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'I think I might have ended my longest friendship of 30+ years': 45-year-old man reflects on the one thing that finally ended his friendship with his oldest, clingiest friend and wonders if he did the right thing

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  • two young boys stand together on a path
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  • My clingy friend finally got tired of clinging

    Just today I (M45) think I might have ended my longest friendship of 30+ years.
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  • The guy was my childhood bestie and the charismatic dominant leader of the pack during our teens. Our friend group naturally dispersed in our early twenties but us two kept contact for old times sake.
  • By then our relationship was already strained. He has a very demanding personality, to say the least, and I was a young man coming into my own, learning to set boundaries.
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  • I thought that him moving away would be a good middle ground. Instead of ending the friendship, we would naturally drift apart. as old friends sometimes do.
  • Oh how I was wrong. The guy never left high school mentally. He still talks about things that happened back then like it was yesterday. Clings to me like a dog to a bone. He ruminates about things, positive and negative, that
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  • I've moved past tens of years ago. The first years he called often, sometimes multiple times a week, as his lifestyle allows him to talk on the phone for hours at an end if nobody stops
  • him. Of course 90 percent is about him, details upon details on what someone had said and what he'd said in return. Or some walk down memory lane. that no one asked for. Still I kept up contact because of our shared history, and
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  • maybe because I was occasionally entertained by some of the drama in his life. Other than the one-sided phone calls, we'd meet on average once a year when he was in town or on bigger life occasions (his wedding,
  • some burials on both sides, etc), which I thought was kind of nice. As life went on, it became practically impossible to answer all his calls. I had a family and a full time job and hobbies and an aging
  • parent and new friends I barely had time for. I was pretty frank and told him multiple times that I rarely have time to talk on the phone and that I needed to schedule longer calls. I also suggested texting more often, which fit me
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  • better. He said he understood but nothing changed, except my patience running lower. Eventually I stopped answering. Not entirely, but I made a point of only taking his calls when I felt
  • like it, which was increasingly longer in between. I felt really bad because I know he's lonely. He has a family and kids, but he's alienated himself from pretty much all his other relationships.
  • Now he's finally grown fed up with me. It started last summer, when he suddenly showed up in town with his family, unannounced. Still I invited them over to the house and we had a great day together. But that wasn't
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  • enough for him. As the days went on he demanded one favor after another from me. Out of nowhere I had become responsible for him having a nice stay in his old home town. A visit I had gotten no heads up about. When
  • he finally asked if they could come to stay at my house to prolong their stay (they had been staying with his sister) I said no. Felt ash I but I'd had enough of serving his needs.
  • Still we hung out a couple of more times. I kept up appearances but things were pretty tense. During the year since then we've only talked twice. All about him, even though he knows that I'm in the midst of changing careers.
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  • man holding phone
  • The other day I made time to call him. It had been a couple of months since we talked and I had been worried about him having a health scare. Just before we ended the call he poured his heart out. It sounded like he'd
  • rehearsed what to say, but everything he said was true, and sad. Basically, he told the story above but from his perspective. Now, it could have been an opening for us to be honest with each other.
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  • But he ended it all with an ultimatum, more or less: Either we talk more often on the phone or he feels that we might as well be casual acquaintances. Maybe I'm demonizing him, but this felt like just
  • another occasion where he's forcing his will. Today I texted him, telling him just that: that I'm tired of being pressured and of feeling guilty. That if he feels that way, it's better we go our separate ways. And the he needs to build
  • new friendships. It felt harsh and I'm worried that he won't take it well. I just hope this will force him to take care of himself and to get his social life together.
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  • I'm relieved but I'm also grieving. It really didn't have to come to this. Despite his flaws I had plenty of love left for this geezer.
  • two roads divide between trees

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