Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Been there, OP. It stinks. Someone I thought was a very close friend totally checked out when my mom died suddenly and it really altered our friendship going forward. On the flip side, some unexpected people reached out and kept reaching out and it made a terrible time more tolerable. I’m sorry you’re struggling, OP, and I hope things improve for you.
Is there any way the silent friends could apologize that would be okay? I was going through a tough personal time when my friend's mom died and I sent some texts and meant to send flowers and a loving card... And I didn't. I'm so ashamed, but don't know how to remedy.
I am not the PP. Do you feel you can make yourself vulnerable and reach out to your friend? Write a letter or email, ask to meet in the park, and be honest? If a friend abandoned me in my time of need but later was honest, expressed remorse, and changed her behavior moving forward, I would at least be open to the idea of rekindling the friendship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Friends are fleeting and you're better off expecting very little from them. Family is what counts. That's why I feel so sorry for so many DCUM women who do nothing but complain about theirs.
Not to side track, but my friends and husband and way more supportive than my family. Those of us who complain about family often have pretty nasty family members.
Sorry to hijack, OP, and I am sorry your friend let you down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a friend going through incredibly difficult time and I have stopped texting her. I was there in the beginning offering love and support and would text every week to let them know I was thinking about them. I stopped hearing from her a few months ago and my last few texts were never returned. I received no response. I put holiday cookies on her porch and heard nothing. My assumption is that they need space and when they have time to come up for air they will reach out. I'll always be here, but if you don't reach out, I can't know that you need to hear from me.
I recently went through something really awful. Several of my friends would text me something along the lines of “No need to respond, but wanted to let you know I love you and I’m thinking about you.” I really appreciated it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Been there, OP. It stinks. Someone I thought was a very close friend totally checked out when my mom died suddenly and it really altered our friendship going forward. On the flip side, some unexpected people reached out and kept reaching out and it made a terrible time more tolerable. I’m sorry you’re struggling, OP, and I hope things improve for you.
Is there any way the silent friends could apologize that would be okay? I was going through a tough personal time when my friend's mom died and I sent some texts and meant to send flowers and a loving card... And I didn't. I'm so ashamed, but don't know how to remedy.
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend going through incredibly difficult time and I have stopped texting her. I was there in the beginning offering love and support and would text every week to let them know I was thinking about them. I stopped hearing from her a few months ago and my last few texts were never returned. I received no response. I put holiday cookies on her porch and heard nothing. My assumption is that they need space and when they have time to come up for air they will reach out. I'll always be here, but if you don't reach out, I can't know that you need to hear from me.
Anonymous wrote:This happened to me. About a year ago, I made plans to go on a walk with a long time friend (we weren't going to meet indoors due to the pandemic). Then prior to our meeting up, I found out my parents had COVID. I texted my friend to tell her. The next day she said she had to cancel and would call me later. (My parents lived across country so there wasn't a concern that I had gotten COVID from them.) A couple weeks later, my mom died. I never heard from my friend, not even "I'm sorry for your loss" on Facebook. Nothing. Then a couple months later she started commenting on my Facebook posts like nothing had happened. It was SUPER WEIRD. This is a friend who I have had for 30 years!
I'm going to be honest, I haven't gotten over it. I still exchange a superficial text with her once in a while but my opinion of her has fundamentally changed.
Anonymous wrote:Friends are fleeting and you're better off expecting very little from them. Family is what counts. That's why I feel so sorry for so many DCUM women who do nothing but complain about theirs.
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend going through incredibly difficult time and I have stopped texting her. I was there in the beginning offering love and support and would text every week to let them know I was thinking about them. I stopped hearing from her a few months ago and my last few texts were never returned. I received no response. I put holiday cookies on her porch and heard nothing. My assumption is that they need space and when they have time to come up for air they will reach out. I'll always be here, but if you don't reach out, I can't know that you need to hear from me.