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Relationships

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:
user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 11:45

PoorYorick I honestly did feel the need to vent. I just regret doing it in that way. It wasn't even that she slagged me off online outwardly, but it was just that she'd put subtle things, like one time I told her she was very lucky to have found the job she had gotten and I meant it in a positive way. But instead she took it badly and wrote something about "you don't know how hard i worked to get this job" on her fb status rather than talking to me, and it was just continuous things like that drove me to see advice

OP posts:
SeekingSugar · 23/04/2017 11:49

It's not anything to do with Facebook is it, it's a fall out and it's a pretty big one. I think you have to let it go. She has been very clear that she cannot forgive you and you need to accept that.
If it's any consolation, you're not the first person to be caught out like this, loads of people have done similar! If you take anything from this, make it a vow not to back stab others - and definitely never in writing. It'll always come back to bite.

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 11:53

SeekingSugar, the Facebook was just the cherry on the icing, yeah. It is a big fall out, you're right. I guess I was just unsure HOW big it was. In the time I've known here there have been a couple of "big fall outs" and I thought I'd done something terrible, but in the end she came round like nothing had happened. I guess this isn't one of those times...

OP posts:
SeekingSugar · 23/04/2017 12:00

It's really not. It's over and tbh it's kind of weird that you're obsessing over it so much. Friendships are usually more mutual, but you don't seem to be able to grasp this. Maybe counselling for yourself would be helpful?

ScarletForYa · 23/04/2017 12:00

OP, do you have feelings for her or something?

Why so much angst?

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 12:02

Why do I have to have feelings for some to care about them? I've known her for a very long period of time, we've been through a lot together. It just hurts to know it has ended. I'm not even fighting it that much, or pressuring her to "come back" into my life. Just simply talking on a forum about the pain. I'm a HSP and that's just how I feel.

OP posts:
TheElephantofSurprise · 23/04/2017 12:02

Adults text each other several times a day? Really?

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 12:09

Yes, TheElephantsofSurprise, some young adults text each other several times a day. Neither of us are married or have partners or any thing like that. We were close. You see people on whatsapp, messenger, facebook all the time and you question the fact that two people kept in touch on a daily basis?

Why are people on here so judgmental about all the tiny, non-relevant facts?

OP posts:
nakedscientist · 23/04/2017 12:10

Don't have a sister? But she unfriended you and you sister..
I know how hurt she must've felt. It was written from a place of hurt
There is no writing in Skype, it is a face to face conversation.
Also there is no red button to add friends on my Skype...
it's hard to remember exactly what she (counsellor friend) advised
Err really?
This post feels a bit wrong.

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 12:13

Lol "there is no writing in Skype" -- i don't think i've ever used Skype for face-to-face time since i've had it. Clearly you don't use Skype. I now use skype in my job and all I do is write on skype. I can see the "add people to group" button right now and let me tell you it was fairly easy mistake to make

I already said I had a sister, that was a typo.

OP posts:
user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 12:14

p.s. i'm fairly sure i said round button, not red button. It's in the top right on the conversation log and it has a blue cross on it. Literally, acting like a detective for things that don't even matter but carry on...

OP posts:
LettuceMash · 23/04/2017 12:14

[Sits on the bench next to Naked]

ScarletForYa · 23/04/2017 12:15

What's a HSP ?

FrancisCrawford · 23/04/2017 12:17

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

alltalknobaby · 23/04/2017 12:19

User, people are picking up on inconsistencies in your story - that is why they are highlighting these seemingly insignificant points. You contradict yourself and it makes it seem like your story may not be true

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 12:19

FrancisCrawford, damn why is this forum full of bitchyness? I clearly thought I'd meet some decent people here, but I was wrong. Picking apart every little thing I say. Is it normal to gang up on people here?

OP posts:
user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 12:20

I consider 25 as a young adult. Sue me

OP posts:
OnionKnight · 23/04/2017 12:21

Is it normal to gang up on people here?

Yup Grin

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 12:21

A Highly Sensitive Person. It can be googled...but I'm sure I'll get attacked for admitting this as well. waits

OP posts:
Longtime · 23/04/2017 12:22

OP I have a cousin the same age as me. We are very close. I left the UK when I was 22 (32 years ago). I wrote to both my cousin and her mum who was my favourite aunty. After about six years, my aunty started writing horrible things about my cousin to me (there was a complicated family situation I won't bore you with). Eventually I suggested she speak to my cousin about it as it was obviously bothering her and that I'd rather she didn't talk about my cousin like that to me. She stopped talking to me as apparently she didn't need her niece telling her what to do. I wrote another letter to apologise. She still refused to speak to me. Sad thing was that she stopped talking to my mum too (over some fabricated issue). My mum's brother (cousin's dad) had died when we were 11 and my mum had been a huge support to my cousin and aunty for those 17 years. My mum was devastated and never really got over it. My cousin and her two brothers continued to see us and we are still really close fortunately. Aunty died three years ago having never said another word to mum or me. Sometimes you just have to learn to live e things as hard as it is.

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 12:22

Well I guess I came to the wrong place then. I remember writing in here years ago because my mother was in an abusive relationship and I got so much shtick for sticking my nose in. It shocked me. I thought this was a place you could have a little vent and speak about what's troubling you??

OP posts:
Longtime · 23/04/2017 12:24

*live with these things

user1492893618 · 23/04/2017 12:26

Is it always the same people here as well? Cause that might explain the "ganging up" if you've all got some bond going on

OP posts:
gamerchick · 23/04/2017 12:29

Has the venting helped OP? Are you going to let it go now and get on with your life? It's really not healthy to obsess about stuff to this level for months. Forgive yourself.

UndersecretaryofWhimsy · 23/04/2017 12:32

Or it could be that you're having it pointed out to you that you're not very good at interpersonal relationships.

Look, what you need to get through your head is that it doesn't matter what you intended. It matters what you DID. And what you did was eviscerate your friend's character in front of her. It doesn't really matter how much of an accident it was or how sorry you are. It doesn't make the hurt from that go away.

Part of being a grown-up is understanding that people don't care about your intentions, they care about the impact of your actions. And they have a right to. And part of being a grown-up is accepting that you have to live with the impact of your actions, and you can't undo them by being sorry.

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