Anonymous wrote:I see a lot of denial in this thread. Saw it coming, however.
Anonymous wrote:Just felt a little depressed and tired today as I thought about it. I'm social, outgoing and emotionally healthy (enough), as are many of my friends. But over the course of time you start to realize that no matter how much love exists between you and your friends, and how positive and drama free your relationship is, and how much effort you put into the friendship, some things never change.
Your friend is still a flawed human being no matter how awesome they are. Still lack sufficient self love to stop themselves from comparing themselves to you, still have insecurities no matter how balanced and confident and mature they seem, still capable of secretly getting jealous of you. No one wants to admit it but sometimes it is your best friend who hates to see you succeed far beyond their own success.
And friends are complex humans. They have issues from childhood to deal with, romantic problems, and other social or professional issues that all influence their attitude towards you.
It's condyantly a game. You can trust your close friends but you can't trust them with EVERY vulnerability in your life can you? You have to protect yourself and maintain some semblance of strength to keep their respect even as you show vulnerability. It's complicated and often exhausting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does it make a difference that I am successful in a competitive field, and many of my closest friends are either in the same field or similar fields? I really don't think my experiences of envy, insecurity, and competition - going hand-in-hand with friendship, love, laughter, and support - is as unusual and weird as some of you are making it out to be. I think my experiences are actually pretty standard.
or maybe they can't stand how full of yourself you are.
o hai Internet troll! I was waiting to see when the angry personal attacks would come out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At the end of the day you can't fully and 100% trust anybody in the deepest sense. And that's OK. That's how it is. Kind of sucks. But this is true even in the very best of friendships. Just enjoy all the wonderful moments and accept the frustrations. I agree, OP. It's disappointing. But it's also fine and in a way this let's you realize that you can be strong for yourself and learn to trust yourself. I appreciate your post OP. I feel that way sometimes too.
It smells like sockpuppet in here.
Uh? I'm the OP, not the whoever you're quoting. Thanks for your participation though.
It's ok to sometimes be jealous of your friends. Life isn't always fair and sometimes your friends' lives are going well when yours isn't. It's ok to be insecure sometimes. If you can't let your friends know when you're feeling insecure, they're not real friends. (frankly, if you couldn't dream of telling a friend you were jealous, that might not be a real friendship either.) I think real friends are people who can see you at your worst and know your flaws and still like you.
A true friend can be happy for your success, while at the same time being sad that others all seem to be succeeding when they're not. Mature people are capable of holding two seemingly conflicted thoughts at once.
If you really think so little of your friends as you seem to, they may be acquaintances who don't really like you all that much. Ask yourself if you're being a good friend too, instead of just expecting people to be good friends to you. It's a two-way street.
I'm beginning to see that what I said in the OP is being blown out of proportion a little. I think very highly of my friends and said that in my OP, and I've also said that my friends accept me for who I am, as I accept them for who they are. We wouldn't be friends if our friendship wasn't a positive factor in our lives. The point I'm saying though is that even a positive social relationship has the potential to turn toxic because envy is a natural human trait, and to say that it's absent from happy relationships is blind and wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At the end of the day you can't fully and 100% trust anybody in the deepest sense. And that's OK. That's how it is. Kind of sucks. But this is true even in the very best of friendships. Just enjoy all the wonderful moments and accept the frustrations. I agree, OP. It's disappointing. But it's also fine and in a way this let's you realize that you can be strong for yourself and learn to trust yourself. I appreciate your post OP. I feel that way sometimes too.
It smells like sockpuppet in here.
It's ok to sometimes be jealous of your friends. Life isn't always fair and sometimes your friends' lives are going well when yours isn't. It's ok to be insecure sometimes. If you can't let your friends know when you're feeling insecure, they're not real friends. (frankly, if you couldn't dream of telling a friend you were jealous, that might not be a real friendship either.) I think real friends are people who can see you at your worst and know your flaws and still like you.
A true friend can be happy for your success, while at the same time being sad that others all seem to be succeeding when they're not. Mature people are capable of holding two seemingly conflicted thoughts at once.
If you really think so little of your friends as you seem to, they may be acquaintances who don't really like you all that much. Ask yourself if you're being a good friend too, instead of just expecting people to be good friends to you. It's a two-way street.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds awfully melodramatic to me. If you're constantly struggling in your friendships, the issue may be you more than them.
Melodramatic? Constantly struggling? Ok then, if you think adult friendships aren't complex then you go ahead with that. It just means that yours are superficial and lack the extent of emotional intimacy that mine do.
Also, this is an undercurrent that rarely surfaces. 90% of the time its fun, laughter, good times, and always positively helping each other out. But if you think that friendships don't require work and that any mention of the difficulties even the best of friendships involve constitutes "melodrama", then I can't help you.
Anonymous wrote:At the end of the day you can't fully and 100% trust anybody in the deepest sense. And that's OK. That's how it is. Kind of sucks. But this is true even in the very best of friendships. Just enjoy all the wonderful moments and accept the frustrations. I agree, OP. It's disappointing. But it's also fine and in a way this let's you realize that you can be strong for yourself and learn to trust yourself. I appreciate your post OP. I feel that way sometimes too.
I was talking with DH tonight about my embarrassment at inadvertently revealing my insecurities to a new friend, and he told me that's part of who I am and I don't need to apologize for that. I am also a person who loves my friends, warts and all. I think I'm not grasping OP's main point, though.
I understand what you're saying too.
At the end of the day you can't fully and 100% trust anybody in the deepest sense. And that's OK. That's how it is. Kind of sucks. But this is true even in the very best of friendships. Just enjoy all the wonderful moments and accept the frustrations. I agree, OP. It's disappointing. But it's also fine and in a way this let's you realize that you can be strong for yourself and learn to trust yourself. I appreciate your post OP. I feel that way sometimes too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And this is a revelation to you why? All people have flaws and all close social relationships involve some degree of conflict.
Sorry if it sounded that way, it wasn't a revelation. It's something I've been conscious of to some degree or another since I was a kid, and most of the time you don't ever think about it, but since I actually saw a close friend get jealous of my BF proposing to me and some other things, it is obviously just something that was percolating.