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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

My best friend of nearly 20 years and I have fallen out

555 replies

Mondura · 02/12/2025 14:04

a long one..

My friend and I have known each other for 17 years. We both live in the UK. We’ve had a wider friendship circle since our twenties when we met but ppl move away and their lives end up going in different directions so it's not a strong group of friends anymore. I’d say she’s been a constant, supportive presence in my life throughout these years and we’ve never fallen out until a couple of months ago. I’m not even sure how things got to this point. She is turning 40 soon (a few months before me) and together with a third friend we were trying to organise something to celebrate her birthday. We all had some ideas, put them in the group chat but she decided she just wanted something simple, like going away to a cottage, just the three of us, have a few drinks, dinner, stay a night or two and just chat, laugh relax, etc. Great, nothing complicated or so I thought. Our third friend and I suggested a country pub with rooms which we’ve both been very impressed by previously, it had other locations in the UK, great service, lovely atmosphere, we were very keen to make the most of it. Our third friend sent some links and she highlighted some of the rooms have two beds, she’ll try and find maybe a family room, but can’t see a cottage on the grounds with multiple rooms. Fine, nothing has been decided and I said I’m happy to take a separate room maybe next to them and don’t mind the extra cost if they prefer sharing the two-bed one. We’ve known each other for a long time, all three of us know that I can afford a bit more in life in general. It hasn’t always been the case, we worked hard for the money we have, run a business, take risks etc. that’s not to say, they are poor, they can both afford luxury holidays, meals out, lovely clothes etc, so none of these things have ever really been an issue. My friend, the birthday girl, didn’t reply to my suggestion to book two rooms, we were all in a rush to do things that morning anyway, we knew it wasn’t going to be finalised so just left it. She then sent another link to the chat a few days later with an Airbnb link for another, cheaper cottage. We all liked it, lovely place, location, great! I was going away a few days later but was keen to finalise something for my friend so we'd have it locked in the calendar and had this short getaway to look forward to so instead of packing and getting myself organised, I prioritised this trip and started my morning looking into booking this. I told them that I’m happy to advance the payment and they can just transfer it later, I just wanted to look through the listing again to make sure it’s all to our liking and needs and I’m ready to book it. My friend messaged back that it’s fine and if it’s ok if she transfers her share the following month. I said ok. Then I was looking for the room configuration on the listing which was a bit hard to figure out, but I found it and it was a cottage with two double bedrooms and a living room with a sofa (not pull out). I sent in a screenshot with the caption “this one only has two bedrooms”. This is where things kicked off. She seemed to have gotten really upset and replied that I should just find another one then. I didn’t reply as I sensed that she was upset. We generally text or call each other almost every day, often multiple times a day, so I can read between the lines, she was not happy. I said I can look for something else, but not until I come back from my upcoming trip a week later so we can park this for now if that’s what she wants. She then messaged again saying it’s best to cancel the whole thing, all of us have different needs, she doesn’t want to go away any more, just a simple dinner is fine. I didn’t reply, because I was busy getting myself ready, I was already short on sleep and had a lot to do, I didn’t want to engage in discussing it further. It was clear that the booking wasn’t going to go ahead then. So I didn’t respond, she then private messaged me and said the same thing that it’s best to not go ahead at all with the plans. It’s her call of course, but then I replied saying I don’t understand and I don’t think it’s fair to now just shut it all down when we’ve all planned so much and looked forward to this ( took forever to find dates that suited us all). We were ready to book and it sounded like the ‘everyone has different needs’ is aimed at me as if my needs were too much. I said I don’t mind looking for a bigger cottage and I’ll just pay the difference for the third room if that’s the issue as it’s no problem for me. I was very polite and I tried to come up with a solution though I didn’t really understand why she got so agitated so suddenly. She then became pretty abusive saying she knows I can afford it, I rub this under their noses all the time. Last time when our other friend sent a link, I also told them I can afford a separate room for myself and that’s it’s not cool and I should really have a think about how I communicate because I come across entitled. I was shocked and started crying. I was totally oblivious to this if it was the case and really I thought I'm just booking a trip for my best friend and doing my best to be flexible.I scrolled back in the messages to see if I was rude or what exactly I said but I genuinely just stated that I don’t mind going for an extra room for myself. She knows I’m an awful sleeper, I send her screenshots of my sleep stats often and we analyse it together, I usually need a dark, quiet room and although we have shared rooms and even bed together in the past, I’d rather pay for my comfort levels approaching our 40s if we can afford it. Clearly her main issue was not me wanting a separate room, but it was deeper than that. It just seems she never expressed these to me. I stopped responding. I saw her last message later on where she says I’ve been the one person who is closest to her in the past 20 years and that she loves me, sort of like a half-assed apology where she probably realised how overboard she went. But I just couldn’t continue writing anything after all this and I had a lot to do that day anyway. I shouldn't have started the day with this booking as I had a lot on. She then tried to ring me in the afternoon and again in the evening, but I was on the school run in the afternoon, then took a sedative for the night (I don't often do this), but I had to calm down somehow and it was important that I had a good night's sleep before an early start to my flight. Over a week went past and I didn't contact her. In fact I muted her chat and the other chat too, which had all three of us in originally as I just couldn't deal with the drama plus I was away with my daughter, I didn't really have time to myself to dive into this whole 'who said what and why' saga.I also didn't want this to ruin my time away with my daughter though it definitely overshadowed it. I cried a lot at night or when she couldn't see me. I also didn't really know what to write tbh. I don't often post on social media, so whenever I snap pictures of what I do, where I am, what I eat etc, I just send a few to some selected friends and my husband. So this friend would've in normal circumstances received a lot of pics from my trip away, but I just had such a block in me. She said I rub things under her nose, so I didn't want to send her a pic of us sitting at the airport lounge. On arrival we went out of dinner to a new spot she actually specifically talked about before. I didn't want to send pics of the food. What if we spent too much? Would that be rubbing it under her nose? Suddenly everything I did felt like I was in the wrong and I was no longer able to share my life with her, because who knows what else I'd done in the past which was too much for her to handle? So I basically just parked this whole thing in my mind to deal with later and tried to enjoy my time away. A few days after getting back home, she messaged me again asking if I cared to discuss what happened at all. I replied politely and told her that I don't really know what to say and it still hasn't settled enough in me plus I'm busy catching up on life and work after returning from my trip (which she knew the length of) She said we should meet in person to discuss, but I told her I genuinely don't have time to know go out in the evening for this as I've only just got back and my other daughter terribly missed me and I just generally have a lot on. She became very accusatory again especially about the fact that I didn't respond at all for nearly two weeks (she said two weeks, it was a week and a half) and somehow I ended up reading more of how I did something wrong and how bad she felt during this time and that I shouldn't have just disappeared like that. I tried not to take offence, but it seemed a bit harsh from someone who was trying to mend things. So I told her I felt bad too, I just couldn't bring myself dealing with what she said as I feel like I can't be myself with her anymore. We try to text now regularly, but it's somewhat forced. It feels very awkward and I don't enjoy sharing anything with her. We got our car stolen a few months back and we recently got a brand new, better car and she was very interested in it previously. The car arrived after our fall out and she casually asked what it's like to drive it. I told her I think it's best not to analyse it as the new car is too expensive and I don't want to rub anything under her nose. She then stopped replying for a few days. I reached out afterwards to meet in person finally in the hope that I'd feel differently about her or I don't really know what I expected really. We met and I don't think we discussed anything in more detail or better just because we were face to face. There was some crying, but mostly we just both tried to make the other one understand why we are hurt. We left, I texted her again the next day and we messaged since, but it's not the same. It's awful actually. I'm only texting out of some obligatory feeling. I lost a very good friend over such a stupid thing and I can't believe it's happening. We have a few things in the calendar lined up, which we haven't discussed. We take turns spending Christmas lunch at each others every year and it's their turn to host this year. We have shows booked and our children are similar ages, they are good friends and we always maintained that they see each other regularly. I think she wants the friendship to continue, but something has broken between us and I guess I can keep going like this; in a forced, uncomfortable manner but I'm looking for advice on how to get past it and feel free and comfortable again spending time with her. Right now I always just feel like any moment I can say or do something that constitutes entitled and will cross her boundaries over what is or isn't allowed. If she wasn't important to me, I could just let this all go, but I'm really struggling to let my hurt and anger, but mostly sadness go away so we can just be happy friends again planning our next adventure.

OP posts:
Differentforgirls · 02/12/2025 22:46

IMustDoMoreExercise · 02/12/2025 22:05

I think she would.

Can I ask you a serious question? Does it make you feel good if you think people are jealous of you?

I just don’t get it.

MowingMachine · 02/12/2025 22:48

Whatsthatsheila · 02/12/2025 22:45

Public Service Announcement:

no medals will be awarded for longest post/response

TLDR: you didn’t win an award for a psychological breakdown of the situation.

Public Service Announcement:

Every time you somebody quotes the AI slop, we have to scroll through it again

Whatsthatsheila · 02/12/2025 22:51

MowingMachine · 02/12/2025 22:48

Public Service Announcement:

Every time you somebody quotes the AI slop, we have to scroll through it again

I noticed that after I posted it - bloody annoying 🙄

it won’t let me freaking edit it to take the quote out - 👎

Gremlins101 · 02/12/2025 22:52

I read to half way and then skimmed.

You are being unreasonable. You ignored her for a week and a half when she tried to make amends and now you are saying your friendship is broken even though you are chatting, meeting up, and have things planned together. With kindness, you need to chill out and give your friend a hug. You sound a bit uptight (probably the lack of sleep). And after 20 odd years you should be able to be frank with each other.

TidyCyan · 02/12/2025 22:54

beAsensible1 · 02/12/2025 22:38

Honestly.

as if we need more infinite scroll ai slop!

Anyone posting "ChatGPT says this" like a badge of honour and posting the whole load of nonsensical AI slop drivel should be immediately banned.

MowingMachine · 02/12/2025 22:54

Whatsthatsheila · 02/12/2025 22:51

I noticed that after I posted it - bloody annoying 🙄

it won’t let me freaking edit it to take the quote out - 👎

Edited

😆

Berluddy AI slop. On top of having to wade through the OP!

ElmBeechOak · 02/12/2025 22:54

OP, don’t give up - you had a good friendship. I agree with the PP who suggested talking to your friend about where the limit is re sharing your good fortune so you don't have to doubt again. Also, you could ask her to tell you more about how she felt when you did share your good fortune, and tell her that you didn’t realise it would upset her.

You could apologise for not having texted briefly at the beginning of your holiday to say that you were on holiday with your daughter and would be in touch ASAP. I’d be hurt if somebody ghosted me for 10 days.

Then try to tell her how you felt using ‘I’ statements. ‘When you did X, I felt Y.’ It’s a good aim to seek first to understand, then to be understood.

I think it’s worth persevering with this.

Animatic · 02/12/2025 22:58

I feel you wouldn't be where you are if you sorted this out in the first 48 hours instead of ignoring and crying at night (or whatever else you did there), and then making comments like "the car is too expensive to discuss".

Morecoombe · 02/12/2025 23:09

nomas · 02/12/2025 22:11

  • 3 person girls' trip planned for friend 1's 40th birthday
  • friends 1 and 2 happy to share a room
  • friend 1 suggested a two bed cottage
  • OP kicked off at no 3 bed cottage
  • friend 1 got upset at OP being showy
  • friend 1 asked OP about OP's new car
  • OP told friend 1 new car is too expensive to discuss
  • friend 1 went quiet and now lukewarm to OP's advances

thx , sounds like mountain out of molehill

also “car is too expensive to discuss” wtf?

Newpensioner · 02/12/2025 23:11

Mondura · 02/12/2025 15:15

Gosh, I popped to the shops and my phone blew up. Sorry about lack of paragraphs, I wrote this in two sittings, had to save it elsewhere and then copy pasted it. I can’t figure out how to edit it now. And shorten it as some of you kindly suggested.

I will summarise response for you. YADBU, your friend deserves better than you. HTH

Morecoombe · 02/12/2025 23:12

MowingMachine · 02/12/2025 22:03

RTFT

I would but it’s TLDR

MowingMachine · 02/12/2025 23:12

Morecoombe · 02/12/2025 23:09

thx , sounds like mountain out of molehill

also “car is too expensive to discuss” wtf?

OP was making a sarky comment back to her ex friend.

Honestly, although the OP was long, bullet points are not your friend.

Beesandhoney123 · 02/12/2025 23:16

If you spent hours sobbing and not sleeping because you were so distressed, why didn't you just phone her?

You like everything being about you, you ghosted her, you don't care its her birthday coming up and you've held the power to upset her for weeks. I don't think you are best friends. I think you are long term friends with an Co dependency on each other which is nothing to do with friendship at your age and stage of life.

I don't understand why you message your sleep stats, and you both analyse them. Really? I couldn't be arsed to collect and analyse my own, never mind about a friend. She must really like you or you are in convo with a bot and haven't realised.

Go and see her, apologise and see where you both want to go from there.

ForFunGoose · 02/12/2025 23:21

You should have tossed for the sofa bed with the other friend and let the birthday girl enjoy the weekend.

I have more disposable income than most of my friends and never bring it into play.

Schoolchoicesucks · 02/12/2025 23:30

Sorry OP, but I think you are the one driving this minor disagreement into ending a decades long close friendship.

The actual weekend away booking - if originally the other 2 were willing to share a room in the pub with rooms why was a 2 bed cottage unacceptable? You seem to have assumed they wouldn't share a room in a cottage without asking. It stings a bit when people dismiss your ideas, your friend felt frustrated that the booking was going nowhere and was snippy with you.
By not taking her calls to try and discuss it and then not replying to her while you were away you made it into a bigger deal. And by repeating her phrase about rubbing nose into it you are dragging it all up again.

If you have spent every Christmss together for years you have clearly been close. Now you are wallowing in a "things have changed between us" mode.

You can decide to clear the air, accept that neither of you behaved in an amazingly gracious way, but to continue with your friendship. Or to decide that you can't possibly go back to the way things were and lose a close friend.

TeaRoseTallulah · 02/12/2025 23:34

ExtraOnions · 02/12/2025 14:20

What a load of fuss about nothing.

essentially ..

You were going for a weekend away, it all got complicated due to dates / location. She found somewhere she liked (eventually) you said it wasn’t suitable, she got fustrated .. suggested you find a different one.. you ignored that message.. when you do eventually reply you said you will look for something when you get back in a weeks time.. after that she said “let’s just cancel the whole thing” (I would probably have done the same)

I think you made it worse by essentially ghosting her for 2 weeks.

Don’t keep saying that you can “pay more” .. I’ve got more income than people I go away with, I never mention that I can afford “better” that the level they have chosen. I make a real effort to not come over as “lady bountiful” - maybe you do make it sound a bit “I’m considerably better off than you”

She tried several times to get in touch and build bridges .. you turned them all down, with a list of fairly weak excuses.

Look, you can do one of two things .. you can think “you know what, we couid both have done better, let’s learn and move on” or you can say “nope, it’s all gone to far, I’m done” .. it’s up to you.

You are not blameless in all this.

This sums up my feelings. I think not messaging her for so long when away probably really pissed her off/hurt her.

Lalalol · 02/12/2025 23:37

5128gap · 02/12/2025 14:49

Honestly? From an outside perspective, your friend was irritated by your references to being able to afford things, spoke out of turn, which was wrong and regretted, and then proceeded to jump through hoops for days trying to mend things while you cold shouldered her. So while she was wrong initially, you have certainly evened the score.
I have friendships of 50 years duration and they are part of the joy and fabric of my life. I can't say how precious they are. We have had our spats and hurt each other along the way, because we're human and humans aren't perfect and mess up.
However unless the issue comes from malice or other deal breaking flaw, then some tolerance is required if you're going to go the distance. And is so worth it if you can.
So, my advice is to meet up again soon. Make it something light with external stimulus, an event, the theatre, rather than a one on one conversation that could get intense, which is not a great idea if it feels fragile. Just enjoy something together and remember why you like this woman.
The more positive experiences you can layer on top of this unfortunate one, the less significant it will seem.

This is the best advice you’re going to get IMO

If your intention was never to hurt her and you believe the same of your friend then I’d just move on

sunshineday850 · 02/12/2025 23:39

You don't come across that you deal with conflict very well OP. Surely you can see ignoring her for over a week after she reached out multiple times and then getting a petty dig at her about the car won't help things.

You've both hashed it out, met in person and cried about it so just try to move on from what was said if you want the friendship to continue.

JustSawJohnny · 02/12/2025 23:44

You're getting a bit of a hard time here, I think.

Yes, the post rambled on quite a bit but it's clear that what she said really hurt you and showed that she has some simmering resentment.

It's perfectly reasonable that you now don't feel comfortable sharing your day to day life with her as you worry she'll think you're showing off.

She threw her toys over the accommodation issue and overdid it with her bitchy comments but unfortunately you ignoring her for a week or so means you also did something wrong in her eyes and she's more than ready to put all of the blame on you.

I'd let her.

Sometimes relationships change, OP.

It's a shame but if interactions continue to be forced and awkward then what's the point?

TheAutumnCrow · 02/12/2025 23:49

beAsensible1 · 02/12/2025 22:43

@Littlewiseone

you cannot be serious with that everlasting scroll

People keep bloody quoting it as well ffs.

TealSapphire · 03/12/2025 00:00

YABU. Crying on your holiday, rather then sorting it there and then. Dragging out the drama because your other daughter missed you - it takes five minutes to text or call your friend. It seems like you're going to hold this one comment over your friends head till the end of time. I hope she has other friends who actually care about her in her life.

Catsbooks345 · 03/12/2025 00:13

TealSapphire · 03/12/2025 00:00

YABU. Crying on your holiday, rather then sorting it there and then. Dragging out the drama because your other daughter missed you - it takes five minutes to text or call your friend. It seems like you're going to hold this one comment over your friends head till the end of time. I hope she has other friends who actually care about her in her life.

This is a good point. The ignoring and dismissing her efforts to build bridges comes across as a bit cruel OP even if that wasn't the intention and in reality you were just protecting your peace. It only exacerbated the whole thing causing her ( and you) more distress. The excuses not to reply etc are weak. I think you can resolve this. Good friends are worth holding onto , good luck .

Calliopespa · 03/12/2025 00:13

If I've got this right op, it sounds as though she possibly has some pent-up resentment of your better financial position which ended up getting the better of her, but she has tried to reach out and make it up but you are the one who now feels the friendship cannot go forward because it isn't the same?

Pent-up jealousy isn't a thing for her to be proud of but neither is drawing out a disagreement after someone has made overtures to fix it something for you to be proud of. Bringing up what she said at every opportunity (like when she asked about your car) is going to mean the friendship can't work.

You need to decide what you want: get over it and accept she has reached out and is sorry, or move on and accept it is over.

I see why you felt hurt but she can't unsay it op.

Calliopespa · 03/12/2025 00:19

Littlewiseone · 02/12/2025 21:12

Here’s what’s actually going on underneath all that chaos — because this is NOT about a cottage, a bedroom configuration, or even money. This is a classic friendship rupture triggered by something symbolic, not the practical issue itself.

Let me break it down clearly and compassionately.


What’s going on for the friend? (Not the poster — the friend)

  1. There is deep, unspoken resentment that has been building for YEARS

Her reaction makes zero sense in proportion to the “trigger” (the cottage with two bedrooms).
That tells you the trigger is not the cause — it’s the excuse.

The friend has:

Unprocessed feelings about money differences

And probably the power balance within the friendship

Mixed with turning 40 (identity, comparison, life evaluation)

Mixed with general emotional dysregulation

She’s been holding these feelings privately, and they finally burst out in an ugly, misdirected way.

This is why the reaction was:

Sudden

Disproportionate

Personal

Accusatory

And then followed by shame and panic

Classic emotional spillover.


  1. The friend is actually envious and ashamed — and projecting

Her line "you rub it under our noses" is pure projection.

Here’s what projection looks like:

I feel insecure about something

I don’t want to admit that

So I accuse YOU of causing my discomfort

She is struggling with:

Comparing herself to the poster financially

Feeling “less than” (even if she actually isn’t)

Fear of being left behind socially or lifestyle-wise

Turning 40 and evaluating her own life choices

The “separate room” became a symbol of:

independence

capability

financial comfort

adulthood

growing apart

And that terrified her.


  1. She felt “outgrown” and panicked

Her identity is tied up in this long friendship.

When the poster:

handled booking smoothly

offered to pay upfront

calmly suggested taking a separate room

…it triggered something like:

> “She doesn’t need me anymore. She’s in a different league. She’s outgrowing me.”

And instead of saying:

> “I feel insecure and weird about this.”

she said:

> “You’re entitled and showing off.”

That’s how insecurity often expresses itself.


  1. The friend then experienced shame — which made everything worse

The initial explosion was emotional insecurity.

Afterwards came shame:

She knew she was unreasonable

She knew she hurt her friend

She panicked when the poster went quiet

People in shame do ONE THING: They double down and attack again.

Because if they admit they were wrong, they must face the deeper insecurity that caused it.


  1. The poster’s withdrawal triggered abandonment fears

When the poster muted the chat and went quiet, the friend panicked because:

She expected immediate soothing

She wanted the poster to reassure her

She needed the relationship re-stitched RIGHT AWAY

She was terrified the poster was truly done

But the poster needed distance to regulate (which is healthy).
The friend interpreted that as rejection.

So she became:

demanding

accusatory

self-pitying

dramatic

This is classic anxious attachment behaviour.


  1. This is not about the cottage — this is about life stage shifts

Friendships built in your 20s often wobble around 40 because:

finances differ

lifestyles diverge

children change social dynamics

people subconsciously “compare lives”

birthdays trigger self-reflection

the friendship roles shift and no longer match the past

She is grieving the old dynamic where:

you were equals financially

shared rooms

lived similar lives

relied on each other daily

She felt the poster “moved on” without her, even though that isn’t true.


  1. There is also a strong element of control

The friend wanted:

simplicity

emotional closeness

predictable dynamic

The moment the plan became slightly more complicated, she lost control and threw the grenade.

People who subconsciously want control often lash out when they feel:

out-paced

outgrown

or “less needed.”


  1. The poster’s response (silence, withdrawing, being careful) unintentionally reinforced her insecurity

The friend already felt:

“less than”

like the poster had more money, more ease, more choices

So when the poster said:

> “I won’t tell you about the car because I don’t want to rub it in”

The friend heard confirmation of her deepest fear:

> “You ARE too much for me. We ARE different now. You DO think you’re better.”

That’s not what the poster meant, but that’s how an insecure person hears it.


So what is the REAL diagnosis?

This is a mix of:

✔️ **Financial insecurity (hers)

✔️ Fear of being outgrown
✔️ Turning-40 identity wobble
✔️ Long-term friendship role shift
✔️ Anxious attachment/panic
✔️ Shame → anger → shame cycle
✔️ Unspoken resentments that finally erupted**

This is not about:

the cottage

the room

booking timing

cost differences

Those are symptoms.
The cause is deeper and emotional.


Can the friendship be repaired?

Yes — but ONLY if:

**1. The friend is willing to admit insecurity (she might not be)

  1. The poster stops walking on eggshells
  1. They reset the friendship dynamic as equals — not rescuer vs. rescued
  1. They acknowledge that life stage differences exist without shame or comparison
  1. They move slowly and gently rather than forcing closeness**

Right now, the poster is trying to:

protect the friend’s feelings

manage her reaction

avoid upsetting her

be “careful”

That dynamic will kill the friendship if it continues.


The path forward

If this were the poster asking, I’d recommend:

Step 1: Stop apologising for who you are

No more:

“I don’t want to rub it in”

“Sorry I didn’t reply instantly”

“I won’t mention the car”

That strengthens the wrong narrative.

Step 2: Have a gentle but clear boundary

Something like:

> “I love you and value you. But I can’t walk on eggshells.
I want us to feel comfortable being ourselves again — both of us.
I don’t want money or rooms or logistics to represent something they’re not.
When something bothers you, I need you to tell me calmly, not explode.
And in return, I’m open to hearing anything you feel.”

Step 3: Don’t over-share until trust is rebuilt

Just keep things warm but light for a while.

Step 4: Accept the friendship has changed

Not ended — just evolved.
Once you accept that, the pressure lifts.

Step 5: Let her manage her insecurities — they are not yours to solve


TL;DR

The friend is not angry about the cottage.
She is having a 40th-birthday-life-comparison-insecurity meltdown, projected onto the poster.

The fallout is the result of:

emotional flooding

shame

fear of being left behind

resentment about perceived financial inequality

and panic that the friendship dynamic is shifting

This is fixable — but only if the poster stops carrying the responsibility for the other woman’s insecurities.

Was that a poem?😳

Calliopespa · 03/12/2025 00:21

5128gap · 02/12/2025 14:49

Honestly? From an outside perspective, your friend was irritated by your references to being able to afford things, spoke out of turn, which was wrong and regretted, and then proceeded to jump through hoops for days trying to mend things while you cold shouldered her. So while she was wrong initially, you have certainly evened the score.
I have friendships of 50 years duration and they are part of the joy and fabric of my life. I can't say how precious they are. We have had our spats and hurt each other along the way, because we're human and humans aren't perfect and mess up.
However unless the issue comes from malice or other deal breaking flaw, then some tolerance is required if you're going to go the distance. And is so worth it if you can.
So, my advice is to meet up again soon. Make it something light with external stimulus, an event, the theatre, rather than a one on one conversation that could get intense, which is not a great idea if it feels fragile. Just enjoy something together and remember why you like this woman.
The more positive experiences you can layer on top of this unfortunate one, the less significant it will seem.

A very wise post op.

And such a relief to hear someone reference proper relationship skills rather than "Go NC" or "LTB."

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