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Are You The Reason Your Friendships Don’t Last?

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[caption id="attachment_831208" align="alignleft" width="1068"] Bigstockphoto.com/Headshot of pretty young African American woman with black curly hair looking up as if thinking or trying to recall something important with pensive expression holding an index finger on her check[/caption] Do you have friendships that have lasted more than three years? How about five? Ten? If you’re a grown woman, you should have at least a couple of friends you’ve known for a decade, and several you’ve known for five years. You’ve spent quite a bit of time on this planet, and you are (or should be) past your destructive, selfish college and high school behavior. If you’re a woman pushing or past 30, you’ve had plenty of time to stabilize, know who you are, know what you need in a friendship, and cultivate lasting friendships. If you are in that age range but seem to lose friends left and right, it’s time to face the fact: you’re the common denominator in those broken friendships. In other words, other people aren’t the problem…So, are you the reason your friendships don’t last?   [caption id="attachment_610724" align="alignleft" width="422"]A troubled wife turns to Reddit for advice after struggling to forge a relationship with her new husband's ex. Shutterstock[/caption]

You see favors as currency

When you do someone a favor, you keep that in your back pocket. Next time you want something from them, you remind them of the favor you did them back in the day. This type of behavior makes people not trust you, and feel that your relationship is more an exchange of services than an actual friendship.             [caption id="attachment_713302" align="alignleft" width="420"] Image Source: Shutterstock[/caption]

You only help if it’s convenient

You only help someone if it’s incredibly convenient for you, or makes you look good. You would never cancel plans or drive far to be there for a friend if they said they really needed you. And you probably wouldn’t do them a favor unless you’d get plenty of public credit for it.             [caption id="attachment_700481" align="alignleft" width="420"] Image Source: Shutterstock[/caption]

You can’t be happy for others

You struggle to be genuinely happy for others when good things happen to them. If your friend shares good news with you, you end up interrogating her, suspicious as to how she had this victory and wondering how you could have it for yourself.               [caption id="attachment_702375" align="alignleft" width="420"] Image Source: Shutterstock[/caption]

You don’t have boundaries

You’ll ask your friends to do things they aren’t comfortable doing to help you, particularly with your career. You’ll ask them to introduce you to a high-up figure who they barely know themselves, and who they’re still building a relationship with. Or you’ll ask them to give you a fake reference for a job.             [caption id="attachment_706777" align="alignleft" width="420"] Shutterstock[/caption]

You flake, “Because you don’t feel like it”

You often cancel plans simply because you no longer feel like doing them. It doesn’t occur to you that the other person specifically made time in their schedule to keep these plans. Part of being a good friend (and a grownup, to be honest) is showing up where you say you will, even when you don’t feel like it.           [caption id="attachment_716483" align="alignleft" width="420"] Image Source: Shutterstock[/caption]

You’re possessive of your friends

If your friend introduces you to her other friends, you’re passive-aggressive towards them, find ways to make them look bad, and try to make them see that your common friend likes you the most.             [caption id="attachment_609049" align="alignleft" width="415"] Shutterstock[/caption]

You make everything about you

At your friend’s birthday party you ask, “How are there no dairy-free cupcakes at her birthday party? I’m lactose intolerant! She knows that!” You are unaware of all the other things people often have to think about, besides your small, rather insignificant demands.           [caption id="attachment_698275" align="alignleft" width="468"] Shutterstock.com/Yelling[/caption]

You can’t control your anger

When you’re angry, you say nasty things you do not mean. Another part of being a good friend and an adult is developing a filter and recognizing which comments are productive and which are just hurtful.                 [caption id="attachment_610668" align="alignleft" width="420"] Shutterstock[/caption]

You don’t communicate when you’re upset

If you’re angry at your friend, you don’t tell her. Instead, you reject her calls, spread rumors about her, and make passive aggressive remarks. You force people to ask you what is wrong, rather than just coming out and telling them.             [caption id="attachment_608142" align="alignleft" width="420"] Corbis[/caption]

You bring down the mood if yours is down

If you are in a bad mood, and you’re at someone’s celebratory meal or drinks with friends, you bring everyone’s mood down. You cannot muster up the strength to have a positive attitude for two hours so that everyone can enjoy themselves.           [caption id="attachment_621190" align="alignleft" width="479"] Shutterstock[/caption]

You give your two cents, unsolicited

You give your opinion on everything, even when it isn’t very nice and it wasn’t asked for. You’ll tell your friend if you think her job is beneath her or her boyfriend is beneath her or she’s dressing too provocatively.             [caption id="attachment_607271" align="alignleft" width="462"] Corbis[/caption]

You can’t admit fault

You never apologize. Your way of apologizing is listing all the ways the other person provoked you. That is not a real apology.                 [caption id="attachment_617568" align="alignleft" width="420"] Shutterstock[/caption]

You’re not nice to their boyfriends

Part of your being possessive of your friends is your inability to be nice to their boyfriends. You’re, deep down, jealous that they have boyfriends because you haven’t been able to keep one yourself (mostly because you have the same behaviors in romantic relationships as you do in friendships).           [caption id="attachment_607067" align="alignleft" width="378"] Shutterstock[/caption]

You’ll cancel if something better comes up

You’ll cancel plans with a friend if somebody else invites you to something that sounds more fun, or where you can network or social climb.               [caption id="attachment_703765" align="alignleft" width="420"] Shutterstock[/caption]

You favor the famous/popular person in the room

You’ll ignore your friend if there is someone in the room you think you can benefit from knowing. This could be a celebrity, someone of high social status, or someone notable in your industry.

The post Are You The Reason Your Friendships Don’t Last? appeared first on MadameNoire.


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