minervx wrote:
TeaEarlGreyHot wrote:
minervx wrote:
Yeah, it happens.
If a person doesn't enjoy my company, they have a right to not be my friend. I don't really consider it their fault; we all want different things in life. I can't expect someone to just serve my interest without me serving theirs.
I've had at least 5 best friends leave me, 3 of which, it was mainly my fault. But I grow and learn from that.
The way I see it: I lose one friend, so what? There's millions of people out there. The empty space of one person can easily be filled by another person who means a lot to me.
I don't expect anyone to suffer through my presence. Nor do I expect to get and not receive.
It's not so much losing a friend that bothered me. It was how it happened and the why. Not to mention the timing. Friends have a habit of suddenly deciding they don't like me whenever I'm going through hard times. I know I can sometimes be difficult to handle, but am I really so bad?
Yeah. I know what you mean.
Not knowing how it happened is the worst part.
It depends on the case. Sometimes, when someone "abandons" you, it is temporary as they are very busy for a month or two.
I don't think its a personal thing. It's probably all relative. I may have been left behind for people who are more interesting to the other person. Or they may have unintentionally misjudged me.
Very true. More often than not, the abandonment is not entirely personal, especially when people are young and still experimenting with what they really want in a friendship. It's common for someone to want one thing, but their friend may want something different, and they end up drifting apart because of this. Many friendships tend to end this way.
It is about the depth of the relationship at times, though. I have a few friends that I'm not able to see or talk with that often for various reasons (distance, work, lack of money), but we have shared important memories together, and when we get together, it's like we never left each other.
_________________
Given a “tentative” diagnosis as a child as I needed services at school for what was later correctly discovered to be a major anxiety disorder.
This misdiagnosis caused me significant stress, which lessened upon finding out the truth about myself from my current and past long-term therapists - that I am an anxious and highly sensitive person but do not have an autism spectrum disorder.
My diagnoses - social anxiety disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
I’m no longer involved with the ASD world.