Home→Forums→Relationships→Outgrowing my friends? Losing friends?
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Anonymous.
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April 22, 2016 at 6:57 am #102445
Joe
ParticipantDom
It’s okay to outgrow friends – you deserve to be surrounded by people who understand and appreciate you for who you are. Life is too short to spend time with people you really don’t enjoy spending time with. You shouldn’t have to feel guilty about this. Friendships should be a two-way street about support and bringing people up, not keeping them down.
I’ve had some really crummy friends over the years, and this year I came to the end of a one-sided, very toxic friendship. I soon realised that we just didn’t gel together any more. It’s okay to be friends with somebody who holds different aspirations in life but the toxic friendship I mentioned didn’t seem to understand this – he wanted to stay stuck in the past, he was too critical of the fact I wanted to make more of an effort to become healthy and he would bad-mouth me to my other friend about this. I’ve learned not to spend too much time with people who are too critical of other people and those who gossip and talk about people behind their back – they will only drag you down into their drama and into their level.
As for making new friends – what are your interests and hobbies? Could you make friends from volunteering for some community or charity project? You could also check out meetup – I believe it’s a site where a group of people with the same interests arrange meet-ups and other fun stuff like that (I haven’t checked it out yet).
April 22, 2016 at 9:22 am #102447Anonymous
GuestDear Dom:
We, human beings, are animals, and not solo type animals, but herd animals. We need to belong to a group, starting with our family group and extending later to a group of friends. You have been one in a herd, this group of friends. The group engaged each other with heavy gossip as means of staying together, as the condition to stay in the group/ herd. You don’t like that condition anymore (and I agree that it is unhealthy to gossip and to be exposed to ongoing gossip) but you … didn’t outgrow your need to belong to a group. And you never will as a social/ herd animal that you are (that we all are).
It is possible that a few people in that group don’t like gossiping themselves but they are afraid to be kicked out of the group if they don’t participate in gossip. Nobody wants to be kicked out of the herd without having another herd, at the least, waiting.
You are already looking for a new herd with different rules, and don’t know where and how to find a new group to belong to. I have another suggestion to go with it: make your feelings known clearly within this existing group, clearly and not in a judgmental, condemning way. After all, there might be someone there who already doesn’t like the gossiping and would prefer another condition to stay in the group, another glue to hold everyone together.
So let them all know you don’t like to gossip and instead, let them know what you do want to talk about, be specific. Say; for example, I would like to talk about X.
Basically, this way, you are starting a new herd within the old herd. Maybe someone will join you by talking about X. A herd of 2 may be enough to hold you over until you find more people with similar values.
anita
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