'What Did I Do Wrong? : When Women Don't Tell Each Other the Friendship Is Over'

April 6, 2006 — -- Sometimes close female friendships come to an end. According to author Liz Pryor, women have the tendency to bring these relationships to a close with silence. They stop calling their friend back and turn down requests to get together.

Pryor investigated the roots of this issue through personal interviews and stories submitted to her Web site, www.lizpryor.com. She reveals warning signs, patterns, and ways to help a friendship in trouble.

Chapter One

MAGGIE: The Loss That Redefines Us

"Help us to be ever faithful gardeners of the spirit, who know that without darkness nothing comes to birth, and without light nothing flowers." -- May Sarton

The ending of my friendship with Maggie ultimately led to the profound beginning of something much bigger -- a realization of the prevalence of these unhappy endings to women's friendships and a need to understand them. However, at the time, I was completely unaware of anything other than the sadness, confusion, and havoc her avoidance had brought into my life.

I felt positive that Maggie and I were not these two estranged women. If our friendship were in trouble, we would have discussed it. Something or someone would be accountable. Maggie would never say, "I'm busy," and be done with it -- or would she?

I hung on as long as I could to the sliver of hope that the whole thing was some sort of crazy mix-up. In fact I convinced myself after another week had passed to call her one more time. Maybe, just maybe, I was insanely paranoid and would we would laugh together at the absurdity of the idea of this friendship being over. I dialed her number, and the moment she answered, I wished I hadn't -- I wanted to hang up, but instead we carried on a brief swapping of "How are you's?" Everything I had felt earlier was validated once and for all? She was done.

Through my wave of nausea, I found the courage before hanging up to ask if she was angry with me about something. I think it was my feeble way of letting her know that I was on to what she was doing. She stuck quietly and adamantly to the "busy" thing. My sliver of hope was gone as I put the receiver down.

The part of me that sees a glass as half full recognized that at least the guessing was over. She was done. But I was a mess. Just after I hung up the phone with her I felt the first real taste of rage, sadness, and shame. I think I was angry with myself for not having had the nerve to say something more direct -- like, "I know what you're doing, you coward. At least admit what you are doing here. Say, 'I break with thee.' Say something." But I couldn't muster up any more to say to her even though, clearly, I had nothing to lose. But the emotions of these experiences are tough to explain while you're close to them and right in them. That's one reason I wanted to write this book -- to help myself, and other women, get clarity and perspective on these murky situations.

For about a year after Maggie broke off our friendship, I felt wretched. It was hard not to keep imagining that I'd said or done some god-awful thing of which I was completely unaware. I wracked my brain, desperate to recall any clue, and then moved on again and again to scrutinize my overall character. I would find great faults in who I am, but nothing specific to our friendship.

My personal sense of failure at the ending was overwhelming. I had always fancied myself as being blessed with rock-solid intuition, but this experience had totally blind-sided me. I was flailing. Eventually my frustration and question led my head to a place where I occasionally contemplated driving over to Maggie's house, waiting for her to come out, sticking my fist down her throat, and ripping out the reasons she didn't want to be my friend. But I didn't.Months inched by, as it does, and Maggie came to rest as an unsettled memory inside. She was gone, and I'd resigned myself to the thought that I'd always wonder why. I had my second child, and then my third. Life kept me running, moving every second.

And then something happened. Right about the time I began to shift as a mother from dealing with small babies to dealing with little people, when sleep deprivation was becoming a rarity, and I was beginning to recall how I had felt before kids, I noticed that something was different about me. Something had changed.

Something inside felt inexplicably off. I had a nagging pit in my stomach. It would come first thing in the mornings and slowly fade as the day went on. I had no idea what it was about. Then one day, and through more days, it didn't fade. It lingered and gnawed at me. The more I tried to blow off this feeling, the further it seemed to make its way in, until finally it was living at the forefront of my everyday life.

I eventually had to take the time to try to figure it out. I looked inside to search honestly for an explanation of what was really going on. My investigation led quite easily but surprisingly to my female friendships. An entire trail of ended friendships with women ultimately surfaced. A few had ended naturally because they or I had moved away or common interests faded, but this trail revealed numerous friendships that had stopped -- with basically no ending. I sat on this realization for a while. I went over it, and over it, but each time it came up the same. The pit inside me had begun to feel more like a brick. Friend after friend, women I'd almost completely forgotten, rose from a purgatory holding bin inside me.

After pushing aside my denial and self-justification, and allowing the magnitude of this reality to surface, I had a major insight. The endings to each of these friendships in my adult life had come through some form of avoidance. And not just regular avoidance, but a masterful, calculated, methodical kind -- quiet, brutal, and alarmingly effective. I no longer had to question the meaning of the pit in my stomach. It was a mass of un-addressed emotion that had accumulated after each and every un-ending with a female friend.

After sifting through as many of these experiences as I could remember, I got to Maggie and her more recent avoidance of me several years earlier. And I realized that I had wrought that same, awful, unfinished, questioning havoc on other women. I was floored, and slightly horrified that I'd been so completely disconnected from the truth about such a significant area in my life.

I felt then that I must be the only woman on the planet who was this blatantly dysfunctional when it came to ending friendships. If this were a universal issue, if every woman had been stopped in her tracks at one point or another by the ending of a friendship, I would undoubtedly have heard about it. At least a few other women would have mentioned it. Yet I could positively say that this subject had never come up. I had never asked a woman, "How are you?" and heard the response, "Not so great, I'm in the process of being dumped by a very close friend and I'm feeling so sad and kind of ashamed about it." No, I'd never heard anything even close to that.

I came to realize that I'd had a little assistance in accomplishing my massive dysfunction. I even found a little comfort in it.

The act of girlfriends dumping girlfriends is simply void of any guidelines or rules. Neither society nor women have decreed it has to be this way, but there is no protocol when it comes to how a woman should end a friendship with another woman. She is free to behave and act in any fashion, fit or unfit. Not a soul will question her. Like no other situation I can think of, accountability and responsibility simply don't exist.

Maybe the general idea is that, if something is never acknowledged, it can't be criticized or judged, and the hope is that it will disappear entirely.

Except in my case. I may have shorted out some wiring, because the experiences hadn't disappeared for me. In fact, they had become unrelenting in their drag on my emotional life and were getting bigger and deeper.

I was sure of only one thing. I'd revealed a truth within myself and could never go back on it, if I intended to even kind of like myself in the years to come. My life would be unthinkable to me without the female friends with whom I share so much. They link to so much of what makes life rich and full. How could I have also not dealt with the endings of other friendships?

Having just scratched the surface of the endings to women's friendships, I began to be consumed with the subject. Since it was taking over my life, I started to write this book. It's not a how-to book, or a book in collaboration with an expert, but one written straight from my heart, the heart of an ordinary woman. I'm not psychologist, or a philosopher. I am not a trained expert in anything except for maybe multi-tasking as a mother. I'm a regular woman, living her life, raising her kids and feeling strongly at this point that I'm not the only one out there who feels the aftermath of unfinished endings with her friends.

I am the fifth of seven children raised in the heart of the Midwest by a mother who honored and respected her girlfriends as much she did health, God, and good manners. We were not only taught but were able to watch the profound effects of friendship on our blessed mother. She may have had too many children and never enough time for herself, but she always made time for her girlfriends.

I ended up spending four years on this journey into women's friendships. I got together with groups of women and heard hundreds of their stories. Women eagerly shared and purged their emotions, ideas, and questions with others in these groups and with me. And I wrote it all down. I hounded every expert I could find; I located every printed piece of information on the subject of ended friendships among women. From all this, I wanted to be able to pull together and some perspective on the truth of what happens when we women end friendships with each other. And I also wanted to uncover some common sense for dealing with the pain and the process.

The one thing I learned for sure is that these experiences are universal among women. They transcend age, race, educational background, and socioeconomic status. The stories and discussions that lie ahead in the next chapters represent women from all walks of life.

In this book I have attempted to band us women together so that we can all take a clear look at the reality of this phenomenon and try to reduce the pain it causes. Little by little, we might begin to understand and acknowledge the big effect that these experiences have on our lives and on each other.

I have changed all the names, places, and the identifying characteristics within all the stories in the following chapters, except for my own, and my family's. My appreciation and gratitude go out to the hundreds of women who took the time to stop and share their hearts and stories with me.

"Help us to be ever faithful gardeners of the spirit, who know that without darkness nothing comes to birth, and without light nothing flowers." -- May Sarton