10-30-2014, 05:34 PM
That's happened to me many times. Some friends just didn't want to deal with my mental health issues and moved on. Others couldn't see behind the wall I constructed to make people think I'm not rabid, and felt I was making much ado about nothing. In the end they felt like they couldn't respect me somehow. That's all fine with me; I can't hold people accountable for not needing extra drama in their lives.
It's happened when friends get boyfriends/girlfriends, husbands/wives as well. I think its only natural for attention to shift to a significant other to some degree. The other thing is that people change. Most of my friends from 20 years ago have drifted from my daily life and I have difficulty relating to them these days because our lives have taken different paths and we've naturally grown apart. Geography has played its part as well. A long distance friendship is very difficult to maintain long term.
In your case it sounds like this "friend" is somewhat of a chameleon who changes ideology when she changes relationships. I'm going to go out onto a limb and say that after twenty years of friendship your friend probably knows that you're gay. If the boyfriend is the least bit homophobic, that attitude sounds like its taken root in her as well.
People change. Nothing says that you have to be at her beck and call if she's not willing to extend the same courtesy to you. Let her go. This marks a turning point in your friendship with her, one that probably will see you drifting further apart from one another.
Be happy with the friendship you had. Smile for the past.
It's happened when friends get boyfriends/girlfriends, husbands/wives as well. I think its only natural for attention to shift to a significant other to some degree. The other thing is that people change. Most of my friends from 20 years ago have drifted from my daily life and I have difficulty relating to them these days because our lives have taken different paths and we've naturally grown apart. Geography has played its part as well. A long distance friendship is very difficult to maintain long term.
In your case it sounds like this "friend" is somewhat of a chameleon who changes ideology when she changes relationships. I'm going to go out onto a limb and say that after twenty years of friendship your friend probably knows that you're gay. If the boyfriend is the least bit homophobic, that attitude sounds like its taken root in her as well.
People change. Nothing says that you have to be at her beck and call if she's not willing to extend the same courtesy to you. Let her go. This marks a turning point in your friendship with her, one that probably will see you drifting further apart from one another.
Be happy with the friendship you had. Smile for the past.