It’s called a breakup because it’s broken

In December, I ended a relationship.

In January, I ended another one.

You might think that this is some form of unhealth, but it’s actually not – it’s not symptomatic of me cleaning house to start another downward spiral, and it’s not because I felt that I would be better off without relationships – I simply examined what I needed from these two individuals, assessed what I wasn’t getting, tried to massage the deal-breakers and realized that they couldn’t be kneaded away.

The first one was a boy I was seeing. Had been seeing for a few months. He’s nice, funny, cute, intelligent, got along great with Zoë and seemed like a prime contender for something maybe more. We talked for hours on the phone, every night. He told me that I was beautiful and I listened. It was giddy and lovely and nice.

But there was something broken about the relationship, right out of the gate. We didn’t actually see each other – living on opposite schedules, with differing priorities – and even though we spent hours together, talking, our conversations went from the everythings and histories and dreams to the everyday and work and married life ramblings very quickly. The honeymoon period ended before it began, I could say.

So, instead of being in a relationship where I wasn’t getting what I needed – thrills and highs – I decided to end it on a friendly, I’m sorry this isn’t working for me level.

The second relationship didn’t end so nicely.

This was a friendship. The friendship. This was someone that I threw caution to the wind and trusted immediately, even though I don’t do that well. Trust, that is.

This was someone I joined myself to by pelvic girdle, becoming enraptured in their life and mannerisms and in turn, bringing them into mine. I adopted this person, even though signs along the way cautioned me that they weren’t someone that I would feel ultimately safe with. Even though I watched the person make judgments, mistakes and morally unjust decisions, I sat within this intimate relationship, refusing to let go of what I got to know after a time was toxic to me.

When you get to the place where someone says they’ll do something and your mind says yeah right, you can’t be a good friend to them anymore. When you find yourself analyzing every move they make, wondering why they would continually fail to make the choices that would make their life happier or successful, you have to ask yourself why you’re there, asking them the same questions over and over, making the same suggestions, providing (mostly unsolicited) advice.

This friendship made me feel small and dirty. Like I was always keeping a dark secret, like I was hiding in the wings, snickering with the other mean girls. This friendship made me wonder why I was in it.

But I still stayed. And I started fighting.

The always friendly, enthusiastic demeanour of our love started to crumble as I started to resent this person for making me feel a conspirator in her personal demise. I’ve mentioned before my deal-breakers: cheating, lying, lack of integrity, lack of follow through. And I stayed, bearing some brunt, or watching someone else (often unknowingly) bear those.

This doesn’t make me a good friend, or loyal, to the person I was friends with. This makes me ethically bankrupt, because I stood and said little to nothing until I was so personally affected by it, I lashed out in anger and frustration at my friend.

So we fought. It was a surprise to them, because they were self-absorbed and I was a good enough actor for them to think nothing was wrong. Promises were made and the friendship would be repaired.

But then these things kept happening – the lack of follow through, the I’m going tos that never get done or finished – and my whistle blew again. This fight was angrier, it was more hurt. I felt more victimized, and so I likely victimized them a little more than was necessary by spewing truths, hard and blunt, right in their face. Not all, but most, without sensitivity.

And then things were going to be okay again, because promises were made again, and this time they would be kept.

Because I hadn’t learned throughout the friendship, because I’m a glutton, because I was afraid of ending the friendship and thus losing a major person in my life, I believed that words said meant something and that we could try to work at the relationship and repair it.

Hurts and distrust and suspicion and judgments would be knitted back into the previous carefree ease we had.

It wasn’t. And I was even more angry than before, because I was more angry at myself for putting off the inevitable.

I wasn’t getting what I needed from this friend – a relationship that I could trust in, that challenged me and excited me, one where we both said I will and we did – and so for the same reason, and as a reaction to a final let-down, I ended the friendship.

There’s a problem with meeting friends online and incorporating them into your everyday. They stay part of your everyday. And if those people have differing ideals than you, if say, they don’t agree with you that tweeting about their relationship with you is offensive, impersonal and that some things should just be fucking private, you have a problem.

During a fight before ending the relationship, I made it clear that I had problem with them sharing (with 5000 of their closest friends) that they felt X about the argument – even though they weren’t saying who was making them feel so. It was in tandem with the argument, and it hurt and offended me that they had to publicize it. They didn’t agree, and I walked away from that portion of the argument with their word that they wouldn’t, even though they didn’t see the big deal.

Then, the friendship ended and the floodgates opened but I chose to not go the route so many do when they end an online friendship – the en masse unfriending across the Internet. I didn’t want to make that statement, to say that they were dead to me. But I did keep my own pain about the end of the friendship private – I didn’t tweet or really blog about it, and you won’t find mention on Facebook, either.

Because of that, the primary symptom of the friendship, now ended, came to light – self-absorption over-ruled the word this friend had given to me and I got to see days of tweets about their sorrow, remorse, quotes about forgiveness, and on and on. And still, I kept silent, and I didn’t make the great gesture of blocking this person from my periphery.

Then was the – what I imagine to be dark and stormy – night when I was being (namelessly) tweeted about, called judgmental and narrow-minded. When some of our mutual contacts were there for this person, soothing the soul, not knowing what, if any part, they had played in this catastrophe of relationship death.

And even though I had been hurting, too, even though I had never not felt saddened about having to end this friendship because it was hurting me to be in it, I was attacked.

Which is fine. I mean, come on, no one knows all of the sides to a story, right? And they were being good online companions by trying to make this friend feel better. Which is what we should all hope to have in our life – on and offline.

But I couldn’t see it anymore. I couldn’t be angry and feel attacked, and like the bad guy and hurt, and heart-broken. I couldn’t see this person talk about their wounds, and express how I was without any, to the fucking twitterverse.

So I blocked them. And it made me feel sick to do so. But I thought maybe it would send the message that enough was enough – that they should stop talking about me and our relationship – and at the very least, I wouldn’t have to see it, if they did.

Then, they told the world that I, @Zoeyjane blocked them.

So. Two relationships, both ended within the past two months.

One because it wasn’t what I needed; the other because the person is so self-entitled to their own demons and pain, they have to hurt me to publicize them.

I never walked away, thinking that someone’s dead to me. I stopped being their friend. I didn’t do it without feelings, and heartbreak, I just didn’t tweet about it. So, after all of these words about publication, and all of these years putting anything and everything out there, I’m not telling you the names of the person I broke up with, or the friend I ended the friendship with.

Because frankly, some relationships deserve to be treated with dignity. And I’d prefer to have some, myself.

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  • adriennejanelle
    I have a friendship that has needed addressing (or more accurately breaking) for months and I chicken out every time, but I keep coming back to this post for inspiration. So thank you for that. Hoping I'm able to deal with it soon... :)
  • al_pal
    Awww, sadface. I'm sorry that things ended poorly, but glad that you did what you needed to, and with class. *HUGS*
  • I'm sorry for what you had to deal with. It's total bullshit on so many levels and I think it's great that you chose the moral highground (in ending the friendship and in not naming names).
  • The older I get the more I realize that some friendships do the growth and changes of both parties will inevitably end. Sometimes it can be painful other times, both parties realize it is time to move on. With online friendships it sometimes takes longer for a persons true colors to show through. The best thing is to do what you did and move on.
  • I'm really sorry. Online friend or IRL friend, still hurts. I wrote an open letter about my breakup:

    http://www.singingwithmyheart....

    Takes a long time to get over when a friendship ends badly. I'm sending u virtual hugs.
  • So to the heart and well said.
  • hockeymandad
    Bravo my friend. Bra-vo.
  • I was broken up with by a sister-friend a few years back and I still haven't fully recovered. I think I deserved an explanation, but what I got was "You aren't ready to hear the truth." It was so condescending and immature, which was why I'd begun pulling away from her in the first place. She had an insane need to control me and keep me with her always.

    I wish that she'd written something even half as articulate and insightful as you've done here. I wish there'd been dialogue and conversation -- because I miss her fiercely -- but perhaps if there'd been some maturity and dignity, I could've walked away without the whole in my heart.
  • ending friendships suck hairy balls... but some times we REALLY need to do it!!!
    it hurts... but u gotta do it sometimes if you want to survive.
    and you've got courage!!!
    ;)
  • Wow. Just wow.

    That is low. And totally tacky.

    You have class, my dear, and that is why you are the better person. I don't know if I know the other one, but if I had seen this shitstorm I would have said something. Cause, TOTALLY NOT CLASSY.
  • Ending close relationships are tough. I don't think I've had to end a close friendship since grade 7 - ever since then we just drifted away. It sounds rough and I'm sorry that happened to you.
  • grace134
    I often admire your honesty and integrity. Now is one of those times.
  • Sometimes it's just better to let things go. Your life will be more positive and beautiful for it.
  • karensugarpants
    Good for you for a) standing up for yourself, more than once; and b) ending both relationships that weren't healthy for you.

    This is precisely why I keep the mean girls at arms length. Most of the time they are fun and interesting, but when the subject turns nasty about someone else, I get squirmy in my chair until I finally say something like, "hey - not cool." Then they shun me.

    To which I say: OH WELL. I do not need or want friends like that - offline or online.
  • amandatronic
    I had a sister friendship end last year as well. Your story. I'm not sure whether i'm the "Zoey" or the "other" person in the story. A bit of both? Thank you for writing this. I feel like it added to my ability to heal and move on. It was quite painful.
  • Uggg in so many ways friendship break ups are harder than romantic ones but it def sounded like you were the fair-er person who handled herself with dignity (even when it wasn't being returned!) Good for you!
  • Amo
    Beautifully written. This online world can hurt so much more deeply than our outside one...
  • way to drop the hammer.

    as for the boy... wise choice. Seeing the end in the beginning. if it ain't fireworks outta the gate, then will it ever be?
  • Ending any relationship is almost always hard because at least one party inevitably ends up hurt.

    I had a habit of befriending people who... weren't really very good for me. Even when that little voice inside my head first raised a concern, I still hung on, certain it wasn't *that* bad, or that it could be "fixed." I always learned the hard way. The last friend breakup wasn't pretty: when confronted with her own short-comings, she lashed out at me. Luckily, we hardly saw each other at all anymore at that point, so I haven't been faced with the uncomfortable task of dealing with her.

    Now I'm just stand-offish with new people. ;) *love*
  • CheekySweetie
    I just had a friendship that felt like a sisterhood end. It's painful to find that someone you believed in and trusted with parts of you that are delicate and fragile really didn't care about you or the relationship. I'm sorry that happened to you....and why the hell is it so hard to foster healthy friendships with women?
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