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[yesmagazine.org]


How to Survive the End of a Friendship


Breakups happen to friends, too. Here’s how to find closure, while preserving your heart and dignity.


As life gets busier due to career, family, and other demands, friendships may seem inessential. However, good friendships are crucial to one’s well-being because they offer a wealth of benefits—from reducing stress to lowering blood pressure. Ultimately, they can help us live longer lives.


Negative friendships also impact heart health. But even if we’re aware of unhealthy friendships in our lives, it can be difficult to know when and how to let go.


Theories on romantic breakups, including how to end a bad relationship on good terms, saturate pop culture. And while a friendship breakup can be just as devastating, we seldom give it the same consideration. In an age of friendship ghosting, there’s little emphasis on how to handle the end of a friendship in a way we won’t later regret.


Melanie Ross Mills, who is a friendship expert, licensed temperament therapist, and author of the book The Friendship Bond, says there’s a process for ending a friendship. “Much like a romantic breakup, we need time to process, grieve, and heal,” she says.


Here are some thoughts to consider while navigating challenges and coping with the loss of a friend.


First, try to resolve the situation.


Do you know what happened to cause the dynamic between you two to change?


“Accepting that your friend is choosing a different path is the first step to getting your heart in the right place,” Mills says. “Once you’ve acknowledged, admitted, and wrestled through how and what you’re feeling, you can hopefully go to your friend without bitterness and anger.”


Occasionally we sense the answer. Maybe there was no fault or negative factors involved; the friendship simply ran its course. Not all friendships are meant to last forever, nor does their duration define their value.


“Sometimes we grow out of friendships, and that’s OK,” Mills says. “It doesn’t mean that you don’t care about them. It means that you’re headed in a different direction for the time being.”


If you’re the one ending a friendship and your friend is still reaching out to you, at least give them the courtesy of a reason. You don’t need to give an exhaustive explanation, but say something out of respect for them and the friendship you shared.


“It’s possible to share that you valued your time together and you wanted him or her to understand what’s going on with you,” Mills says. “We’d prefer to ghost as to not have to deal with the uneasiness, but we miss the growth opportunities for both parties involved.”


If your friend pulling away is unsettling to you, discuss it with them—ideally in person rather than via text or calling. And avoid resorting to social media, as that rarely benefits anyone.


“Ask him or her if there’s something you’ve done that needs forgiving,” Mills says. “With every goodbye, we learn, if we’re open to it.”


You don’t have complete control over people’s impressions of you.


Broaching the subject of a breakup could dredge up a bevy of accusations. While you can ask someone for an explanation, you can’t control what they’ll say—only how you respond.


While we hope our friends know our true character, their opinions of us can be surprising when put to the test. If there’s a misunderstanding, you can try to truthfully explain yourself, but your friend may doubt your explanation; they may do this to protect their ego or for other reasons that are impossible to know.


Prepare yourself for the possibility that unbeknownst to you, various frustrations have been brewing in their mind for a while and they may offer some unflattering criticism. “There’s a difference between constructive criticism and ill-intended criticism,” Mills says. “It’s a heart issue.”


What happens when the person declines or disregards your request to talk? You can’t force someone to respond to you, but after approaching them you have the perspective of knowing you did your part to try to remedy or better understand the situation rather than dropping the relationship carelessly.


“Sometimes we can’t rationalize with irrational people,” Mills says.


Consider whether the end of the friendship is for the best.


Perhaps, in the end, you’re better off without this person in your life and the breakup will make you healthier.


If you usually don’t feel good after spending time with someone, then that friendship might not be salvageable. Ask yourself: Do you really want to be friends with someone who upsets you or who you don’t enjoy being around? Friends don’t need to agree on everything, but mutual respect is essential.


Don’t interfere with mutual friends who continue relationships with your former friend.


Each relationship is separate and operates its own way. There’s a mathematic aspect to relationships, and your incompatibility with one person doesn’t mean the same would apply to friends you have in common.


Some people urge or demand mutual friends take sides because they view it as a sign of support for their decision, but the choice to end a relationship that’s not working isn’t validated by someone else also cutting ties.


So, consider whether you truly want to cause the end of a working friendship. It’s not a betrayal if your mutual friends don’t take sides.


“Allowing the third party to decide for themselves without holding their decision against them is the healthy and mature approach,” Mills says. “Respect and give them the power to choose, just as you've exercised your power to choose.”


Sometimes we never completely understand why a breakup happens. Good friendships aren’t one-sided and require effort from both people to work. If you’ve explained your perspective and apologized for what you may have done wrong but your friend takes no responsibility for their role, don’t hold out much hope for them to come around.


Even if the friendship ended abruptly, you get to decide how much you’ll allow it to affect your life. We may never fully understand why some breakups happen, but by handling the situation thoughtfully and on our own terms, we can come to make peace with it.


Question: What experience with the end of a friendship have you had or observed?

AnonySchmoose 8 Oct 13
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4 comments

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0

Makes the past make more sense .

GEGR Level 7 Oct 14, 2019
0

..feel happy not having to read all that 🙂 Five years ago, after losing family land and leaving my home state, life felt like it had a gaping hole in it… Romance with a borderline didn’t help, either.

Arriving at a new land, with said hole, I wandered about, alone. Met others, explored the land, learned it’s history, found employment and met even more.. Lately, that hole not only feels filled, but maybe a little bit heaped.

So, was set up to meet someone by a friend, and did. ...yah, stuff in common, but no more so than friends shoved aside to make room for other stuff. So why add another, benefits or not..? Having lived with someone all my life, time alone has become ..magnificent. No longer feeling the ‘need to be with someone,’ yet surrounded, seems like thriving!

But, it took a lot more reading than all that 🙂

Varn Level 8 Oct 13, 2019
1

I may be off the point here but your post made me think: whenever I've left a job or a city or a social milieu I've always said to myself "Now this time I won't lose touch with the people I've liked here. I'll make the effort." and sometimes I have, for a while. Over time, however I've always lost touch. This is undoubtedly my fault, by the way. So, to respond more directly to your post, my problem has never been the mechanics of ending friendships; rather it has been the seeming impossibility of ever continuing them.

Senex Level 5 Oct 13, 2019

I've moved locations very often, and from job to job. It has been rather impossible to maintain friendships. I think it may be a generational and American culture issue. My parents maintained friendship their whole lives, but they came from difficult circumstances. My family are the main people whose friendships I've maintained a lifetime, but the visits are infrequent. I have a few close friends I've known for about ten years, and some neighbors for a bit longer.

@AnonySchmoose I have moved quite a few times and have found, for me, some friendships are only meant for certain places and circumstances.

@Sticks48
I had a fun group of friends when I was an active member of my neighborhood canoe club, but there is no connection now. That lasted about four years. When I was in college I had a group of friends for those years, but it didn't extend beyond that. That is why I feel I am in a transitory culture, which does not value connection enough.

@AnonySchmoose I have one almost life long friend (middle school) who is like a brother. Those transitory friendships, and some of them were very close, are friendships I treasure just for having them even if they only lasted for a certain period of time.

@Sticks48
Yes! Even though they've long since moved on, I have two friendships I treasure from grammar school, and one from middle school. I will never forget those girlfriends. There are also guys I'll never forget, even though we moved on separately.

@AnonySchmoose Keith my almost life long friend came over yesterday and spent the afternoon together. We have been apart without seeing each other for as much as five years and it is like we saw each other yesterday. Those are rare friendships, l think.

@Sticks48
During the past 1.5 years I saw several cousins I hadn't seen since the '80's, and we had a similar closeness, as though we were continuing our mutual experiences from how we felt back then when we saw each other oftener. It was exciting, because we discovered more interesting things about one another.

1

Always had a amicable resolution still friends and help each other

bobwjr Level 10 Oct 13, 2019

The course of actions in the article make sense to me, and I would have thought similarly.
However, recently I've read posts commenting on the stress and indecision people are undergoing while they contemplate how or whether to dissolve a friendship.

@AnonySchmoose yeah can be very difficult but I detest acrimonious separation, makes no sense

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