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6 Things I Learned About Ending a Long-Term Friendship

By Julia Hubbel May 26, 2023 Lifestyle

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:

A Right to Choose a Different Path

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.

A Fork in the Road

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.

Ending Things in Person Is So Very Hard

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.

Just Walk Away, Lovingly

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.

Create Room for New Acquaintances

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.

Hold the History in Your Heart

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.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

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.

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let

I recently had a long-term friendship end at a very confusing time when I was trying to leave a narcissistic relationship for the second time. Very hard because this person was trying to help me but couldn’t possibly understand how the relationship was changing who I am. She was going through her own challenges due to changes in her life. I involved her in a business transaction, and an unfortunate chain of events happened and she told me she didn’t like the way I acted, that she couldn’t have an honest conversation with me and has cut me off after 40 years of friendship. I am so heartbroken and depressed. I am glad I found this article. I wrote her a letter to tell her I apologize for any harm or hurt I caused. I am still very, very sad and miss her a lot. This article gives me some kind of solace. The author seems to relate to being heartbroken about a lost long-term friendship. I never thought this person wouldn’t be in my life. It’s shocking, like someone in my life died.

Lonely BFF

I recently lost a 30 year friendship and I have no idea why. We met in college and had been best friends ever since; celebrated holidays together, children, everything. We were more like sisters than friends. Things changed with her job and her husband’s job; so i know they are very busy; things changed for my family too-but we still would text, go to lunch when we could, and spend at least one holiday together.

Then 6 months ago-SLAM- the door was closed, no responses ever; after a couple of months I sent a message apologizing if I had done anything and let me know how to correct it. No RESPONSE. I wracked my brain for what I could have done; there wasn’t anything. Then i would get texts or calls from other of her family members/mutual friends and they were all normal like we always had been.

It has completely wrecked me emotionally; because I have no idea what caused this. I have never lost a friend. (Never totally lost a friend other than to passing away). I am always to pick back up with friends from years ago-be friendly and get along just like always did. I don’t let many people get that close; i want quality over quantity and my closest friends are long term; one even from birth!

I know i must accept what has happened even with the unknown reason; that i need get out of the Shock stage of grieving to process this and move ahead.
ANY ADVICE on how to do so?

Peggy Sue

I have a friend of 25 years standing but for a good number of years I have felt no real pleasure in her company. We are incredibly different and I find her irritating. I have maintained the friendship because I felt loyalty and she has always been loyal to me. However I don’t her. I tolerated her because of our shared history. Now things have become complicated because she has an incurable illness. I feel little desire to continue but huge guilt because she is ill. Recently there was some tension between us over something fairly minor. But I found her petty and it’s made me face up to how I feel. Now I want to walk away but feel what kind of person would do that when someone is terminally ill. Welcome thoughts.

Last edited 1 year ago by Peggy Sue
SDL

in 2010, I had one of my closest friends end a 45 year friendship. The way and reason she did it still hurts. I just tell myself she was never my friend.

THIS is what happened…

https://www.quora.com/Was-a-friendship-sacrificed-for-a-job/answer/Scott-Livingston-10

Shelly

So beautifully written thank you. I had to end a long term friendship of roughly 38 years. It broke my heart. I had been conflicted for several years prior but this particular friend would still give me something to hang on to. They began to change, I began to change and there was no connection. I noticed for about 3 years they would not stick to plans, but would go for the better option and cancel on me. I was feeling like a personal door mat and their plan B. I would give but they would not and it hurt to realize that they were using some manipulation tactics that I finally was able to clearly see and understand. As painful as it was, I had to walk away from this person. Knowing that they are not easy to confront under difficult situations I really wrestled with what to do. I felt angry, sad, disappointed and abandoned. So after much contemplation and guidance from other close people in my life, I had to quietly step back and offer no explanation. This was a very hard decision but it was the right thing to do as I did not want to stress them or create an argument. When they never questioned it or reached out I realized all these years I was caring and loving a stranger. A very distant acquaintance at best. It was all an illusion.

I went through a major mourning process. I also was deeply hurt that they were still getting together with people that they told me they did not like, or had issue with but not me, the person who would answer the phone at any hour of the night to be a sounding board, a listener.

What has this all taught me? People have to earn your trust. Just because you shared a long relationship and have felt comfortable, that does not mean that the person has your best interest at heart. At the end of the day I realized I am worth it. I am worth having a friend who cares about me, is not jealous and truly has my best interest at heart.

I have also learned that it is ok to have many different levels of friends in your life. Loose friendships, friends you can share things with, friends you cant. Fun happy go lucky friends, serious friends. We all serve a purpose to others and the real learning experience for me was how to know the difference.

God Bless anyone else going through this loss. It in my opinion is similar to a death. I think death of the person would have been an easier acceptance because it would be more final. But I never wish bad on anyone and pray for this person that they have a happy and joyful life.

The Author

Julia Hubbel is a prize-winning author, journalist, international business and women’s conference speaker and international adventure traveler. Her work teaches people how to erase the impossible and redefine their boundaries. As a sales and leadership trainer, her work focuses on success skills and finding the courage to be your best. Visit her website here https://www.walkaboutsaga.com/

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