Your Turn to Share
This is an “All About You” post, where your story takes center stage, and hopefully you’ll drop it below. The question is simple but rarely asked out loud:
What friendship ended that you still think about?
Not romantic relationships or family drama, but the friendships that mattered, then didn’t, or couldn’t anymore. The ones where you’re not entirely sure what happened, or you know exactly what happened but still wonder if it could have been different.
Maybe it was sudden—an argument that neither of you came back from. Maybe it was gradual—the slow fade where responses get shorter, plans get postponed indefinitely, and eventually you both stop trying without ever acknowledging it.

Perhaps you were the one who walked away. Or they were. Maybe nobody walked—you just drifted until the distance became permanent.
Whatever your story is, tell us about it.
Why This Question Matters
Friendship endings are weird. We know how to talk about romantic breakups. We understand family estrangements, even when they’re painful. But friendship endings? Those often happen in silence, without closure, leaving questions that can linger for years.
Nobody asks “What happened with you and Sarah?” the way they’d ask about a divorce. People assume friendships fade sometimes, which they do, but that doesn’t make the loss less real or the questions less persistent.
Some friendship endings we understand completely and feel at peace with. Others we’re still turning over in our minds years later, wondering what we missed or what we could have done differently.
Both kinds of endings matter.

What makes some friendship endings easier to accept than others?
The Questions Worth Exploring
When you think about a friendship that ended, what comes up?
The ending itself: Was it sudden or gradual? Was there a specific moment or conversation, or did things just slowly stop? Did you both acknowledge it was ending, or did silence do the work?
The reasons: Do you understand why it ended? Was it circumstances (someone moved, life stages diverged, what mattered to you changed)? Was it something said or done? Was it a pattern you finally couldn’t take anymore? Or is the “why” still unclear?
Your part in it: Were you the one who pulled away, or were they? Did you fight for the friendship or let it go? Did you handle it well or poorly? Would you do anything differently knowing how you feel now?
What you miss: Do you miss them, or do you miss who you were back then? Do you miss specific things you did together, or just the ease of that connection? Do you miss them at all, or just wonder about them?
What you learned: Did this ending teach you something about yourself, about friendship, about what you need or can’t tolerate? Did it change how you approach other friendships?
The “what if”: Do you ever imagine reaching out? Do you wonder what they’d say if you did? Do you think they still think about you?
The reconnection question: Would you want to reconnect with this person if you could? What stops you—fear they’ve changed too much, worry it would be awkward, concern it might seem weird to track down someone from decades ago just to talk about old times? Or have you made peace with the ending and don’t actually want reconnection, even though you still think about them?
Which of these questions hits home for you?

The Different Types of Endings
Here are some ways friendships end—maybe one sounds familiar:
Drift: Neither of you did anything wrong. Life just pulled you in different directions—new jobs, different cities, changing priorities. The friendship that used to be easy started taking work neither of you had energy for. Eventually, the gaps between contact got so long that reaching out felt awkward. No argument, no betrayal, just… distance.
Outgrown: One or both of you changed in ways that made the friendship no longer fit. Maybe you developed different values, different interests, different ways of living. The person you became doesn’t quite match the person they knew, or vice versa. It’s nobody’s fault, but the connection doesn’t work anymore.
Betrayal: Something happened that broke trust—a secret told when it shouldn’t have been, support that wasn’t there when it was desperately needed, a line crossed that couldn’t be uncrossed. The specific betrayal might have been major or minor, but the impact was permanent.
Imbalance: One person always initiating, always accommodating, always giving more than receiving. Eventually the weight of that imbalance became too much to carry. The friendship ended not from a dramatic event but from exhaustion.
Conflict: You fought about something—maybe something significant, maybe something that seems small in retrospect—and neither of you knew how to come back from it. Pride, hurt, or stubbornness kept both of you from reaching out. Time passed until reaching out felt impossible.
Life Stage Split: Big life adjustments (marriage, kids, divorce, retirement, illness) changed what you each needed from friendship in ways that didn’t match up anymore. Not because either need was wrong, but because they were incompatible.
Which pattern matches the friendship you’re thinking about, or was your ending different entirely?

What Makes You Still Think About It
The friendships that ended but stay with us usually do so for specific reasons.
Sometimes it’s unfinished business—things unsaid, explanations never given or received, apologies offered or owed that never happened. Never getting closure leaves you with questions you can’t stop thinking about.
Perhaps it’s regret—not about the friendship itself, but about how we handled the ending. Things we said in anger, or didn’t say when we should have. Ways we could have fought for the connection but didn’t. Times we chose pride over reconciliation.
In some cases, it’s gratitude mixed with sadness—knowing the friendship meant a lot during a specific time in your life, even though that time is over. You wouldn’t trade having known them, but you also know that getting back in touch isn’t going to happen, or shouldn’t.
For some people, it’s genuine confusion—you still don’t fully understand what happened or why. The ending didn’t make sense then and still doesn’t now.
Sometimes it’s just the particular ache of losing someone who understood you in ways others don’t. Not because they were perfect or the friendship was ideal, but because certain connections are difficult to replace. When they end, that specific understanding goes with them.
What keeps this particular friendship in your thoughts?

The Invitation to Share
This is your space to tell your story—as much or as little as you want to share.
You may want to reflect on what happened and why it still matters. Perhaps you’d like to explore your questions out loud. Maybe you wish to acknowledge that this loss was real, even if no one else is aware of it.
There’s no one way to tell this. You don’t need to have it all figured out or know what it all means. You don’t need to have handled it well or learned the right lessons. You just need to be honest about your experience.
Some friendship endings we’re at peace with. Others still hurt years later. Both deserve space in the conversation.
Your story might give someone else permission to acknowledge their own situation. Your questions might resonate with someone who’s been carrying similar ones. Your honesty might help someone feel less alone with their confusion or hurt about a connection that mattered, then ended.
What friendship ended that you still think about? What happened, and what keeps it in your mind?

Share your thoughts below. I respond to every comment, and your experience often helps others more than mine does.



