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Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Unfriended on Facebook as an adult. More painful than I thought.

230 replies

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 09:17

Last week I was "unfriended" by a woman I've been best friends with IRL for 8 years. We were very close and I loved her lots but our friendship wasn't without difficulty. She was a good-hearted, sensitive, cheeky and funny woman. We had that kind of friendship where we'd just be texting each other silly things all day...but I soon learned she had this kind of "yo-yo" personality. One minute she'd be her normal, happy self; then at some point she'd switch and become distant. Then I wouldn't be able to get hold of her at all, any plans we made would become cancelled and I just felt pushed away.

It was clear she was fighting her own demons. When she was unhappy, communication would become poor and she'd just send these moody one-word texts or she'd backhandedly write something online, rather than confront the situation. I can't say I'm perfect either. I've always been rather anxious and wanted to keep the peace, but I think she felt like I was being intrusive. The more she'd shut me out, the more I pushed for a conversation and I guess I seemed clingy at times.

So I did something stupid. I confided in another friend (not someone she knows, but a long-distance friend who works as a counselor). I basically just wanted advice about my friend's "on/offness". It was supposed to be a private conversation on Skype, but like the total idiot that I am, I accidentally added my friend into the chat. She saw the whole thing and I was devastated. Even though I wasn't outright trash-talking, I was still discussing her behaviour in a fairly invasive way, saying things like "she tends to deal with her problems passive-aggressively, she's fickle, she's very flaky" etc. I didn't even name her, but but she guessed it was about her. She must have felt so violated.

She reacted by posting a string of angry statuses about betrayal and backstabbing on Facebook, then shortly after she deleted her account. I felt unbelievably guilty. She wouldn't answer the phone so I sent this very lengthy apologetic letter via email saying how sorry I was for hurting her and trying to explain myself. She replied saying that I didn't understand her at all and she wouldn't be able to trust me again. A week later, I still felt terrible. It was only last week she'd been so kind to me and cooked me dinner when I was feeling upset. I sent her a funny apology card to her house. She replied with a small 'thank you' but nothing more. Then she just started ignoring me completely for the next month. I thought after a while, she'd cool down, but last week she reactivated her Facebook again and unfriended me and my sister.

It's all so messy and heartbreaking. I know I shouldn't have sought advice int that way. I keep thinking about all the good times and all the things we've been through together, but all she thinks of now is the fact I'm a "betrayer", and it hurts to think all our memories are now tarnished.

Has anyone ever been unfriended like this before? Did you ever work things out?

OP posts:
usernumbernine · 23/04/2017 11:21

It's not something that a woman would tend to say. Are you male?

gamerchick · 23/04/2017 11:21

You said she cooked you dinner last week when you were upset.

You have posted this before haven't you? You need to accept that this friendship is over. Let it go.

PoorYorick · 23/04/2017 11:22

Ok, well I'm tired of repeating myself, so all I'll add now is: at this point, your intentions don't matter. She's understandably hurt and may not want to continue the friendship. You may need just to accept that and choose your venting/concern-based requests for help methods more wisely in the future.

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 11:24

Errm what would be wrong with a woman using the word pal? I don't understand why I'd lie about my age or gender aas that doesn't affect the situation at all. I'm gay, but I don't see how that changes the fact I'd use those words?? Male, female; how is this relevant to the topic.

OP posts:
OnionKnight · 23/04/2017 11:24

I still felt terrible. It was only last week she'd been so kind to me and cooked me dinner when I was feeling upset.

Hmm
usernumbernine · 23/04/2017 11:24

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

usernumbernine · 23/04/2017 11:25

It's not relevant to the topic at all - it's just showing that you're coming across oddly and there are inconsistencies in your posts, so I wondered if you were a man trying to change some details to get a female perspective.

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 11:26

By the last week, I meant the week before the argument happened

OP posts:
user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 11:27

Not a man, sorry. I'm told I'm quite manly though

OP posts:
zen1 · 23/04/2017 11:27

....we haven't spoken in weeks, 2 months even...i'm not messaging her daily asking for forgiveness, it doesn't stop the turmoil in my head though

It was only last week she'd been so kind to me and cooked me dinner

These can't both be true

usernumbernine · 23/04/2017 11:28

Again, you didn't say "the last week" in your OP, you said "last week"

gamerchick · 23/04/2017 11:29

You need to go and read your first post again. It's fine to change details but you need to remember them later on.

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 11:30

Yeah the last week before the argument she cooked me dinner, then she stopped speaking to me for 2 months, then recently she unfriended me...sorry for the confusion...i'm getting better at grammar, honest

OP posts:
Ilovespringandchocolate · 23/04/2017 11:30

I think I must be on a different plant to the majority's of posters tbh.

I absolutely adore all my friends, all of them have so many amazing qualities and we've had some amazing times. However, I'd be lying if I said that most of them didn't also have some bad qualities and that sometimes with a few of them, we've had silly little fallings out a couple of times over the many years we've been friends. I'd be point bank lying if I said I'd never discussed these issues with my DP or anyone else. Sometimes you need to bloody vent. It doesn't make you the devil incarnate FFS.

I have a friend, who, quite frankly annoys the shit out of me on FB. She's a lovely girl and I enjoy her company when I'm with her, but her 100 Facebook status updates a day, especially the passive aggressive ones (which seem to happen at least twice a week) do my head in.

I was with a mutual friend of ours yesterday and this friend texted me, I said 'Oh, so and so has just text' and friend I was with was like 'Love her to bits but I've had to unfollow her on FB as all the drama is just ridiculous' I then agreed.

Now, if said friend had found out about that convo, do I think it'd be OTT of her to stop off, screeching and ending the friendship? Yes, quite frankly because she IS OTT on FB, she DOES post a lot of passive aggressive posts etc. She has to accept that she'll be criticised by some for that.

Likewise, if any 'friend' was treating me badly, in whatever way, I have a right to vent about that to someone else, to confide in them if I want/ need to. I'm sure people have done it re me, I can't say I'd end the friendship straight away, I'd want to talk to that person and talk through the issues.

Re the OP's situation, it's shit and yes, if it happened to me I would feel really humiliated and betrayed, however if I genuinely was responsible for some of the things talked about etc and if I had done some of the things I'd been accused of, I'd damn well take some responsibility for it.

If you're going to be a shit to people, expect some backlash, it works both ways.

OP's friend has a right to end the friendship, however all of the posters just saying 'that would be it for me' just makes me wonder whether they throw away everything so quickly the moment someone says something they don't like? Even if there's an element of truth in it?

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 11:31

sorry i missed out 'the' lol, there goes my english gcse

OP posts:
KRG13 · 23/04/2017 11:33

It's not your grammar you need to improve mate, it's your memory.

KiwiDoc · 23/04/2017 11:33

No idea why I just wasted my time reading this whole thread. OP is clearly making it up.

WizzardHat · 23/04/2017 11:33

Your story keeps changing and it's confusing. You say t happened months ago or last week; you say you don't have a sister or you have a 17 year old sister? maybe start again with what happened.

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 11:35

Ilovespringandchocolate yeah I get what you're saying...I don't know if it's different for where I was brought up or whatever, but everyone I know is a gossip and everyone has a vent about their friends at times. I don't tend to gossip in person but maybe it's much worse to do it online.

I know she has the right to end the friendship...I guess I just hoped she want to talk to me about it first, see if we could resolve some issues that have been ongoing for a long time, but to say the reason I spoke about her in the first place was because she couldn't talk to me, I guess I shouldn't have hoped for that

OP posts:
usernumbernine · 23/04/2017 11:35

As judge judy says, if you tell the truth you don't need to have a good memory.

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 11:36

I have a 17 year old sister who has no relevance to the story other than she was unfriended

2 months ago she cooked me dinner, a week later the fall out happened, then we stopped speaking...sorry for the confusion, my grammar gets bad when i type fast

OP posts:
usernumbernine · 23/04/2017 11:38

As has been said, it's not your grammar that gets bad it's your memory.

ClodTheGoat · 23/04/2017 11:39

It was a daft mistake. I think you are a people pleaser and need to learn how to react when a friend treats you poorly/coldly - ie their loss, don't go into overdrive trying to get a positive reaction. Nobody is perfect, we all vent about stuff we'd be mortified about someone hearing - I bet your friend has done same to you. Move on and stop tormenting yourself.

PoorYorick · 23/04/2017 11:40

I might get annoyed with a friend here and there and vice versa. But none of my friendships involve them serially slagging me off online (or ever, to my knowledge) and me going behind their backs to sound off about it. If that were the case, I'd probably withdraw from the friendship because, well, there wouldn't actually be one to lose.

I actually don't remember the last time a friend upset me so much I had to vent about them. They're all great people. If I had to vent to anyone I'd use my husband because that's his job. He'd make sympathetic noises, nod and then go off and forget about it.

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 11:41

yeah i think i am a bit of a people pleaser, you're right

OP posts: