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We grew up on Sex And The City, Girls, Broad City, The Bold Type, Gilmore Girls, Friends and many more movies that taught us that, above all else, female friendships are the strongest form of relationship we will ever experience.
And it's true.
Our closest friendship with other women can last through family problems and romantic problems.
But what happens when the friendship itself is a problem?
It might be an unpopular opinion but I know so many women would agree that friendship breakups are the most heartbreaking form of separation. Our friends have been through it all, they've known and loved the truest version of ourselves and have adapted throughout our ever evolving life stages.
That is why it's so hard to get over a friend breakup.
So we spoke to 12 women about the moment they knew their friendship had ended — and some of them are brutal.
Steph.
"When I finally acknowledged to myself that our friendship no longer mattered to her. I spent the last few years of our friendship trying to keep it alive, continually lowering my expectations and efforts to align with hers, hoping it would help rekindle what we had. But every time I met her level of effort, she lowered it again.
Eventually, I walked away, unable to navigate the shift from being best friends and family for 30 years to becoming more like casual acquaintances with minimal contact. Six months later, the grief is still overwhelming; it’s the first and last thing I think of each day. I also struggle with the shame of the situation and the false narrative she gets to tell herself and others about our breakup, given I was the one that walked away.