I’ve had it done to me; I’ve done it to someone (poorly, I might add). I have relatives who have gone through it, and several friends. We’ve all probably gone through it from one side or the other, but nobody can tell you the best way to break up with a friend.
You’ve grown apart, you are no longer gelling, or the relationship has gotten downright malignant, but only you seem to really know it. With romances, it can be hard to explain why a relationship needs to end, but with a friendship, it’s nearly impossible – there is no “goal” to a friendship, where if you feel the relationship will not achieve the goal, you’d better end it. Breaking it off then seems like a pure rejection of this person, as a person, whether that’s your experience of it or not. What’s the point, then, in ending a friendship?
Friendships can cause you just as much pain as romantic relationships. It’s painful if you feel you are not really accepted for exactly who you are, and it’s painful if you feel like you are having trouble accepting your friend for exactly who they are. It’s painful if you feel you aren’t getting as much as you are giving in a friendship, and it is painful if you feel you are unable to give what your friend seems to need. And it’s horrible to feel that, whatever combination of these feelings you are having, your friend will not understand and will therefore be truly hurt by what you are about to do.
Unfortunately, there is no good way to break up with a friend. The whole reason you have to do it is that he or she doesn’t understand the problem – otherwise the friendship would blow up, or simply melt away effortlessly, as they sometimes do. This makes a good conversation with an amicable conclusion almost impossible. Unfortunately, as with everything, you can be sensitive to your friend’s experience, but you cannot be responsible for your friend’s reaction. You can try to be both clear and kind, but you can’t control his or her interpretation. So the focus has to be on you. What takes the best care of you? What form of communication will be the most productive? To what extent and in what form would I best be able to explain the problem? How can I do this in a way I won’t regret later? What needs to be said, and what is better left unsaid? What part of the problem can I own? Who do I want to be in this situation?
It is possible that there is almost no way to end a friendship that won’t be accompanied by some form of regret. There will almost always be a sense that this friend deserved better, and there will always be pain over hurting their feelings. Or there may be a lingering question mark about whether the relationship could have been repaired. Maybe you will even feel hurt or unsatisfied with your friend’s response. In the end, all you can do is stand in your truth – you know when a relationship has become a negative force in your life, and it is your responsibility to yourself, AND to your friend, to choose to let that go.
How do you break up with a friend?
January 27, 2009The Personal in a Public Forum
January 12, 2009 We are so spread out today. Friends and families who, back in “the day”, would have stayed within coffee distance now have to move where the work is. Even when we live within that distance, the increase in the hours that go into a normal work day make it difficult to make that coffee date a priority. So we are so grateful for the opportunities the internet provides to stay connected and share with everyone we’ve chosen to include in our communities. Blogs, Facebook, Twitter… we can better keep track of what’s going on in the lives of our “people”, and we can make sure no one is left in the dark about the basic goings-on in our own lives. It’s a wonderful and useful adaptation to changing circumstances.
But there are aspects about this public sharing that are challenging to our personal relationships, and I’m afraid we may have to learn how to handle these challenges the hard way. This blog, for instance, whose purpose differs from these social-networking sites, has become a real challenge for me in this sense. Though not meant to be a forum for posting my personal news, in order for my writing to be meaningful it has to be in some part personal. But how do I address these personal issues without possibly offending friends and family for making these personal stories public? This has, in addition to the overwhelming amount of writing I have had to do for school, been a large factor in my not having written in a while. I am having trouble reconciling this issue for myself.
Social-networking sites like Facebook leave us vulnerable to the same kind of offense. We may post something publically that some friends are really happy to have access to, but a specific person may wish we had not shared that way. And there are additional concerns. The “mass” quality of the choice to share information this way makes these communications less intimate, less special, and therefore can devalue the relationship. Friends may be grateful for the information, but unhappy that they had to find it out “that way”. It encourages a lazy, impersonal approach to our relationships, and gives us opportunities to cop out when facing personal discussions about difficult things. It can also seem to devalue the information itself – when we casually throw something on our Facebook wall, this brief and public communication can give the impression that we have a cavalier attitude towards our own news.
These are all manageable issues, and I am in no way taking a stance against social-networking and blogs. The intention of these constructs is to allow us to stay connected and close. But if we can remember to value the relationship first, and use the social network to serve the relationship, hopefully we can avoid sacrificing relationships for the sake of the social network.
Posted by randieshane
Posted by randieshane