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Friendship gone wrong part 2

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  • #456292
    Sonia
    Participant

    Hello all,

    I had another post some time back names the same: friendship gone wrong
    Long short story: i had a best friend over the 3 years and i was a people pleaser by heart
    He had/has a loooot of problems, mostly in romantic relationship. I was there everytime, offering support, listening to hours of stories.
    He admitted that i helped him a lot to ho through these tough times and i am happy to hear this…
    But
    It was exhausting
    He was getting upset very often of simple things , feeling that he is not taken into consideration even though i was always including as much as i could…
    And i began to be tired of listening to complaints everyday…. coffee is bad, day is bad, relationship is bad, this is not good, that is not wow…
    I started having boundaries and now from talking everyday we barely talk ( but coming from him, i still asked “how are u” everyday and when i stopped, he stopped as well)

    Now i still have struggles to think if i should check on him, if he is ok, etc…
    But at the same time i feel like it’s from my side only
    He was (is?) A food friend, listening when i need etx

    But i am just tired. I was feeling too responsible for him to be good.

    Am i a bad person for being happy we don’t discuss anymore? And not checking on him…
    I feel somehow guilty.

    Thanks!!!

    #456294
    anita
    Participant

    Hello Sonia 🙂

    I read your new post and our communication in your first thread earlier this year, and what came to mind was the image of a boy (your friend) when he was a child, “feeling that he is not taking into consideration” by his parents, a boy who “was getting upset very often” but kept it inside, no place safe to express it.

    Fast forward, he found that safe place in you and he took advantage of this opportunity and expressed himself a lot, “hours of stories”.

    Another image: a girl feeling responsible for a parent’s feelings, rushing to make them feel better, being the best emotional caretaker she could be.

    As to your questions in the last paragraph:

    It’s clear to me that you are not a bad person for setting self-protective boundaries, for not over-extending yourself and for feeling happy about it (when guilt doesn’t overshadow the happy).

    But you sometimes feel guilty, like you are a bad person because by putting yourself first, you feel that you are neglecting a responsibility to put him first?

    👧 👦 Anita

    #456295
    Sonia
    Participant

    Hi Anita,

    Thanks for reading the last post.
    You described it better than me…i was happy for him a long period of time that ” i can show to him he is loved and a good person”, but i ended up not saying anything when he was upset, to not upset him more 🙁

    And yes, this is why i feel guilty…i don’t want him to think he doesn’t deserve love or anything like this, but i can not continue like in the past anymore, everyday discussing only negative aspects of life 🙁

    He needs to stand up for himself and see his value.
    Has a lot of emotional backpack from his past…but i stoped feeling like i need to help him see his value.

    And i don’t know where is the blurred line of ” but that is what a friend is for…”

    #456297
    anita
    Participant

    Hi Sonia:

    You are welcome!

    “I stopped feeling like I need to help him see his value”-

    That’s progress, that’s healing. Because you are his friend, not his mother, or his emotional care-taker, right?

    👧 Anita

    #456298
    Sonia
    Participant

    Hi Anita,

    Yes, this i am starting to see only now…i didn’t wanted to hurt him, but i was hurting me staying in this role and being anxious to not upset him 🤷🏽‍♀️

    Thank you for making the time to respond!

    #456300
    anita
    Participant

    You are welcome home. Sonia.

    Leaving this role is not easy. When you feel like a bad person for doing what’s good for you.. that’ difficult.

    Recently I came across the term “moral guilt” vs “trauma guilt”. The first is when you feel guilty because you really did say or do something that harmed another.

    The second happens when you feel guilty not because you did anything wrong, but because of early emotional trauma of some sort.

    Setting healthy- helpful boundaries may inconvenience another person. They may not like it, but that doesn’t mean you harmed them.

    You can’t make everyone like everything you say and do. No one can get only ‘likes’ and zero ‘dislikes’.

    👍 👎 Anita

    #456301
    anita
    Participant

    * You are welcome (no “home”)4

    #456323
    Sonia
    Participant

    Thank you🥺 it is soothing to hear this 🥺

    #456327
    anita
    Participant

    You are welcome, Sonia. Anytime you want to express yourself here, please do 🙏

    🥺 Anita

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