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Sometimes the bravest thing you can do is recognize when a friendship has become a pattern you can't escape. Something happened recently with a friend I've known for many years. I'll call this person A. The whole thing got me thinking about those relationships that seem to follow the same script over and over, like a record with a scratch that keeps jumping back to the same verse.
The Pattern Emerges A is someone who has always wanted to get closer to me. There's something persistent about the way A approaches friendship, like someone knocking on a door that's already open but somehow can't see inside. For more than ten years, we've been caught in this dance - getting close, then pulling apart, then reconnecting again. The thing about A is the emotional intensity. When I sense a friendship heading toward that toxic level where there's no good outcome, I step back. It's become instinct now, like flinching before you get burned. We had an eight-year gap once where we weren't in touch at all. I was fine with that. Life went on. I was happy. The Reconnection A couple of months back, A reached out again. It was nice at first - catching up with an old friend always has that warm feeling, like finding a book you'd forgotten you owned. But then A started sending photos. Daily updates. Hourly updates. The digital equivalent of someone calling your name from across a crowded room. I could feel what A wanted - some kind of reciprocation. The same energy returned. The same level of sharing. But I wasn't ready to give it. Maybe I never would be. A even came to visit me. Made the trip to where I live. I took it in good stride, spent time, had good conversations. It felt positive. But after A went back home and we continued chatting online, the same thing happened again. The hints started. The suggestions that I wasn't reciprocating enough. That I wasn't matching A's level of investment. The Demand for Depth A shared something personal with me. Very personal. The kind of thing you tell someone when you're testing the waters, seeing how deep they'll go with you. I listened. I gave my perspective. I tried to help. A seemed appreciative. But then came the line that made me react: "I shared so much with you. If only you would share your innermost thoughts with me. Your personal things." That's when I realized what was happening. A was keeping score. Intimacy as currency. Vulnerability as a debt to be repaid. Here's the thing - I'm in a good state. I'm happy with my life the way it is. I don't need to know about the rest of the world. I don't need to reach that level where I'm digging into everyone's business. I'm okay not having all the information. I'm happy to live my life, do my simple things, chase my own happiness. If there's nothing to share, I don't want to manufacture something just to balance the books. The Conversation That Didn't Work After this pattern repeated itself, I reminded A: "The same thing is happening again. You keep asking me to share when I have nothing to share." I explained how it felt passive-aggressive, even if A didn't realize it. I gave examples. A wasn't happy with this. Said I didn't understand. That I was seeing things negatively. I was surprised by the reaction, but maybe I shouldn't have been. When you tell someone they're asking too much, they rarely thank you for the feedback. What I've Learned About Communication You can't talk to someone by asking them to fully understand you. That's backwards. You have to try to understand them first. I did try to understand A. But when I started sensing the repeated demands, the pattern that never changed, I knew I had to name it. Some friendships get caught in loops. The same problems recurring because both people can't find a way to solve the situation and improve. We become characters in a play we've performed too many times, saying the same lines, expecting different outcomes. The Step Back Right now, there's a bit of stepping back happening. Life is easier. Less stressful. I wonder sometimes if we're caught in a spiral we just can't break out of. Have you ever had a relationship where the same problems keep coming up because both parties just can't find a way forward? I think for certain personalities, it just doesn't work. Oil and water. Two frequencies that create interference instead of harmony. If it doesn't work, both people have to be brave enough to say it doesn't work and walk away on good terms. Life goes on. We can find our happiness again. We shouldn't stay stuck in situations that make us miserable just because we don't have the courage to walk away. The Quiet Space Sometimes the healthiest choice is to recognize the pattern and step back. Not with anger or judgment, but with the quiet understanding that some relationships have natural limits. That friendship doesn't always mean endless excavation of each other's depths. Maybe A and I will reconnect again in a few years. Maybe we won't. Either way is fine. The world is full of people, and not all of them are meant to be close friends. Some are meant to be occasional visitors, passing through our lives like seasons. There's peace in accepting that. There's freedom in knowing when to let go. The coffee grows cold while I write this. Outside, it's starting to rain. Life continues in its quiet way, and I'm grateful for the simple things - the sound of water on the window, the blank page that doesn't demand anything from me, the space between words where silence lives. Sometimes that's enough.
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AuthorI am MrWildy and I am trying to journal more about my life and also my travels. Find out more about me here. Categories
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September 2025
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