Friends · Online Friendships / Social Media
gpt-4o-mini · Female · Anxiety, Sleep Disorder
Okay so this is kind of a weird one but a few years ago I made a fanpage and somehow ended up with this whole group of friends through it. They were close people, we talked every single day. There was even this one woman who was abt 15 years older than me and we just clicked so well, it didn't feel like an age gap. It felt like super real connection you know? But then slowly everyone just kinda drifted apart. People stopped posting, stopped texting, and now it's like that whole world just disapp
I'm really sorry to hear that you're going through this. It doesn't sound weird at all; the connections we make, whether online or in person, can be incredibly meaningful and real. It's completely valid to feel a sense of loss when those connections fade, especially when they've been a big part of your daily life. The wonderful thing about the internet is that it allows us to find people who share our interests and passions in ways that can be harder to do offline. That can create very genuine b
I've thought about reaching out but I feel its weird at this point. It's just that so much time has passed and I'm not sure what to say. It also feels desperate like as if I have no in real life friends. Also, the woman I was close with, she was the one I miss the most honestly. We had such good conversations and she felt like a big sister almost. Now she's 50 years old. I She might not remember me the same way and might think it was cringe of her to be friends with someone so young.
It's completely natural to feel hesitant about reaching out after a lot of time has passed, and your concerns are valid. However, the bond you described with this woman sounds like it was based on genuine connection and mutual respect, not just on age or circumstance. It's possible she remembers your friendship just as fondly as you do. Reaching out doesn't have to come from a place of desperation. It can be a simple gesture of wanting to reconnect with someone who was once a significant part o
I think she might respond out of politeness and not actually care. Tbh I'd rather keep the memory of how it was than find out she's moved on completely and doesn't really think about it. Is that weird? I'm protecting myself from finding out it meant more to me than it did to her.
Your feelings are not weird at all; they're very understandable and a natural way to protect yourself from potential hurt. It's okay to want to preserve the memory of your friendship as it was, especially if that memory is something you cherish deeply. The fear that a reconnection might not live up to the past or might reveal an imbalance in how much each of you valued the relationship is a common concern. It's a form of self-preservation, and it's perfectly valid to choose to remember the relat
I think that's where I'm at. I do wish that it didn't have to end the way it did. There's not even a fight or anything, just silence. That's harder to accept. At least with a fight there's a reason. This just kind of faded and nobody even acknowledged it and there's no reason. One day we were all talking and then slowly we weren't anymore and nobody said anything about it. I didn't notice too until now. Life just got super busy for me.
It sounds like you're grappling with a very poignant form of loss, one that's all the more challenging because it lacks closure. The slow fade of relationships, without a clear end or reason, can indeed be harder to make sense of compared to a distinct break caused by an argument or disagreement. This kind of ending leaves so many questions unanswered, which can linger and make the moving-on process more complicated. It's natural and okay to wish things had ended differently, or that there had
I know right, life got in the way for me and it's probably the case for the other people too . I'm not saying it's anyone's fault. It's just sad that something that felt so important disappeared without anyone even noticing. I noticed now and it's too late. I guess I just miss having that kind of connection where you just get each other with inside jokes and everything. It's hard to find that in real life so it was special.
Absolutely, it's a profound kind of sadness when something that once felt central to your daily happiness quietly slips away, especially when it's through no one's fault but the simple, often relentless march of life. The realization that it's gone, particularly when it comes without a clear endpoint or a dramatic reason, can hit hard. It underscores the transient nature of many connections, even those that seem like they'll always be there. The sense of loss you're feeling for the community an