Alright if I Leave?

I've always had a bit of a difficult relationship with people. I remember asking in a post I wrote last year,

Is it alright if I walk away?

I have a habit of walking away when I recognize the cause to be lost. And it often creates moral quandaries because it's not always easy, and sometimes the people you're trying to walk away from tend to follow you. Ask why.

I've done that in friendships a couple of times. When the pandemic started, I walked away from a friendship of ten years. One I certainly counted as my closest relationship outside of family. On the surface, it was about the stupidest things. It was over Covid, but Covid was in its very early days. At the time, I don't remember thinking this is the argument that ends it.

But it was. And looking back, it was about so much more than just Covid, lockdowns, or any one thing.

My friend was (and is, for all I know) someone very driven, very top dog mentality. She was better than everyone, and let it be known in her relationships. Down the years, I'd watched her lose countless relationships over this bossiness, this overt superiority (or at least, the idea of being superior). She never understood why. She always thought, whenever someone left her, that they couldn't handle being with the greats. That they had to return to a lowlier level.

I'm sure she thought that when I left.

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That break was terrible and a very long time coming. For years and years before, I came home drained after seeing her. She was incredibly judgmental and nothing I ever did received anything but derision. I remember I got my first real job during those last few years of our friendship. I was only 19 and I worked for this half-shady politician guy, local guy. I wrote stuff for him and he pretty much let me write whatever mostly 'cause I was young and cute and he needed filler content for his website. Worked for me.

'Cause even as it was mostly drivel, it was a new level of responsibility for me and I was very proud when that job earned me enough money to go abroad. All on my own money that I worked for. My friend never got the concept of not having money. Her folks were loaded. They worked hard to afford their princess everything. So she was always mocking and dismissive when I talked about that job. It hurt.

The weird thing was, I didn't miss it. I found it incredibly easy, once we stopped talking, to go on not talking. I didn't expect that. I reached out about a year or so after the rift. I was feeling lonely and vulnerable. She was polite but cold, and I knew it was broken forever. Down the years, I haven't really missed it or regretted it that much.

Looking back, I realize it was a relationship that no longer helped me grow. Only hindered me. And frankly, I don't see how it would've survived the next very divisive years, anyway.

After leaving, I eventually found my way to another friend of ours, one who'd stopped hanging out with us previously (also because she couldn't stand the first friend's superiority and attitude). And while we do have our disagreements, I feel a lot safer talking to this person than I did with my former friend. And I reckon safety matters a lot, if friendship is to endure.

I've only walked away from one other friendship in life, but it was much less serious. Over a difference of alignment. I still talk to that girl occasionally, on her initiative. I even saw her earlier this year after not really hanging out for a couple years. And funnily enough, that night confirmed I made the right call cutting this person out. At the time, I saw her as vain, superficial and materialistic. She was very tiring. She still seems to be and I don't have energy for that.

So,

Is it alright to walk away?

Think so. But my advice would be, think on it for a while. Don't underestimate the value of talk. A lot can be achieved by simply communicating your needs in a relationship, you know? If something bugs you. I think you should walk away when the situation is irretrievable. Or is causing you so much mental strain and anguish that it's not worth keeping.

I certainly don't think you should walk away over differences of nuance or tone if you connect with someone. Because the more yo go through life, the more you see you really don't meet that many people you truly connect with. So...



*When I saw the prompt for the #ThoughtfulDailyPost, I wanted to throw in my 2 cents. Thanks @wesphilbin for giving me something to mull over. :)

Have you had to walk away from a friendship to preserve your inner peace? Describe the factors and reflections that impacted this decision.

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18 comments
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(Edited)

You could be or maybe are my "Soulsister" because ( reading your content)

I am going through the same. So strange because I thought I am quite good with people.

I am much better with dogs now as a Dogsitter Hahhaa

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❤️💜💛

So strange because I thought I am quite good with people.

Who says leaving is the opposite of being good with people? If people are hurting you or imposing on your vibe, I wouldn't think it's "good" (for anyone) to hang around.

(Hi! :D Lovely smile. Hi doggo! Dogs are better than people anyway. ;))

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It's sad walking away from a friendship but unfortunately necessary at times.
I do believe people like that have a very low self-esteem. Belittling others shows insecurity, and the only way they're able to feel good about themselves! Right decision @honeydue.

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I'm sure that making this decision wasn't an easy one and I can totally relate to what you are saying here as I, to, have had to walk away from a friend for very similar reasons. It was also hard. Thank you so much for sharing your experience with us.

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Waoh this is very educational and a smart way of keeping one's inner peace. But most times it takes longer time and very hard to forget these friends you walked out from.

know there has been many years of interactions of laughter and quality gists, to just forget them and start a fresh looking for and making other qualities friends.....is hard. Anyway, all these is for our inner peace.

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I only learned the term ghosting a few years back, and it made me reflect and introspect.
In my teenage years, I was a no-strings-attached person and found ghosting the opposite sex felt more natural than taking the time to discuss 'the end'.
I thought, 'Why waste time to discuss the obvious."

Looking back though, my ghosting was sickening and I really should never have been that mean to humans... but I was young, stupid, and carefree then, and didn't think anything of it. I think I'm forgiven.

On the other hand, I've never had to end friendships with females, simply because I never had any.
I agree with you though, that communication would be the best thing to do in the case of differences with a real friend.
In recent years though, I've been plagued by narcissists who presented themselves as friends. In such cases, ghosting is the right thing to do:)))

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This whole negative popular opinion of ghosting freaked me out to. While the obvioust" don't be a dick" should continue to apply throughout, I don't think every situation needs a long discussion, debate or a song and dance to end. Especially if it's something harmful.

I've been plagued by narcissists who presented themselves as friends.

That's curious. Ever wonder what's attracting them? It's fascinating when you notice a pattern, even unnerving, to try and unravel it.

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That's curious. Ever wonder what's attracting them?

Narcissists have traits that they look for in their victims, and some of the popular ones are:

  1. if you're considerate
  2. if you're honest and believe that others are
  3. if you're compassionate
  4. If they perceive that you have a light in you that they know in their hearts they have.
  5. if you believe in people and never give up on them easily
    ... Things that they wish they were, and try to deceive people into thinking they are.

The thing is, narcissists operate like textbooks, so once you're bitten by one, it's easy to spot them from afar.

My strategy for dealing with them is to either ignore them and move on completely, or I become the 'narcissist's narcissist' and give them a dose of their own medicine.
Doing that takes strength and you have to be strong so that you do not become what you practice, but instead, rise above them.
Either is delightful for me, so it's a win-win.😆

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Looking back, I realize it was a relationship that no longer helped me grow. Only hindered me.

That's exactly the hardest part to figure out before you leave. So I came to the conclusion that it is based on how much the other person is willing to grow or talk things through wether it makes sense to stay or go... and I agree that finding the people you can talk things through with, that's the ones you can or maybe have to keep forever:)

Resonated a lot, again, reading through your words. What a wonderful connection, I genuinely enjoy that, a lot!

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I think you can estimate how they'll react, esp if you know them well. Like some people, I knew wouldn't agree, would argue, would rage or would talk me out of doing a healthy thing for myself by leaving.

Others will try. I always give a lot of points when I see someone genuinely try to change something after they learn it bothers you. IT might not be easy, not even successful, but they heard you and care enough to try. It says a lot.

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Sometimes I think it hinders us NOT to walk away from certain relationships. Friends sometimes just don't grow in the same directions and time spent with them feels like putting on an old coat and playing the role of the person you used to be. I'm guilty of being overly sentimental and hanging on to some friends too long but also have no problem walking away when I finally decide it's time (sometimes it scares me how easy it can be). I've discovered that it's normally a two way street, if I'm feeling that way the other person usually does too. It is more difficult to make true friends as we age, older people just aren't as open.

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Such truthful and powerful words, brother. Just wanted to stop by and send a friendly greeting. I see several people posting in our community. That are interacting with your Memoir Monday initiative. I feel this is a great way to help spread positive and thoughtful energy on our blockchain! I hope you had a safe, and memorable Independence Day.

Wes...
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(Edited)

Indeed it's alright to walk away when the friendship is toxic all the time. I've done it a few times too.

It is possible your ex-friend is also treated as such at home that's why she is like that. If you'd like, you can definitely pray for her too so that she could change her ways with God's help. It's possible with God's grace, not just our own efforts alone as it is super hard to change even when we decide to.

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