We’ve
all been there in primary school when someone has said ‘I’m not your friend
anymore!’ to us, and it’s simply seemed like the end of the world. Part of
growing up, I’ve sadly come to realise, is losing people. We drift apart, we
grow up, we lose contact – it happens.
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However,
I seem to be one of a small minority who feels like this loss, although a
potential for temporary heartbreak, is healthy. (Not to say that I relish
losing my friends, that would be very unhealthy).
What I’m saying is, it is a fact of life that some of the people you grow up
with will not be the ones you share your bingo days, your 50th
wedding anniversary, your 30th birthday or even your graduation
with.
Of
course, some friends you make you will make for life and these are worth
holding on to at any cost and treasured. (Someone came to your mind just now,
right? Text them, call them, tweet them right now and tell them you love them).
But these will be few and far between, which is exactly what makes them so
special.
For
the friends who just drift to the side-lines of our lives, having their
occasional presence on our social media platforms isn’t so much of a big deal. It
may even occur to you to like their engagement selfie as a whimsical expression
of goodwill, for old time’s sake. But what about the ones who have hurt us,
with whom we have had a granddaddy type fall out that even the protagonists of
‘Mean Girls’ would be jealous of? It’s hard to tiptoe around something like
that on social media.
Before
I continue, I feel it important to say that I am not a confrontational or
antagonistic person, but a very anxious one. Having myself been isolated from a
group of friends a few years back, I found it very difficult watching their
updates on Facebook. Without any physical presence in my real life, they were
still haunting me every time I checked my phone. Any tweets with a sly dig
involved, I would instantly head spin into a panic. Is it about me? Is she referring to that embarrassing thing that
happened to me a few months ago? She wouldn’t make a status about it, would
she? WOULD SHE?!?!
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All
this unnecessary worrying got me thinking. What happened in the days before
social media, before we were all continually updated about every single thing
happening in each other’s lives? Scary as it is to consider, I think we all
just let go. When a friendship comes to a natural end, it is just that – the
end. It is supposed to hurt a bit and it is supposed to teach you a lesson. It
is a time for self-reflection - for deciding what you would do differently in
your next friendships, and to promise yourself what type of friendship you
deserve (i.e. the answer for you, my friend, is the very best. Never settle for
anything less).
Taking
a very big deep breath, I began to “unfriend” people from Facebook. Undoubtedly
an already much referred to point, but not everyone on my Facebook is my
“friend”. I didn’t want the process to be a flip off to those I had shared some
of my best memories with, a reincarnation of the primary school “I’m not your
friend anymore”. What it was, and what it needed to be, was a personal refresh.
A new start, to prevent my already anxious flames being fanned unnecessarily by
unexpected pop-ups in my News Feed. Perhaps what I couldn’t see wouldn’t hurt
me, after all. One by one, as these people disappeared, I felt a weight lifting
off my shoulders.
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It
isn’t immature and it isn’t selfish. What it is is self-preservation. People
existed and conducted their relationships in a perfectly healthy manner before
social media became a craze, and they will continue to do so long after the
hype has died down. Why continue to let yourself be upset by something on
social media because society is telling us it’s the thing to do?
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