A few years ago I had a long term friendship come to an end. Four decades of love, laughter and jokes, gone. I felt as though someone had removed a part of my heart. However, that experience both taught me important life lessons as well as opened many new doors. Here’s what I learned:
If you’ve had years of investment with a close friend, noticing that there are differences cropping up can be genuinely disturbing. At first we ignore it, because we want very much to preserve what we’ve had. If it persists, it might be time to ask:
Can we still relate? Are we still on the same wavelength? And, perhaps even more challenging, can I honor the changes in my friend and still be friends? Sometimes, yes, sometimes – no. That is uniquely up to us.
Friends can disagree on many things and still bear great love for one another. I have a close friend whose family differs completely from mine; however, I learn from them, and from her, every time I visit.
This brings value and perspective into my life, and I can appreciate alternative viewpoints. What’s key is mutual respect. If you no longer feel as though your thoughts, views, ideas and opinions are honored, even though you may not agree, this can cause heartache and arguments.
We evolve. Sometimes there is a fork up ahead. You’re headed to the lake front. Your friend needs to climb the mountain. When a long-time friend needs to walk a different path, it can feel as powerful as losing a close family member. In fact, it is.
Sometimes we see behaviors that telegraph an unspoken intention. For example, someone is perpetually unavailable. At first we think that they’re busy. Then it feels like rejection.
A conversation that ends a friendship is very hard, and many of us avoid that kind of confrontation. Lots of us express our intentions without actually knowing it, because we don’t wish to cause someone pain. If a longtime friend “doesn’t have time,” that may be their way of saying things have changed.
Long friendships involve years of investment. When we see that slipping away, it can be terrifying. We’re losing part of who we understand ourselves to be with that special someone close to us.
Of course, we want to hold on, and rejection feels like abandonment. It brings up strong emotions and people may simply not be up to that emotional discussion no matter how close you are, or were.
If and when a friendship reaches a breaking point for any reason, sometimes all you can do is walk away. As hard as this may sound, if the joy is gone, and aspects of your connection have become stressful or toxic, then the kindest thing you can both do is acknowledge that you need to move on.
We may never find out what happened. There may not be answers. Sometimes we don’t know why things changed. While that can be frustrating – “But what did I do wrong? – not everyone can give, or even has, an answer.
Lots of us don’t want to have to justify our actions or choices. Part of maturity includes not only allowing others to make their own choices, but also to be able to live in the question.
While it’s important to mourn the loss of a beloved friend, it’s just as important to create room for new acquaintances. They may not share our history, but the pleasure of new ideas and lively discussions far outweighs feeling lonely.
Healing is ahead – for both of you – as long as you can honor what you had and wish your friend the best in all things.
We can’t all have a gracious discussion when a friendship ends. Sometimes it’s just not available. In the best of scenarios, you can talk it out, express your love, and say good bye without recriminations.
Or, have a loving conversation with this person with whom you have shared so much of you. Then visualize them with a halo of brilliant love around them. Above all, be grateful for what you had, for the memories and the gifts they brought into your life.
After our friendship ended, I would find small tokens from Ellen around my house. Rather than make me sad, today they remind me of the treasure that her friendship brought to my life. She graced my life for most of my adulthood. And that is gift enough.
Have you recently ended a lengthy friendship? Are you currently hurting because an old friend seems to be turning on you or changing? What do you do to work through your feelings? How do you open your heart to new friends as you age? Please share your insights and tips below.
Tags Friendships
My best friend of 49 years and i had a huge argument this week while in my vacation home. She told me what she thought about my weight and that she is “terrified “ that I will die. I’m 40 lbs overweight at age 56 but am in good health. I’ve tried different things over the years to lose the weight but have been unsuccessful. She always has something to say an out others’ weight. She is in the gym 5 days a week and barely eats. She got angrier and more abusive as she went on. It came out of nowhere. I’m not sure if it was planned or not. She left the next morning and I couldn’t even look at her. I believe this friendship is irrevocably broken and am beyond upset- but I’m not going to be anyone’s punching bag. I have family and another best friend who love me- without criticism and fat shaming.
Thank you for this thoughtful topic, article and thread. I appreciate the nuanced comments and stories folks have shared.
Several weeks ago, I had a family event that forced me to face some uncomfortable aspects of a friendship I really enjoyed for 10 years. My friend is very outgoing and caring. She is a medical professional and truly cares about and connects with her clients. We had a friendship based in our community, kids and shared activities which was close and fun.
But she remained friends with my ex-husband in ways that hurt my family. When she was with me, she gave me a lot of advice about him and was frequently upset at his actions towards us. Yet, she chose to continue their friendship. When my teen confronted me about her, I realized I had to speak up. I wrote a very polite letter explaining how this impacted us. I told her I could not longer be a close friend of hers if she wanted a friendship with him. After 6 weeks, she has not written back.
She knew all along that she hurt me. Over this time, I have been separating from her and it feels like the attachment broke. I took all the little gifts she has given me down, and taken her off our emergency contact list, etc. I decided to make a donation in her name in honor of our friendship. Then I write her again saying I respect her decision and telling her what I have done. That will mark the end of our friendship.
This is very hard adulting and I have cried a lot! However, I think “walking your talk” is critical to how I raise my kids. On reflection, I see that I pushed down dissonant things she did with me for many years. As so many have said, it was time to move on.
I had a friend from 25 years, and she ended our friendship via message. The reason can’t come to her father funeral, and I didn’t call her mother to say my condolences. I feel really awful I don’t know what to do. I send her a message before every 2 days to ask how they are, also her mother and I sent flowers to her home address about condolences. I already talked with my husband about this and says it’s her choice, but I cannot accept that we are not friends anymore. I send her a message that I can’t come to her father’s funeral because of the money, but honestly, I am also pregnant, and I am afraid to travel it’s a 1000 km from where I am now. She first said okey, then after that she sends me a goodbye message saying that it’s over.
It’s refreshing to read this from the perspective of someone ending the friendship. I can usually only find posts about when a friend leaves you and how hard it is. But it’s incredibly difficult to end a relationship too when the situation calls for it!
My friend of 12 years (my entire adult life,) who was also my mom’s closest friend beside me, sent us a screenshot of a text saying she couldn’t be friend with us anymore, with no explanation. She refused to engage in a conversation and left us bewildered, reeling, and devastated. I sent her a kindly worded text saying she had hurt me and I wish she could have talked to me about whatever led to this. She never responded. A month later, I sent another text, which I can admit was not as kind, where I said I should have known this could happen, I’d known for years that she threw things away when she didn’t want them anymore. No response. A few weeks later, a mutual friend brought her up and I was sent back into a grief spiral. I texted another mutual acquaintance to ask if she knew what had happened, and I got a vague response. That evening, my ex friend sent me a 7 bullet point email with all of my shortcomings that she had held onto for 12 years, and never once spoke up to me about. Some of it was valid, some of it was purely invented, but all of it was aimed to hurt me. “You copied me to death,”(because I became a teacher after her) “I don’t DO best friends, I have real sisters,” etc.
I spent several days drafting a letter back to her. It was the kind of letter I wish she would have sent to me, though I can admit it was sharp-edged, as she had made her point by this time. Her response, 2 minutes after sending it was, “I got bored reading this. Bye bitch.”
I’m glad to be done with her, and honestly the hurt has dwindled now that I realize she was using me for companionship and comfort during a time when she was geographically far from family, and when she didn’t need me anymore, she disposed of me.
I’m glad I pushed for closure, I, and my mom, deserved to have her take her mask off and be real, for once in her life. I don’t think I can look at our memories and feel anything but contempt, unfortunately. But many of those memories include special time with my mom, so I am holding onto that.
She had every right to move on from our friendship, but the way she did it was cowardly and unkind. I didn’t deserve that. My mom didn’t, either. An honest conversation could have accomplished the desired result without leaving me detesting her, but she was always too cowardly for that.
Now, I’m physically and emotionally drained, but I think it’s going to get better.
Wow, my mouth was open in shock throughout, the good news is, shes given you the best gift of letting you go, she set you free and now you have the space and freedom in your life for real loving friendships which are on there way to you 💕