| Realize that you are being very insecure and controlling, and consider why you need to micromanage their relationships in order to feel better about yourself. Then improve yourself and let this petty approach to life go. |
This. Further, OP, if I were G and we had lunch so you could tell me you are hurt because I became friends with someone you introduced me to, I would think you are high maintenance and likely distance myself from you. This is not about loyalty or being sensitive, it is being straight up jealous for no reason. Neither D or G did anything wrong in becoming friends. |
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Let me get this straight. You have known these friends for 20 years and you expected them to invite you if they got together.
I understand feeling a bit a disappointed but I can't imagine anything you could say that would come out sounding right. I have 2 friends, M and W. M was always my good friend. W was M's good friend and she introduced us. We used to only see each other if M invited us over. After a few years of seeing one another, W and I started making plans sometimes with M, sometimes without. W and I are now better friends than with M. People make new friends. Drift apart. The only difference is how they met, in this case, the mutual friend. |
| It's one thing to feel hurt about being left out. It's another thing to think you have the right to control their friendship and interactions. What you're describing sounds very controlling and petty and will drive reasonable people away. |
| OP, I consider it a badge of honor when two friends that I have introduced have gone on to form their own special relationship. It's like I've made a great match! There's enough friendship to go around. |
That really depends on what you mean by valid. If you mean "having a sound basis in logic or fact; reasonable or cogent," then no, all feelings are not valid. If I experienced extreme anger every time I lost Monopoly Jr. to my son, it would perhaps be genuinely felt but not reasonable. |
It may not be the case with OP and her friends but it is important to recognize that people need different things and have different personalities. If having someone that can be inseparable is a criteria for friendship, not everyone can be your friend or you may lose friends. My big thing is taking the initiative to plan things and being reachable. There may be some great people out there that never take the initiative to plan things/reach out of for whatever reason is barely reachable and that person will not be a good friend match for me. I agree with the PPs that said OP can say a gentle "I would love to meet up with the two of you next time you plan something" but beyond that either they aren't a good match for OP if she needs total loyalty/inseparable in a friendship OR it really is a matter of it being OP and the people trying to put distance in their relationship with her for some reason. |
| You are not the boss of them and you do not get to choose their friends. It is not disloyal to have more than one friend. The only part of this that is a valid complaint is that neither of them mentioned this growing friendship, but given that you are clingy (my friends are my family), possessive (they need my permission to be friends), competitive (she was giving off a vibe like she belonged there more than me) and irrational (I am sensitive, therefore everyone needs to be worried about my emotions at all times, even at a funeral), my guess is that they didn't mention it because they knew you would not respond like a healthy, rational friend and say "lovely! So glad you two are connecting! We should hang out some time!" But knew that instead you would do all you can to make their friendship about you and be a roadblock to them building an independent relationship. |
| How in the world did you end up feeling bad while attending a funeral? You do realize that you sound incredibly petty and insecure. |
| I'm sorry-- I'm not sure what you would bring up with G? That G was supposed to check with you before becoming friends with D? |
Exactly. I don't know what the OP could say to G and not sound very strange. This is precisely why D and G may not have told OP in the first place because of her reaction. OP: G, I feel bad that you hung out with D without me. When did you start being friends? G: D and I started being better friends about 5 years ago. OP: I noticed that you were friendly with D's family at the funeral. G: I was trying to make D's family feel better. OP: I was hurt that you felt more comfortable at the funeral. G: At the funeral? I was trying to comfort our mutual friend D. OP: How come you started hanging out without me? D and I drifted apart. G: ... G will probably start to not hang out with you either. |