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Wedding Woes

You still haven't learned what to confront and what to let go. That's not her fault.

Dear Prudence,

I’ve had a long-term childhood best friend. We’ve been friends since we were elementary school-aged, and given many of the personal challenges in her life, she progressed into being an undeniably toxic friend through most of our high school, college years, and a bit beyond.
Much of this stemmed from her jealousy over my family’s ample financial resources (she didn’t grow up poor by any means, but didn’t have many of the extravagances that I did). She engaged in stereotypical toxic behavior such as one-upmanship, gossiping, rumor spreading, discussing fluctuations in my weight, forming cliques and excluding me, boyfriend stealing, etc. I was a bit sheltered and didn’t have the emotional intelligence and confidence to deal with it very well at the time.

We are now in our mid- to late-thirties, and are married. We both have achieved many wonderful things in our life and she married a man whose finances are in line with what she’s always wanted. He’s allowed for her to have many of the extravagances she’s always craved, so that has perhaps settled some of her jealousy issues. Through our later adult years, I think she came to realize on some level that so much of her behavior toward me as a child wasn’t fair and she’s demonstrated remarkably generous gestures toward me (both emotional and financial) that have indicated she values our friendship deeply. I think she’s gone to therapy to address some of her issues, although I think there are still very many unaddressed issues lurking beneath the surface that I hope she’s still working to tackle. In the meantime, I’ve become better with boundary setting.

My issue is that I still feel a lot of deep shame around how I let her treat me growing up and am angry at myself for not cutting her off and giving her a piece of my mind when the time was right. Even though we’re still “very close friends,” (I was maid of honor at her wedding, she threw my baby shower, etc.), I find myself harboring deep anger and upset toward her and the faintest indication of a slight or toxicity. I know I should confront her directly when these things happen, but they’re usually minor and it’s only after many small slights that I realize she’s stepping back into some borderline toxic territory or taking me and our friendship for granted again. I don’t always feel emotionally safe in this friendship, but I can’t tell whether that’s due to my oversensitivity about the past. I have moments where I want to throw away this friendship, but then reconsider given our long history. Also, when our friendship is on track, it’s fun and satisfying. Do you feel this friendship is worth salvaging or is it time to distance myself once and for all?

—Confused Friend

Re: You still haven't learned what to confront and what to let go. That's not her fault.

  • I’m not saying LW is wrong, but I think it’s a little shitty to say these things about friend, insinuate that friend needs more therapy for “things lurking below the surface” when they clearly also need therapy themselves. It sounds like friend does feel bad and has tried to change, and LW waits for any moment they perceive as “bad behavior.” That’s not fair to friend either. 

    If you don’t want this friendship, then end it, but you have some work to do in therapy too, LW. 


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  • Oh and this letter ties in perfectly to that conversation about “therapy speak” we had a few weeks ago. 


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  • LW....have YOU been to therapy???  
  • The LW also needs to give themselves credit that they have become better at boundary setting.  Maybe if she acknowledges that, she can better forgive herself for being too wishy washy when she was younger.

    It sounds like both of these women have grown into better versions of themselves as they have matured.  I also think some therapy sessions might help the LW let go of the resentment they are holding.

    The LW can certainly end the friendship or let it wane into something more casual.  But it sounds like this person is a good friend now and I think that's worth fighting for.
    Wedding Countdown Ticker
  • banana468 said:
    LW....have YOU been to therapy???  
    Clearly not, or they had a shitty therapist.  Otherwise that LW would understand that therapy helps you cope with thoughts and behaviors and helps give you tools to retrain your brain when you find it going down a bad path.  But I'm not 'cured' from anxiety because I go to therapy, I just have the tools to recognize when anxiety brain is kicking in and I can use what I've learned to redirect my thought patterns.  It doesn't mean the train stays on the tracks all the time.

    Also, all relationships are a two-way street.  LW is not some innocent 'victim'.  It may have been lopsided in the past, but it sounds like friend has taken steps to right the ship.  What has LW done? 
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