Decade Of Friendship Shatters With One Text, Leaving Man Uninvited 2 Days Before BFF’s Wedding
Boundaries are always important. The thing about them is that they’re not some sort of way to ‘ice out’ anybody, quite the opposite: they help you have healthier, happier, and deeper relationships with the people around you. In short, you’re building a foundation of mutual respect. But this is easier said than done. Unfortunately, people, even good friends, overstep boundaries all the time. Sometimes, they are seemingly inspired by romantic comedies.
One anonymous woman went viral on the internet after asking for relationship advice. She opened up about how her best friend professed his long-lasting love for her… just two days before her wedding. Naturally, she was shocked. You’ll find the full story, including a very important update that went viral online, below. Scroll down to see what happened and how the internet reacted.
Sometimes, people throw common sense, decency, and basic respect out the window because they have a crush
Image credits: drazenphoto (Not the actual photo)
An anonymous woman shared how her best friend tried to ruin her wedding because he harbored a secret, unrequited love for her
Image credits: tommyandone (Not the actual photo)
The author decided to ask her soulmate for help. Here’s what happened after they confronted the ‘friend’
Image credits: YuriArcursPeopleimages (Not the actual photo)
Image credits: Wesley Tingey (Not the actual photo)
Image credits: throwrawhythehell
If a friendship no longer works for you, you should have the courage to renegotiate your boundaries
Broadly speaking, if you consider yourself a good friend, then you should not try to undermine their happiness or destroy their relationship. That’s selfish. True friends want to support their best buddies as they celebrate their lifetime milestones like raises, promotions, new jobs, getting engaged, getting married, having kids, buying a house, etc.
You also want to be there for them when the going gets tough. To put it simply, if you’re only ever around for the fun, you’re a fairweather friend who hasn’t invested enough into the relationship.
A good rule of thumb is not to try to dismantle anyone’s romantic relationships. It’s common sense, but that tends to go out the window when strong feelings like love get involved.
Real friendship is hard work. And deep and meaningful connections don’t happen by accident: you have to invest a lot of time, care, and effort into them. Consistently!
Mahzad Hojjat, a professor of psychology at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, told The Guardian that good friendships revolve around mutual understanding, communication, and support.
“It is about give and take in both good and bad times; it is not selfish. If someone comforted you when you had a bad day, reciprocate by offering to help them celebrate, say, a child’s birthday. It is about slowly letting someone into your world and allowing them to do the same,” Hojjat explains.
“Once a friendship is established, it’s important to maintain it, regardless of physical distance or busy schedules. If you haven’t heard from a friend in a while, call them. Perhaps they are in a bad place, and they need your support. Even the strongest bonds can fade if they aren’t nurtured.”
Meanwhile, Susan Shapiro Barash, author of Toxic Friends: The Antidote for Women Stuck in Complicated Friendships, pointed out that many people are reluctant to confront a friend when they step over the line. According to her, you have to be willing to renegotiate friendships.
“You have to have the courage to sit down and say, ‘We need to preserve this, but you did this and here’s how I felt. I really care about you, we care for each other, but I’m very concerned because this or that happened.’”
She continued: “The other thing you need to do is be accepting. It’s worth considering that your friend has her own stuff going on too. And ask yourself: What kind of friend have I been? Possibly, I’ve let her down and I need to be more supportive. So it’s worth reflecting on from both sides.”
Image credits: Keira Burton (Not the actual photo)
Caring about your friends means more than just blurting out whatever you like, whenever you like. Respect them enough to be tactful
Life doesn’t work like the popular rom-coms you enjoy at the cinema. A last-minute declaration of love or a dramatic gesture can work wonders on the silver screen. But in real life, it’s going to create a lot of panic, confusion, anxiety, and disappointment among the people you (claim to) care about.
In short, if you love someone or think you have a crush on them, sure, be honest and tell them… but be mindful of the timing. If they’re already dating someone, don’t wreck it. If they’re engaged, about to get married, or already married, don’t put a wrench in their lives.
Keep those feelings to yourself (not everything needs to be said aloud in life) and move on with your life. There are plenty of potentially great partners in the world, and you will eventually find someone who makes you happy and likes you for you.
If they’re single, you can bring the topic up. But! Be ready for the possibility of getting rejected. Just because you have a crush on someone does not necessarily mean that they’ll reciprocate those same romantic feelings. They might like you as a friend, but they might not love you or feel physically attracted to you or they may not want to be in a relationship right now.
Try to react to whatever answer you get with respect and dignity. You’re still friends after all. Accept their ‘no’ for what it is.
Don’t pressure the other person or pursue them further if they clearly tell you that they’re not interested. And remember, just because someone is polite and tries to phrase their ‘no’ to hurt you less does not mean that might still have a chance. Take that for a very empathetic and kind rejection.
Meanwhile, if you do what the viral post author’s so-called friend did, spewing vitriol when he didn’t get his way and insulting everyone and anyone, then there wasn’t much of a friendship to begin with. Good friends respect each other’s boundaries and can handle rejection.
Have you ever been in a situation where a friend suddenly confessed to you, dear Pandas? Has this ever happened to you when you were already in a relationship? How did you handle the situation and were you still friends after that? What would you do if someone tried to get you to call off your wedding? We’d like to hear your thoughts on all of this. You can share them in the comments, at the bottom of this post.
Image credits: Jonathan Borba (Not the actual photo)
Many readers wanted to share their perspective on the tense and frustrating friendship drama
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That update killed me. What kind of absolute mankaren does that? f*****g incel.
It's sickening. Garbage men like this are the reason why people give me ironic "yeah, sure" looks when I say I have female friends I have absolutely no romantic/sexual feelings towards (and unlike the d!ck above, I really mean it).
Load More Replies...That's not a friend, that's an entitled A hole, probably idolises Ross Gellar. He's just been waiting to get into her pants all these years, you're better off without "friends" like that. His response after you told him that your feelings were platonic shows you all you need to know. Get shot of him.
All the same, I can’t imagine Ross going full blown incel arsehat at the end…
Load More Replies...Kudos to the fiance/now husband. He took al the worries away from her. Definitely the best choice.
Only if it were love! No, the former best friend developed a crush on a "safe" target, a person, who had a stable relationship with someone else. Bestie could have all the daydreams and all the romantic pics in his head w/o facing the reality (and hardships) of a relationship with a flesh and blood individual. As the end of this imaginary relationship came closer and closer, he decided to ruin it ror everybody else too.
The fiancee of the decade ladies and gentlemen! He handled that with such grace and dedication to his fiancee
I love the way OP's fiance/husband handled the situation. Very supportive and understanding. Definitely a better choice than the texter.
I had a pretty similar experience. Only, my guy best friend waited until we were married (about 8 or 9 months in) to spring it on me at 04:00 in the morning. Husband was away for a friend's birthday and I was home alone. Went out with some friends, came home at around 4 am to find "friend" waiting in the parking lot. This was after about 20 missed calls over the course of the night. I didn't want a scene in the parking lot, so I invited him in and we sat at opposite ends of the living room. He told me how he had "always" loved me - we had been friends for almost 10 years by then - and that he wasn't happy in his marriage. Needless to say I shut that s##t down immediately and told him to go home TO HIS WIFE. As soon as hubby came home, I told him all about it and he was furious - with good reason, we hung out with "friend" and his wife at least once a week at that time. After that, we hardly ever saw them and their marriage lasted about 2 or 3 more months.
This is why I **hate** the screen writers' tool of "you've gotta tell her how you feel" to create tension and conflict etc. No you f.u.c.k.i.n.g. don't. You can't help how you feel, it's not your fault, but it is your responsibility. Deal with it yourself, or, even better, talk it through with your actual friends. Don't hand the problem over to the person you fancy and feel better about lifting the weight off your shoulders that way.
Load More Replies...People need to stop referring to Romantic relationships and something 'more' (the quote was 'friend, but nothing more'). There is no 'more' about it. These are two completely different relationships! Poor women and what a gross gross 'friend'
Can I just say your new husband is A KEEPER ❤️he handled that ah with perfection so glad you go to have a fab day and lush honeymoon blessed be for the future As for that a*s hat ex so called friend karma loser is a b***h n u found that the hard way nasty low life he is ! god help any one he does marry
One of my favourite ever movies - was shocked to realise how old it is.
Load More Replies...My husband's ex wife apparently had a habit of begging to get back together 'for the kids' every time he was in a relationship about to take the next step. Sure enough, a few days b/f our wedding she told their daughter (23 at the time) to tell her dad to call her cause she wanted to talk to him. He told his daughter no, he was busy and wouldn't be talking to her mother. It's pathetic really.
Another "nice guy" who'll whine and complain about how women "use" him or whatever and that he can't find a partner because he's such a good guy and not an ahole, like women actually want. The "friend"'s reaction is so typical and predictable as to border on parody. These idiots are seriously all exactly the same.
I had a male friend who was pretending to be in love with a my friend. After a year he said this was all a lie, just a cover to spend more time with me. He was in love with me. No more male friends for me (except my husband)
Wow! Getting into a relationship with someone, just to get closer to someone else. And, to think they planned to somehow leap frog to the other person at some point. Beyond delusional.
Load More Replies...I agree with one of Reddit responders, about how many people have "what if?" thoughts. That is perfectly OK and normal. I think people should get to know each other before getting into a serious relationship. But, if the other person hasn't shown that interest in 10 years and they are seeing other people... that ship sailed a long time ago!
That's why I don't say anything if someone I crush on is dating someone. I don't want to force the crush into a position where they have to choose.
Worst part of it is, not even a decade ago this would have been a grand romantic gesture worthy of a movie plot. That's how prevalent this kind of toxic mentality still is in our society.
Sounds like he was embarrassed and didn't handle it well. He had a fantasy about her and was happy not to commit to anything or make himself vulnerable until the last minute. I can't imagine it would have lasted even if she had wanted to run away with him. Once he was in reality and not a fantasy anymore it would have lost it's attraction.
It's amazing how many people think rom coms are reality. (The same goes for other scenarios) They're fun on screen but utterly gross/terrifying in real life.
Had the same. Male friend, knew each other for 5+yrs, he said in the beginning he liked me, but realized if he dated me and we broke up, he'd lose someone awesome from his life, so he decided friends would be best. A few months ago he texted me that he'd fallen for me and it was hard to be my friend for a long time, I texted back that he's living with his GF of 4yrs, and if he's been living with her while in love with me then I was going to come round and kick his fuc*ing C*nt in because that's a sh*tty thing to do to her. Luckily he told me the romantic feelings for me dropped off and he fell in love with his now-GF. Good grief, MAKE UP YOUR MINDS.
I am fortunate that two male friends in love with me told me within a year, and we are still keep in touch a couple times a year, 40 years late. One married an acquaintance, and she thanked me for not being in love with him.
'Leading him on'? By dating someone else and getting engaged to them? What about that is leading him on? What a f*****g pathetic excuse for a person.
SOMEONE WATCHED Y BEST FRIENDS WEDDING AND THEN DECIDED TO POST A FAKE STORY
I think it's fair to say that *women* (not girls), should be able to treat their male friends as adults and assume that if there's something on their minds, they have the maturity to come out and say it. No games. No expecting someone to read your mind. If you're in love with someone who considers you a friend, then bloody well speak up about it so you can both get on with your lives.
Load More Replies...I promise you that it is really possible to not realise someone has a crush on you for a very long time. Especially if you have a partner so they have to act normally (platonic) around you.
Load More Replies...That update killed me. What kind of absolute mankaren does that? f*****g incel.
It's sickening. Garbage men like this are the reason why people give me ironic "yeah, sure" looks when I say I have female friends I have absolutely no romantic/sexual feelings towards (and unlike the d!ck above, I really mean it).
Load More Replies...That's not a friend, that's an entitled A hole, probably idolises Ross Gellar. He's just been waiting to get into her pants all these years, you're better off without "friends" like that. His response after you told him that your feelings were platonic shows you all you need to know. Get shot of him.
All the same, I can’t imagine Ross going full blown incel arsehat at the end…
Load More Replies...Kudos to the fiance/now husband. He took al the worries away from her. Definitely the best choice.
Only if it were love! No, the former best friend developed a crush on a "safe" target, a person, who had a stable relationship with someone else. Bestie could have all the daydreams and all the romantic pics in his head w/o facing the reality (and hardships) of a relationship with a flesh and blood individual. As the end of this imaginary relationship came closer and closer, he decided to ruin it ror everybody else too.
The fiancee of the decade ladies and gentlemen! He handled that with such grace and dedication to his fiancee
I love the way OP's fiance/husband handled the situation. Very supportive and understanding. Definitely a better choice than the texter.
I had a pretty similar experience. Only, my guy best friend waited until we were married (about 8 or 9 months in) to spring it on me at 04:00 in the morning. Husband was away for a friend's birthday and I was home alone. Went out with some friends, came home at around 4 am to find "friend" waiting in the parking lot. This was after about 20 missed calls over the course of the night. I didn't want a scene in the parking lot, so I invited him in and we sat at opposite ends of the living room. He told me how he had "always" loved me - we had been friends for almost 10 years by then - and that he wasn't happy in his marriage. Needless to say I shut that s##t down immediately and told him to go home TO HIS WIFE. As soon as hubby came home, I told him all about it and he was furious - with good reason, we hung out with "friend" and his wife at least once a week at that time. After that, we hardly ever saw them and their marriage lasted about 2 or 3 more months.
This is why I **hate** the screen writers' tool of "you've gotta tell her how you feel" to create tension and conflict etc. No you f.u.c.k.i.n.g. don't. You can't help how you feel, it's not your fault, but it is your responsibility. Deal with it yourself, or, even better, talk it through with your actual friends. Don't hand the problem over to the person you fancy and feel better about lifting the weight off your shoulders that way.
Load More Replies...People need to stop referring to Romantic relationships and something 'more' (the quote was 'friend, but nothing more'). There is no 'more' about it. These are two completely different relationships! Poor women and what a gross gross 'friend'
Can I just say your new husband is A KEEPER ❤️he handled that ah with perfection so glad you go to have a fab day and lush honeymoon blessed be for the future As for that a*s hat ex so called friend karma loser is a b***h n u found that the hard way nasty low life he is ! god help any one he does marry
One of my favourite ever movies - was shocked to realise how old it is.
Load More Replies...My husband's ex wife apparently had a habit of begging to get back together 'for the kids' every time he was in a relationship about to take the next step. Sure enough, a few days b/f our wedding she told their daughter (23 at the time) to tell her dad to call her cause she wanted to talk to him. He told his daughter no, he was busy and wouldn't be talking to her mother. It's pathetic really.
Another "nice guy" who'll whine and complain about how women "use" him or whatever and that he can't find a partner because he's such a good guy and not an ahole, like women actually want. The "friend"'s reaction is so typical and predictable as to border on parody. These idiots are seriously all exactly the same.
I had a male friend who was pretending to be in love with a my friend. After a year he said this was all a lie, just a cover to spend more time with me. He was in love with me. No more male friends for me (except my husband)
Wow! Getting into a relationship with someone, just to get closer to someone else. And, to think they planned to somehow leap frog to the other person at some point. Beyond delusional.
Load More Replies...I agree with one of Reddit responders, about how many people have "what if?" thoughts. That is perfectly OK and normal. I think people should get to know each other before getting into a serious relationship. But, if the other person hasn't shown that interest in 10 years and they are seeing other people... that ship sailed a long time ago!
That's why I don't say anything if someone I crush on is dating someone. I don't want to force the crush into a position where they have to choose.
Worst part of it is, not even a decade ago this would have been a grand romantic gesture worthy of a movie plot. That's how prevalent this kind of toxic mentality still is in our society.
Sounds like he was embarrassed and didn't handle it well. He had a fantasy about her and was happy not to commit to anything or make himself vulnerable until the last minute. I can't imagine it would have lasted even if she had wanted to run away with him. Once he was in reality and not a fantasy anymore it would have lost it's attraction.
It's amazing how many people think rom coms are reality. (The same goes for other scenarios) They're fun on screen but utterly gross/terrifying in real life.
Had the same. Male friend, knew each other for 5+yrs, he said in the beginning he liked me, but realized if he dated me and we broke up, he'd lose someone awesome from his life, so he decided friends would be best. A few months ago he texted me that he'd fallen for me and it was hard to be my friend for a long time, I texted back that he's living with his GF of 4yrs, and if he's been living with her while in love with me then I was going to come round and kick his fuc*ing C*nt in because that's a sh*tty thing to do to her. Luckily he told me the romantic feelings for me dropped off and he fell in love with his now-GF. Good grief, MAKE UP YOUR MINDS.
I am fortunate that two male friends in love with me told me within a year, and we are still keep in touch a couple times a year, 40 years late. One married an acquaintance, and she thanked me for not being in love with him.
'Leading him on'? By dating someone else and getting engaged to them? What about that is leading him on? What a f*****g pathetic excuse for a person.
SOMEONE WATCHED Y BEST FRIENDS WEDDING AND THEN DECIDED TO POST A FAKE STORY
I think it's fair to say that *women* (not girls), should be able to treat their male friends as adults and assume that if there's something on their minds, they have the maturity to come out and say it. No games. No expecting someone to read your mind. If you're in love with someone who considers you a friend, then bloody well speak up about it so you can both get on with your lives.
Load More Replies...I promise you that it is really possible to not realise someone has a crush on you for a very long time. Especially if you have a partner so they have to act normally (platonic) around you.
Load More Replies...
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