory.

    I had been best friends with (let’s give ’em fake names, how about Emily and Shannon) Emily for years and years. I had known Shannon from elementary school, but it was a more casual friendship. A couple years ago, months before the fall out, I started having Shannon hang out with Emily and I more and more. As I said in the previous post, I attend the same school with one of them, that one being Shannon. Her and I began getting closer and closer, so it seemed only natural for me to having her hang out with Emily and I. Now, both of them had opposite personalities. They would complain about each other constantly to me, and it seemed like they tolerated each other at best. Now, how that evolved into them two being close and starting to act weird against everyone else is beyond me, even two years later.

    So eventually, I began getting intentionally left out of plans. I caught them in lies time and time again, and went from being the one who made all the plans to either not being included or being hastily last minuted/invited/half-ass (mind my language) invited. I didn’t voice my concerns or real opinions on any of this to anyone because I thought maybe I was just being paranoid. People introduce friends to friends all the time, it’s only human nature for people to grow close as time goes on. But I knew this wasn’t just a natural or pure occurrence… They were being intentional in their actions. As I said in the original post, it all came out one night when I was out with the two of them. I was ditched halfway through the evening, and only saw them once we left the place we were at. We made some awkward small talk in the parking lot, and then went our separate ways. Once I got home that night I called one of our mutual friends and told her everything. She had hung out with three of us often during those months, so I knew she would have at least some idea as to what was going on. She confirmed my suspicions that things were messy and weird, saying she had noticed everything and had also just decided not to say anything. It felt so good to have my feelings validated after months of internal silence.

    Hours later, I receive a text from Emily saying that she felt some tension all evening and wanted to know what was going on. I told her in all honesty that I felt ignored and like I was third wheeling a married couple and couldn’t understand what I had done to receive that kind of treatment for the past few months. I also told her that I didn’t think Shannon had a good heart and was trying to drive a wedge between us. I had good reason to believe this, as Shannon had been a shady person in all the time I had known her (hence her and I remaining more casual for most of our years as friends). To my shock, Emily doesn’t bother accepting what I had to say and said that NO, Shannon is a great person and loved me and always said great things about me, she wasn’t doing anything bad! I couldn’t believe what I was reading. Here I was telling her how I really felt, and she goes Team Defend Shannon. It was crazy. Minutes later, in the most non-obvious thing in the world, I receive a text from Shannon asking if I was okay. I ended up calling both of them out for trying to team up and text me with accusations at 1 in the morning, and eventually stopped responding after it only got messier with both of them. The next morning, I received a text from Emily saying that she was sorry for what happened, and that she should’ve listened to me and not thrown away our years of friendship. I accepted her apology, and we made small talk over text that day. She wanted to make plans to hang out, but I knew that what had happened wasn’t something I was going to get over anytime soon. Her true colors had come out, and I saw where her true loyalties lay. I ended up cancelling the plans with her, and that was the last time we had texted. Communication with both of them effectively stopped that day. Emily eventually followed/deleted me off all social media, and I immediately followed suit. Shannon continued following me everywhere and we stayed Facebook friends, but I saw no point in that and pulled the plug on all social media apps. She did the same literally minutes later.

    Months later, my cousin passed away and Emily actually did send me her condolences, which was kind. So that takes us to present day, where I cannot seem to get over any of it. I had always been the friend who had taken care of everyone. Whenever either of them needed a shoulder to cry on, it was me they came to. When they had issues with family, I was the one who was immediately phoned to vent and cry to. I think that’s what hurts the most. I was never a bad friend, ever. Ask my whole social circle. So I guess if I knew deep down that I was a crap friend, it would’ve been easier to accept. The idea of bumping into either of them makes me queasy for reasons I can’t explain, but I never once have regretted my decision to cut ties. I just want to understand why my brain won’t let go and just let me forget these people were ever in my life. However, I’m aware that years of friendship doesn’t just get deleted. We’re not computers, and I need to understand that.

    Sorry this got so long, I wanted to make sure everything was said so that any advice that comes will be advice that had the whole story. Thank you Anita!

    #163958
    Eliana
    Participant

    Hi Kelsey,

    I can very much relate to your post. I will have a very close friend and then I meet another person, who then becomes close. I too, am a very giving person. I go out of my way to be there for them..to listen to their problems. Then there comes a time, that they are doing all the complaining, and I am doing all the listening..and as soon as I want to talk, they interrupt, and say they “have to go” I feel like a doormat and become resentful. Its usually or always me that calls them and invites them to lunch or dinner. Yet, neither one calls me and invites me out.

    Then what happens is I introduce the both of them, and they become close, and suddenly, I am left out. I lost my car due to being on SSDI disability. My one friend bought a car. She would never ask me along. I would go upstairs and watch TV with them, and they would get real quiet and just look at each other. Then one would say, she had to go to bathroom..the other would say she had to call her boyfriend and leave, and I would catch them getting in the car and leaving together. I felt so left out, rejected, like I was not good enough. Then I would get paranoid. I finally had enough and decided I did not want any contact with either of them. This was hard, because we all lived in housing together. They would try to talk to me, I would just give them a quick smile. Instead of watching television with them upstairs, I would watch movies in the residents social room downstairs. I told myself never again, would I introduce two friends too each other, because I end up getting left out. The one girl got evicted, the other girl and I did manage some sort of friendship, but it wasn’t the same. She moved out. Never said bye to me. Haven’t heard from her for a year. Then the other day, some residents told me she came to visit me (I wasn’t here) to take me to lunch. She just left a note in my mail folder at front desk but did not leave her phone number, saying “perhaps some other time”. Having two close friends treat me this way, makes me feel I am back in Junior High School again. It just hurts.

    #163990
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi Kelsey,

    Women simply do not do well in threes! I honestly only have women over who either already know each other or I WANT them to become friends as I am not attached to them.

    In the future if you see your other friends getting along like a house on fire, I would just quietly drop them. They can’t help having a great chemistry between them. I’m sorry that they made it so obvious though.

    Another thing with us women: We don’t ask if anything is wrong. And if we do dare ask if anything is wrong, the correct response is “I’m fine”. Once a woman says to another woman, “Well, actually, I have a grievance…”, even if you talk it out… The relationship is NEVER GOING TO BE THE SAME. It’s maddening, but that’s how it is!!

    You have to accept people for who they are. People stink. They are rude, imperfect, and won’t live up to the roles you put them in. I’m sorry they broke their “my two best friends” roles and cast themselves as “Team Emily/Shannon BFFs 4-evah!” but they did.

    And it’s totally normal to be bothered by this two years later. You lost two BFFs, after all.

    Blessings,

    Inky

    • This reply was modified 7 years, 3 months ago by Inky.
    #164118
    A
    Participant

    Hi Kelsey, I’ve also been trying to get over a broken friendship with no success. I’ve avoided the person-which was not difficult since that wasn’t noticed. But then this person will contact me and the frustration rises up again. I’ve Googled how to moved past relationships and done all those things like starting a new physical activity, keeping busy with things I like to do, socializing more, etc. But those things don’t happen 24hrs a day, so my mind does find it’s way back to those thoughts again. No matter how many times I’ve listed the personality flaws that drove me away (insensitive, self-centered, unreliable, phony) it’s never enough.

    What I recognize as ridiculous is that I’ve had a far longer toxic friendship in the past that I finally ended and it seems like after a couple weeks I was getting over it. But with this one, the fatal flaw was simply repeated inconsideration so there’s no reason there have been months of trying but it’s still under my skin.

    Why do we get so hung up on one thing more than another? Maybe the expectations were higher from the start so we are far more shocked when we get burned.

    #164124
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Kelsey:

    You wrote: “I just want to understand why my brain won’t let go and just let me forget these people were ever in my life”, and you answered:  “years of friendship doesn’t just get deleted. We’re not computers”- we are indeed primarily, emotional beings.

    You wrote: “Shannon had been a shady person in all the time I had known her (hence her and I remaining more casual for most of our years as friends)”-

    Probably not a good idea to have a shady person as your friend, not even a casual friend. And then, it is not a good idea to introduce a shady person to a third friend, Emily.

    You wrote: “I knew deep down that I was a crap friend, it (the broken friendships) would’ve been easier to accept”- I am thinking that it was not about you being a “crap friend” to either Emily or Shannon that contributed to the broken friendship with Emily; what it is that did contribute to the broken friendship with Emily is that you chose Shannon as a friend and you chose to introduce her to Emily even though you believed Shannon was shady.

    anita

     

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