There’s nothing quite as hurtful as when someone you love disappoints you, and when your friends let you down, it can feel like your whole world is falling apart. If you’ve ever been bruised by a broken friendship, this is one post you won’t want to miss!
What is it about female friendships that can send us right back to junior high? Most of the time I tend to think that at 37 years old, I am well past all that girl drama. I have lots of wonderful acquaintances, but only a very small handful of people I would consider my close friends and my “people.”
Those are the ones I trust completely, the ones I can pour my heart out to, the ones who I know will be there for me no matter what, and the ones who are immune to all the jealousy and pettiness and cattiness that so often crops up between us women. They are the ones for which no explanation is necessary when we haven’t talked for a while, the ones who can pick up exactly where we left off as if no time has passed. The ones who understand that life gets crazy sometimes, and don’t take it personally.
They are the ones who won’t ever let me down.
Except, of course, when they do.
What then?
Not so long ago I found myself in this exact situation. One of my very closest friends was suddenly not so close anymore, and I had no idea why. For a while, I tried to blow it off, to brush away that gnawing gut feeling that something wasn’t quite right. And then, when the feeling didn’t go away, I even called to apologize. I told her I wasn’t sure what I had done, but it just felt like something wasn’t right, and that I was genuinely sorry for anything I may have done that had caused the rift I was feeling. She laughed it off and assured me that it was nothing, but still, the uneasiness lingered.
I wondered if I might just be paranoid.
But as time went on, it became more and more clear that I wasn’t just being paranoid. The uneasiness remained and instead, this friend, the one I had trusted and leaned on, admired and looked up to, stayed up until all hours talking to, the one I would do anything for, was quite clearly no longer interested in my friendship. She stopped responding to emails and text messages and suddenly no longer had time to chat, even though I could see from her social media posts that she was making time for lots of other friends.
And then, at the moment I needed her most, she completely let me down. I had reached out to ask for help on a project that was very important to me, sent her both a long email explaining what was going on and two text messages asking her to check her email. She ignored them all.
It crushed me.
All at once, I felt like I was 14 years old again. I replayed every conversation, every email, every text message over and over again in my head. I cried. Then I got angry. Then I cried some more. What had I done?
Finally, feeling completely lost, I called my friend Edie to talk about it. As my accountability partner, I knew she would probably have some good advice. If nothing else, she would be a shoulder to cry on. I half hoped she would commiserate with me and reassure me that this other friend was just a jerk and I would be perfectly justified to never speak to her again.
But that’s not quite what happened.
While she did commiserate and fully understand exactly why I so was hurt and angry, her advice took me completely off guard.
“I think you should give her grace,” she said quietly.
Every part of me protested. “But she is the one who should apologize! She is the one who hurt me! She doesn’t deserve grace!”
“No, she doesn’t,” Edie agreed. “But neither do we.”
Oh.
Chagrined and humbled, I promised to try to give grace, even if I didn’t feel like it. And wouldn’t you know it? Not 24 hours later, an opportunity arose. The friend who had let me down now needed me.
Friends, I had to dig deep. The last thing on earth I felt like doing was helping the friend that had just wounded me without an ounce of remorse or a word of apology.
But I did it anyway.
And you know what? It didn’t fix our damaged friendship. There was no dramatic change of heart, no “aha” moment, no tearful reconciliation. Just the opposite, in fact—in the time since, she has let me down several more times, and I have simply had to come to terms with the fact that our friendship will probably never again be what it once was.
But although it didn’t fix anything, it did make me feel better. It took away the bitterness that was filling up my heart and allowed me to let go of the hurt and anger I was feeling. It has also allowed me to have a lot more compassion, and to see that perhaps the problem isn’t something I’ve done, but maybe just a result of something she is going through.
It often takes a whole lot of effort and intentionality to be a good friend. It means being willing to put yourself out there and to risk being hurt. And, inevitably, because we are making ourselves vulnerable, there will be times where our friends disappoint us and let us down. They will hurt our feelings. They will annoy us. They will forget to show up or say something stupid, or make a decision we don’t agree with. They will be flawed and imperfect and inadequate. In other words, they will be human.
And although we may be justified in our anger or our hurt, the truth is that there have probably been plenty of times when we’ve been the ones to let our friends down, the ones who said something careless, the ones who didn’t come through, the ones in need of grace. At least I know I have.
In order to have a friend, we must BE a friend, and ultimately that means showing grace when our friends don’t come through the way we want them to. It means forgiving when necessary, looking for the good instead of the bad, and treating them the way we’d like to be treated, the way we’ve already been treated.
Even when we don’t feel like it.
Other helpful posts:
- How to Set Better Boundaries with Your Friends
- Cultivate Meaningful Friendships
- Are You a Runner or a Fighter? (How to Stand Up for Yourself When it Counts)
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its better to move on when people give you their shit, its hard but necessary
The friend that did this to me wasn’t a girl he was a guy the first time he let me down was at the state swim meet then after that I needed him in the spring because I had a panic attack and I was home alone I forgave that one because he was in class but not the state swim meet he went out of town with his girlfriend and that’s what makes it unforgivable it makes me feel like I’m in high school too because usually guys in high school do that sometimes he takes days to respond to a text message I had to take his number out of my phone because I don’t know if he’s being a good friend or not I mean sure he’s in medical school and has two jobs and a girlfriend but he can still make time for me I don’t get why he doesn’t
I also ghosted a friend I had been very close to for a few years after she had insulted me. Perhaps it was unintentional, but she does it often and I grew tired. She apologized a few months later “in case I was offended”. I told her it was nothing and that we’re cool. I even tried to start some light-hearted convo. She has not responded since. I wanna do the right thing and reach out again but I’ve really enjoyed not speaking to her on the regular. I’m sure this is not someone who is gonna be my closest friend 20 years from now. But I also don’t wanna be petty. I wanna acknowledge the effort she made by “apologizing” but I also don’t want to restart a close friendship. How can I be a good Christian but also guard my heart and also not be in a fake or shallow friendship?
Thank you for this beautifully written article. I recently experienced this and am struggling with my emotions as a result. Mourning a friendship is hard, and I feel overwhelmingly inadequate that my friendship (and myself) were held in such low esteem by someone with who I remember a reciprocal connection and great memories with. Did I hurt this person? Why do they not value me anymore? How do our mutual friends feel? What could I have done that was unacceptable to this person? I read through a few articles looking for suggestions on healing, and this article was by far the most helpful. Thank you!
I felt heard by reading this article, as strange as that sounds!
Someone treats you like shit, so bottle it up under a beautiful-sounding word like grace, and keep on giving to someone who only takes? There are other ways to handle it graciously – like having a voice, and simply letting your friend know you her behavior made you feel. Only then can you be honest and have a real friendship, and then decide if she is able to reach out enough to mend things.