Friends can bring joy in life. Trust and mutual respect between people bolster everything in life. Finding a friend that you can turn to in good times and in bad is precious and valuable. Unfortunately, this sweet relationship can sour over time which is downright disappointing to both involved. Consider the following points when thinking about your friend.
Sometimes it’s much deeper than we, as their friend, have realized. This can result in friends acting out of character or saying things that they haven’t really thought through.
Ask yourself, “Did they recently have someone pass away who was dear to them? Have they been sleepless and restless about something? Is something bothering them in their profession, life choices, or with their family?”
Can you give them some slack? There may be more happening than they have chosen to share. You don’t know every detail of your best friend’s life.
Can you remember a time you may have let someone down? If you are alive, you have done this at one time or another. Human beings aren’t perfect. I believe they mostly do the best they can, just as you have, but there are blunders and mistakes made along life’s journey.
Their imperfection in a relationship can disappoint, just as your unintentional imperfection has been disappointing to someone else along the way. Remembering this will help you to give your friend some slack.
Consider Sue and Liz, whose friendship spanned over 30 years. Before Liz married her second husband, Sue was there to hear Liz’s misgivings. Liz was being ignored and generally not being treated well by her man. When the girlfriends shared coffee time together, red flags popped up about Liz’s relationship.
Sue did her best to point out the trouble these red flags would result in, but Liz went through with the marriage. When the bottom started to fall apart for her friend, Sue was there. The divorce was messy and hurtful, with Liz’s husband doing things that truly made her feel like dirt.
Sue, as a true friend, stood by her, listening, inviting her over for dinners, playing cards, going shopping, and spending hours talking through the whole divorce pain. A few months after the divorce was final, Liz began to meet her ex for coffee dates and exchanging friendly texts with him. Sue warned her that this was not a good decision, and would have an effect on Liz’s choices, just like before.
This seemed to be a tipping point, where the actions of her friend had become too much, and Sue was, once again disregarded and powerless to help. Hours of support, listening, asking questions, and being there for Liz, to watch her reconnect in this way with her ex, let Sue down in a big crash.
When Sue related to her friend that she just couldn’t hear about the continued interaction with this selfish man anymore, Liz felt let down by her friend who was always there to give support. Sue felt let down by her friend who continually brought pain upon herself.
Due to whatever they are going through, has your friend exhausted you? Are you exhausting your friend with needing constant support and care? Take a good look at the friendship. Is most of the time spent discussing their needs and their life imbalance, or are your needs and your life always the priority?
Friendship needs to have both, a give and take of balanced input. There will be times that you have a crisis, and your friend will listen more than share, and vice versa. If you are always front and center in the relationship or they are always front and center, the balance is off. This will lead to burn out in the friendship. Something is going to give.
Consider going to a counselor or a life coach. They are trained and skilled in creating a safe, unbiased, and nonjudgmental environment for you to discuss life’s challenges. Have you hurt relationships by being too needy, too possessive, and requiring more than your friends can give? Stop.
Friends are precious. Sometimes true friends are few and far between. Value them and preserve them by seeking other input for persistent life changing counsel and support. If your friend has indicated in various ways that they are burned out by discussing something, then turn to someone with the skill and experience to help you.
Many times, your health insurance will cover a large part of counseling fees. You may be unsure of spending money for a coach. Weigh the possibilities then try a 30-minute free discovery session that most coaches offer. Hold on to your dear friends by spending some of your money on this choice.
When meeting with a friend, occasionally make it all about them. If you’ve shared some heavy life stuff, and they have been there for you through thick and thin, please take some time to acknowledge them. Buy them a coffee, and let it be known that this time the chat is not going to include your issues.
Do a few things together where you don’t talk about stuff. Try a movie, then afterward talk only about the movie. Go shopping together for something you need and keep the conversation light. Attend a play, a concert, an event that you can enjoy together and take the pressure off solving issues.
Send a card or acknowledgment that they are special to you. Appreciate them. Let them know that hours of support are there for them if they ever need it.
Remember that true friendships can be saved, rebuilt, and stronger than before! True friendships can last through the years and hard times. Nothing happens until you are willing to start over by communicating about the conflict. Don’t write off a true, lifelong friendship. Treat it like you would pure gold.
Have you experienced a friendship going sour? What did you do to rescue it? Was it lost forever? Consider the friendship. Have you burned out your friend by complaining and being negative every time you meet? Have you ever apologized?
Tags Friendships
Sometimes we need to “weed our garden.” A friend of over 50 years moved to a condo, and kept contacting us to come visit. At that time my husband was in treatment for brain cancer for the 3rd time in 20 years. She kept calling me after I emailed her that this wasn’t a good time since my husband was very ill, and after calling me 4 times in one day, I wrote her and said, “ You are disrespecting my wishes. ” She continued contacting me. I blocked her on my phones and on email. When necessary we must weed our garden when a friend becomes toxic.
My friend exhausts me with her daily illnesses……dizziness, sinus, headache, arthritis, toothache…..I am exhausted and lack empathy. Have suggested counseling, new doctors; she hasn’t taken my advice. The last two times we planned a get together, she canceled at last minute due to illness. Don’t want to waste my time anymore. Help!
i’ve had friends go for various reasons – my own reasons included. a friend i had for years made a(nother) comment on something personal i shared – siding with my ex-husband, whom she never even met! i asked her about this, and she claimed to not even remember the conversation. she’d been making these types of out of the side of her mouth comments, and i just got tired of them. i told her that if she couldn’t remember the conversation, we couldn’t really talk it out and to call me if she remembered what she said. she hasn’t called. i am way okay having that negativity gone.
another friend claimed my ‘tone’ was offensive to her when she was visiting my home for about a week. her dog peed on my carpet (at least) 3 times, and -frankly- my back was hurting from cleaning it up (no, she did not). at that point, my ‘tone’ might have reflected my own physical discomfort. i let about a month go and called her to see if we were even friends. she just said ‘you know what you did’. no, i did my best welcoming her on short notice, renting her a vehicle for her when i was at work, and cleaning up after her dog.
i think some of this was her own physical decline. we couldn’t really walk anywhere, as her knee is pretty bad (her doctor said it was time for her to move her bedroom at her house downstairs). i think maybe sometimes people don’t like to show their infirmities (i know i don’t), and there had to be something to blame for her unease. so my ‘tone’ was it.
i still love her, but i see there’s not use repairing it. we enjoyed trips and visits and friendship for over 20 years. sad, but things do have their own season.
This article resonated with me. I was recently on a reunion committee & found contact information on 2 old friends of mine. I wrote them a personal letter giving them my information & told them that I would love to reconnect. I even texted with their siblings & told them that I was reaching out. It’s been 6 weeks now & I have had no response. I am disappointed & would love to be in their head on what they were thinking when they chose not to respond in any manner ie. email, text, letter, voice mail etc… I obviously must have offended them in some way that I have no recollection of. I guess they were friends “for a season” & I have to accept that fact:(
I received too much jealousy and insulting from my friends other than the love. I believe that finding a best friend with the same mentality as yours is a matter of luck