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hellonearth144

Member
Nov 30, 2025
27
My therapist blames me for my friend ghosting me without a word. Claiming that talking everyday is too much and it caused her to leave me. Anytime I tell her about new person leaving she says I'm too much. And has an obsession with this fact that I talked with my friend everyday for hours. She brings it up on every visit anytime I want to vent about my friend leaving me.
She also claims that no friend will spend life with you and only a partner will,
While I just want to be close with a friend and spend time with them everyday. I just want a platonic soulmate.
She also blamed me for my current friend ghosting me for days or weeks or leaving in the middle of convos without a word.

I'm wanna change her and refused next visit bc she also blames me for my narc mom behaviors. But my mother got angry and started screaming bc my SEVENTY YEAR OLD psychiatrist recommended her. I'm literally gen z I need a younger psychiatrist bc I will never be understood with this one. And also I'm autistic and those people do not understand that and have no knowledge about that so I can't get right treatment and understanding.
I'm whole life under my mother control, it's impossible to reason with her or have a normal conversation
What my therapist says about friendships makes me want to commit bc all I want is close friends who will spend time with me everyday but apparently I'm too much and nobody will tolerate that.
It's all messing with my head and making me suicidal
 
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NearlyIrrelevantCake

NearlyIrrelevantCake

The Cake Is A Lie
Aug 12, 2021
2,409
I'm aromantic and hear that bullshit all the time, that only a romantic partner is a "real" relationship. Friends are not a lesser tier of relationship and the love between them is no less real than romantic love.
 
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Forever Sleep

Earned it we have...
May 4, 2022
13,929
I came to my own conclussion that I could be too much for friends. It's kind of embarassing and hurtful to come to terms with.

As for whether it's even possible to have someone that close for always, I don't know really. The obvious issue is that- as we age and change, our circumstances do to. When friends have partners and families, their priorities do tend to shift. I suppose the therapist is trying to emphasize that you can't hinge your well being on another person. It is pretty risky.

What doesn't feel fair is to make you feel bad about it though- I think. We become clingy for a reason- surely. I thought the whole point of a therapist was to dig out why we may have these behaviours. Not to berate us for having them! I imagine we seek out love from others because we may not have had the level we needed from our parents/ families.

It sounds a little like the borderline personalities need for a favourite person. I don't think I'm borderline but, I am definitely prone to an obsessive clingness in relationships. Both limerence- when it comes to crushes on people and, a clingyness in friendship.

It's swung the other way for me now in that- the intensity of need is often met with disappointment and loss and, I suppose I figured the loss is too painful to risk now.

I don't really know if the need is something that can be toned down. However- if you are noticing that your friendships are largely hurting you and ultimately- you can't change the other person, maybe you do have to look at how much you are expecting of them.

It might of course- be reasonable but then- if they aren't willing to give that amount, it likely will just lead to you getting hurt. My former best friend just literally put it plainly one day that their partner was now their best friend. It hurt a great deal at the time but, ultimately, it made me take that necessary step back.

I try really hard now to appreciate what a person is willing to give without expecting stuff from them. It doesn't always work but, it helps to at least remind myself not to become reliant.
 
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hellonearth144

Member
Nov 30, 2025
27
My friend who ghosted me never wanted to have a sexual/romantic partner just like me. I never wanted either.
 
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Dejected 55

Dejected 55

Enlightened
May 7, 2025
1,999
Some people never want to talk but still want to call people "friend." I don't understand it. People claim anyone is a "friend" as long as that person isn't actively out to get them. Most people really only seem to want casual acquaintances, but want to call that friendship even though it isn't.

I don't think most people want actual friends... just like I don't think most people want actual partners, romantically. It seems like everyone wants to be alone but have someone ready and waiting to do the particular thing they need when they need it and then go away. Transactional relationships as "friends" and "partners" seems to be the way of the world now, and that just feels so empty and not at all worth living to me.
 
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sonnyw

sonnyw

in the end it doesn't even matter
Dec 6, 2025
47
It doesn't seem like they're a good therapist... even if what they said was true (I don't believe it) they shouldn't treat you this way and blame you for everything...
 
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takemetothestars

Member
Dec 18, 2025
17
Please please please don't be suicidal over this. Everything is OK, this is small potatoes
 
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Seneca65AD

Student
Oct 28, 2025
101
If therapy isn't working for you and actually making your situation worse, my advice is to cut ties with them immediately. No exit interview; no thanks for the help, just don't rebook. I believe there are good ones out there, but it takes time to find them. Same with psychiatrists, counsellors and every other health care professional.

There are life-time friends, just as there are short-time family members. My wife has had the same best-friend from school for over 40 years. I am not the "friend" type of person so if I see one of them every year or so, I'm good. Do not apologize for who you are and shame on your therapist for making you feel the way she did - that just seems cruel.
 

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