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Should I break up with a friend?

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  • This topic has 20 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 5 years ago by Anonymous.
Viewing 6 posts - 16 through 21 (of 21 total)
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  • #325811
    Marge
    Participant

    Hello Maria,

    I agree with Anita, you should find a way to detach yourself from this friendship. From your post, itā€™s draining you for years. Itā€™s a friendship that doenst fit with what you believe about human relationships.Ā Abusive or not, doesnā€™t matter the definition, what matters is how it makes you feel. And from what you wrote, doesnā€™t make you feel very good. When we feel bad about ourselves, itā€™s easier to be envious of what others have. You both grew up together but you have a good career, a nice boyfriend, a degree. While she still struggling to find her place. She might not be doing it consciously, but sheā€™s aggressive towards you out of spite like you said, that is clear.

    Your pasta traumas might be tricking you into compensate for what you ā€œthinkā€ you failed at: saving your friendā€™s life from the accident. But these are two different circumstances and you seem clever enough to realize this.Ā Free yourself from these obligations, this is not your burden, not your cross to carry.

    I hope youā€™re able to forgive yourself and live a life true to yourself.

    Keep us posted!

    Wish you the best!

    • This reply was modified 5 years ago by Marge.
    #325815
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Maria:

    As to why an intelligent, successful woman in her late 20s woman cares so much about what this woman (I will refer to her as W, forĀ  simplicity sake) thinks- I will lookĀ  into it now.

    First who is she: W is your age. You met her in high school and you refer to her as “one best friend from high school”. The two of you “used to do everything together and it was really nice”.

    When you went to college, started your first job, and had your first boyfriend, “she started to resent” you and your 1st boyfriend. She complained to you that you are “his puppet”. She expressed her resentment, aka anger, at your boyfriend and you were “caught in the crossfire”. You agreed with W, that indeed, you were “giving in too much” to 1st boyfriend’s wishes, and that while having him as your boyfriend, you were “less inclined to socialize with her”.

    She had her own boyfriend, or a man she hung out with. She went to parties every weekend, “use drugs and alcohol, have sex with random people etc.” Her boyfriend’s goal was to find a rich woman “to finance all his extravagances”, which he eventually did, and is now “a successful sugarĀ  babe”.

    Even though W and sugar babe separated, she “adopted this person’s lifestyle to herself”. You disapproved of that lifestyle and reasoned that “this way of life never sit well with who she is”, that she fell into it because she is “very impressionable”. You told her so but “she wouldn’t listen” and disagreed with you, telling you that “she was the one being free and I was in a cage”.

    But “after a couple of years living like this”, that is, partying, drugs, alcohol and sex with random people, “she developed depression and anxiety”. She told you about her depression and you (having “graduated, got a nice job and rented my first apartment” at the time), “did my best to be there for her but I couldn’t stop feeling guilty”, thinking that if you socialized with her more while with 1st boyfriend, she wouldn’t have gotten involved with sugar babe who led to her lifestyle, that led to her depression.

    You spent more time with her, then broke up with your 1st boyfriend and “grew closer again” to her. A few months later, she got involved with another boyfriend, a man who “convinced her to leave her job and take care of the house, while he paid her bills”. She moved in with him, “lost her self esteem, her independence and became very submissive” to him. You told her this arrangement was wrong for her, but “she wouldn’t listen”. Some time later, he kicked her out of his house.

    When that happened, you “helped her to move out.. encouraged her to get a new job and focus on her college”. She has done so, but is “very much behind in her career and has a long way to go until her graduation”. At this time, you “turned into .. her therapist”. She calls you, texts you about “every little crisis she has… from a guy ghosting ..her to her boss not replying to her good morning greetings. She demands a lot of attention, she gets angry if I don’t answer her texts or if I fail to meet her for a while.. and she criticizes me a lot about the way I deal with people and friendships”. Recently, while your current long distance boyfriend visited you, “she allegedly had a panic attack and I had to rush to rescue her”. She didn’t have panic attacks before or after his visit.

    One time you shared with her that you were upset that “very few people showed up to my bday party”. Her response: “she started lashing me out saying I had no right to be upset about it, since I don’t invest in these friendships”, and proceeded to accuse you for having arrived late to one of her previous birthdays (which happened to be on the week you got fired from a job and “didn’t really feel like celebrating anything”).

    “Her words really made me think if Iā€™m a shitty friend indeed. Iā€™m questioning myself about how Iā€™ve been dealing with people during my social life and if itā€™s right for me to be so detached. If I should invest more and put in more effort to maintain these people in my life instead of just going with the flow. This adds to the fact that I feel guilty for not being there for her when she needed and if Iā€™m a terrible person for being tired of her”.

    You wrote about W: “I don’t see her aggression towards her toxic ex, don’t notice her judgments on other friends and never saw her questioning the other sugar baby person if he was a good friend”.

    I will stop here and give you my input: understanding who she is, who you are, what part of your experience with her is your re-activated childhood experience, and so forth, is very difficult. It takes separating a messy mass intoĀ  pieces and then, like a jigsaw puzzle, trying to put the pieces together in such a way as to get a clear picture. I will try that next, suggesting possible pieces of that figurative jigsaw puzzle:

    1. When she complained to you that you were your first boyfriend’s puppet, you may have thought she wanted you to be independent and free. You didn’t consider, did you, that she wanted you to not be his puppet, but her puppet. She discovered a puppet and she wants that puppet for herself. She may have never had a puppet, she may have been other people’s puppet, but that doesn’t mean she wasn’t excited at the idea of ā€¦ having her own puppet.

    As her puppet, she calls and texts you anytime she wants to, demanding your immediate attention, repeatedly putting you in your place as her puppet by criticizing you and accusing you of doing things wrong, feeding that puppet with more puppet guilt, maintaining the puppet’s weakness and motivation to let her master pull the strings.

    There is nothing much that is more intoxicating for a weak, submissive woman (W) than to make at least one other person weak and submissive to her. (This is why so many weak and submissive mothers make their boys- and girls- weak and submissive to them).

    2. You interpreted her years long stint (still going on?) as a party girl: drug- enhances sex with random men as a lifestyle that “never sit well with who she is”. What if it did and does sit well with who she is. What if the vast majority of women in this lifestyle are not happy-go-lucky, and do get depressed, just like her?

    What if she stayed in this lifestyle after the man in her life was out of her life, for a long time after, not because she wasĀ “very impressionable”, but because she enjoyed it, as simple as that, similar to drug addicts who enjoy their habit at times and continue in spite of the pain and depression in between their highs.

    (And what if you wish you too attended parties like that).

    3. “I’ve been going to therapy for about two years… I don’t feel like I’m the bad guy in general, but I do feel like she would never understand how I feel and would classify me as such”-

    -by the pronoun she, you meant W. I am thinking the pronoun may mean your mother/ parents, projected into W. I am thinking your role as the good sibling, the good daughter, motivated to compensate your parents for having a bad son (your brother) did not match who you really are. I don’t mean that you are a bad guy. What I mean is that you had to pretend you are too good. And you knew that you are not as (unrealistically and unnaturally) good as you presented yourself to your parents.

    I think that it is this early knowing, that you are not as good as you presented yourself as a child, that is fueling your decades long, by this point, doubting of your own nature, fearing that you are the bad guy.

    “When I was a teen my brother started to bring troubles and I felt it was my obligation to bring my parents joy, so I tried to meet all their expectations and compensate for my brother’s flaws”- a teenager doesn’t know moderation. To compensate for your brother’s flaws, or badness, you had to be overly good.

    Your parents failed to see that this overly good role was going to hurt you in life, keeping you in a cage of sorts, a cageĀ  of being-too-good .. for your own good.

    Somehow, W embodies, for you, an authority figure, like a mother/ a parent. You project your earlier life major doubt about your goodness into her, wanting her to take away all her suggestions that you are a bad person and make you feel that you are a good person. It is as if your quest to be good is in her hands. And I suppose it has been in her hands for a long time. You can’t let her go, because if you do, you will be suspended in badness, or in great doubt in this regard.

    Why is the matter in her hands, given she is evidently the least qualified to decide on your goodness vs badness? The only reason I find is here: “she makes me feel responsible for her well being. It’s not like she makes me believe that I need her to survive, she makes me believe that SHE needs me to survive”. I figure that your mother/ parents made you believe that they need you to survive your brother. In reality, you needed them to survive, as all children need their parents, not the other way around.

    I figure you have projected your mother/ parents into W and you are stuck with her, waiting for her, as a parent figure, to take away your suspicion that you are bad and replace it with confidence that you are indeed, good.

    In summary: resolve the question of you being good vs bad, and you cut off the strings holding you to this woman. It will free you from unrealistic expectations from yourself, to be overly good and allow you some of the comfort and freedom to be .. not overly good.

    (The tragic accident you witnessed, as tragic as it was, I don’t see it at this point as relevant to the origin of your basic conflict of good vs bad, which I suggested here).

    anita

     

    #325853
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Hi Anita and Marge, how are you doing today?

    Just to clarify, the Sugar Babe is a gay guy that we both used to hang out with during high school and early twenties. I did went to parties with them but at some point, I decided this life wasn’t for me and left. Sugar Babe became very angry and stopped talking to me all together, but honestly, I never truly cared. I do know he used to bad mouth me for W and again, I never cared about his opinions and I really felt way better for not having me in my life.

    To make it more clear, I’ll answer your points out of order:

    2) About the parties, she stopped doing it all together after Sugar Babe started his relationship. That’s when she dived in depression and eventually found herself with her ex bf. And like I said in the beginning, I did attend parties like that at some point so I know with certainty that this is not what I want for myself. But you’re probably right about her enjoying it…She compared her life to sugar babe once and said that life was not fair because he achieved his goal and she didn’t. So his life is probably better looking in her eyes than mine – as I have to work and pay for my bills. Another reason why she didn’t try to replicate my lifestyle until recently. Also, the fact that she now needs to work and “be more like me” so to speak, brings her the feeling that life is unfair. I have no sure about this, it’s just something out of the top of my head. Another thing that comes to mind is that maybe she wishes I was more like Sugar Babe and I refuse that.

    1) About the puppet comment, what occured to me after a while was that she wanted to have what I had, both her and Sugar Babe and I after this we stopped talking for around a year. But I never saw her as an authority figure, on the contrary actually, I feel responsible for her and that’s what makes me attached I guess. The sense that I have the obligation to show her how real life works because no one will. This is the confusing part for me, because I don’t feel submissive towards her at all but I can clearly see that she puts me in as the authority figure when she comes asking for advice on how to manage her life. Her calls and texts are about her little crisis, her career, her love life…she calls and texts because she wants me to say what she needs to do. Using the comparison you used, it’s almost like I am the mother here and I feel like I can’t abandon my child without being a bad mother and while she feels entitled to my time. This is where I can see the codependency, because I allowed her as this was probably feeding my ego. So this can be an explanation for why I care about what she thinks, a mother cares about how the child sees her.

    3) My therapist brought up the comparison to my mom and yes, I used to seek validation from her. I would follow whatever my mom thought was right, even if it felt wrong for me. I always thought that she knew better than me and that she had the best intentions for me – which I assumed she had but that doesn’t mean she had all the answers. Whenever I needed to make a decision I would go ask her opinion first, and follow it. I did an extensive work with my counselor about this matter and I actually feel free from the need of validation from her. I still go to my mom for her opinions but I don’t take her word as the one universal truth anymore, I’m able to make my own decisions.

    So when I told W about how I didn’t like being criticized by her, at first she tried to argue that I needed to learn how to accept when people disagree with me (which is another critic). My answer was that I am a very open minded person and I love to have debates, expand my views about the world. I don’t have problems with people disagreeing with me but I do have problems with being overly criticized. I said she didn’t have to agree with me but she had no right to decide how I feel and I was precisely telling her that I wasn’t happy with her words and actions. I ended the conversation and we stopped talking for a couple of weeks and that’s when she sent me a message saying she was sorry, that she was hard on herself and tended to replicate this towards closest people…that she does this with everyone in her mind but I was the one that she actually verbalized these opinions to. I “forgave” her and she was doing well for some months until she came up with the comment about friendships.

    But I confess it felt good to not have her in my life during those weeks and it was the same feeling I had about Sugar Babe…like a weight was out of my shoulders. Maybe I’m failing here because I’m allowing her to put the responsibility of her life into me and in some twisted way it makes me feel important – probably me trying to be like my mom?

    She rationalizes everything I say, like she was talking back so I feel frustrated…that Im failing in raising my child. This is the point where I understand some of the things her ex said about her, again. I was quick to judge him but I realized that she was searching for a parent figure in him as well…he was a lot older and he used to tell her what to do and where to go. She talked a lot less to me when they were together.

    Now answering Marge’s input, I think you’re right about me trying to be a superhero and as I feel Im failing, I try to compensate and try harder – invest more. This also related to what Anita said about me, to free myself of unrealistic expectations. This is my doing but definitely not my burden.

    I came here searching for other people inputs about social life and I understand that my view of social life and social circles are accurate. I am certain I need to end this friendship and I will do so but I feel more prepared knowing that this is not how friends should be related.

    #325863
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Maria:

    In your recent post you wrote: “we both used to hang out with (sugar babe)ā€¦ I did went to parties with them”. In your original post you wrote: “she then started to hang out with (sugar babe).. They would go out to parties”-

    -why do you think is the reason you stated originally: “she started to hang out with (sugar babe)”, and not: we started hanging out with sugar babe?

    (I am asking not for the purpose of making you feel uncomfortable, but for the purpose of exploring further. If you want to explore further, do answer me, otherwise, you are welcome to not answer).

    anita

     

    #325877
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Hi Anita,

    I introduced them to each other when we were fresh out of school and during this short period between school and college I went to parties with them. I noticed there were alcohol, drugs and men around but we wouldn’t indulge in these things at the time. We were kinda naive and young but soon after college started for me and I opted out.

    I think I used she and they because after that, the two got really close and I wasn’t part of their lives anymore – this is when I distanced myself. They got cars (meaning more mobility), money and they were legal so the parties became heavier and that’s when the drugs and casual sex became normalized.

    #325885
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Maria:

    In your original post you wrote: “She then started to hang out with someone that wasn’t a very good influence”. In your most recent post you wrote: “I introduced them to each other when we were fresh out of school”, them being W and sugar babe-

    – when you introduce information with a negative connotation, you take yourself out of it: she started to hang out with a bad guy, not you-and-her, only her, presenting it as if you didn’t introduce him toĀ  her, as if you weren’t there.

    In your original post you wrote about W and sugar babe: “They would go to parties.. use drugs and alcohol”. In your recent post you wrote about you and W: “we wouldn’t indulge in these things at the time. We were kinda naĆÆve and young”-

    – again, when there is a negative connotation, you take yourself out of it: it was them who attended those parties, not you. Then, a correction: you were there too.

    In your original post, she got into drugs, alcohol and random sex right away, with him, going to those parties. Later on, a correction: you were there, but you and W were naĆÆve, didn’t do drugs, alcohol and random sex.

    Well, Maria- I can’t count on your account of the story. You are quite motivated to make yourself look good, take yourself out of bad-looking situations. I am thinking this is part of your good-sibling/ good-daughter/ good-girl role. This role has a significant element of retelling a story (your original post is the retelling) so to make yourself look good, and hand the badness to the others (W and sugar babe).

    anita

     

     

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