Anonymous wrote:Friendships have seasons. I had a small friend group when our kids were in the same school, we walked together every morning, etc. and we were just naturally in each other’s orbit quite a bit. We’ve drifted as our kids have gotten older and their paths separated, and then Covid sealed it. We are warm when we see each other but it is rare. I guess ghosting is a different issue, but I guarantee there’s something going on in their life that they are either too ashamed to share, or they’re just in the thick of it and gave no bandwidth or are depressed.
My best friend from college ghosted me in our thirties and I was crushed. We reconnected later when Facebook first became a thing and she apologized and acknowledged that she was very depressed, as a result of certain things going on in her life. I doubt it’s personal, OP - but I know it’s very painful, and I’m so sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Please tell me I am not the only woman in her mid-40s who has had a recent friend breakup. My best friend has gone completely no contact and I am miserable.
Anonymous wrote:I had one in my mid-30s that was worse than any romantic breakup I've ever experienced.
That was when I realized that most friendships aren't really cut out for longevity. I am fortunate to have a few other friendships that have stood up for decades, and I don't take them for granted. But the vast majority of friends we have in life, we'll grow apart from.
Anonymous wrote:I had two of these and both times it was the fault of my mother and Facebook.
First time a friend was throwing me a baby shower. I confessed to my mother that I was nervous about the whole thing and wished she wouldn't do it at all. My mother took it upon herself to private message my friend asking her to cancel the party. My friend was insulted, sent me an email calling me ungrateful and despite my explanation the friendship was over.
Second time I didn't invite a friend's family to my kid's birthday party since she was super Covid cautious and I didn't want to deal with her judgment. My mom couldn't resist posting photos of the party on Facebook despite me asking her not to. My friend thought I was irresponsible for throwing an outdoor party "during a global pandemic" and was ALSO insulted she wasn't invited....Friendship over.
Anonymous wrote:I had one on accident. I stood a friend up because I completely forgot about a coffee date. She was understandably hurt. I apologized profusely over the phone. She needed some space after, I think. I kept meaning to write her a letter apologizing and I meant to ask her to hang again. Covid hit soon after. Two years after this, I was diagnosed with ADHD. She never initiate contact again and I never reached out because I was embarrassed and I really didn't know what to say. It seems so stupid now.