Should You Really "Stay Friends" After The Relationship is Over?

"We broke up last night, but it was mutual and we're going to remain friends." REALLY? Why do we try to stay friends with an ex and is it ever a good idea?


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Jerry Seinfeld wisely observed that breaking up with someone was like trying to tip over a soda machine. You can't do it in one push. You have to get it rocking. Once it is moving and unstable only then you can push it over.

Breaking up IS hard to do. It is difficult to tell another person, "I don't want a romantic relationship with you." Hearing it from someone else is clearly worse. There's pain, tears, possibly even anger. It's a dirty business. So often times, either as a way to soften the blow or out of sincere feelings of warmth, we say, "But let's stay friends."

From an intellectual level remaining friends may seem like a good idea. The logic usually goes, "I do like her as a person. We have fun together. We have good talks. I'm just not that into her romantically. I like having her in my life, so we should stop being romantic and just keep the friend part." If both individuals are emotionally mature, and completely lacking in romantic feelings for each other, then a jump straight to the friend zone might be possible. However, this very rarely happens. Mutual breakups are usually not mutual, and the breakee is holding on to some strong romantic desires.

The ever present danger for these types of friendships is a backslide. One night you're out as friends, you have a couple of drinks, somebody leans in too close, and BAM! It's just like you never broke up. Only this situation is much more confusing, hurtful, and sad.

 


3 Good Reasons Why You Shouldn't Stay Friends

1.    It is hard to turn off romantic feelings

You see it in the paper every day. Someone throws away a prominent career because they have fallen in love (or lust) with someone they shouldn't. This person knows that it is a bad idea, but controlling our emotions in this way takes a discipline that most folks can't muster.

If you've ever been dumped, and agreed to "just be friends" you know deep down inside you still want to get back together. Even if you don't want to…you want to. Each time you get together as friends you're hoping and praying that you'll end up in each other's arms. You may even subtly be pushing things in that direction.

If you did the dumping, the knowledge that this person -- this new friend -- would love to kiss you will always be in the back of your mind waiting for the right moment to lead you exactly where you don't want to go.

 

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26 comments on “Should You Really "Stay Friends" After The Relationship is Over?


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YES YOU CAN BE FRIEND AFTER A RELATION SHIP IS OVER, OR THAT ONLY WITH THE PEOPLE THE ONE'S THAT YOUR ARE JUST FRIENDS NOT MORE... AND THEY REALLY UNDERSTAND IT. THAT MEANS YOU CAN SHARE TIME TOGETHER BUT IT IS ON A DIFFERENT LEVEL . BUT THIS CAN BE A TOUCHIE SUBJECT FOR MOST .....
- November 18, 2009 12:24 PM

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My ex and I had been married for 26 and a half years, when we got divorced, we agreeded to stay best friends. We also tried dating after the divorce. It was the best sex we ever had. He moved away and has been dating someone else, he talks to me about her, and I talk to him about the guys I date. But now he's moving back home to live as a roommate. So I think that yes you can stay best friends with you ex. We had to work through the feelings, but our friendship was worth it.

- November 06, 2009 05:14 PM

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I don't usually have problems being friends with exes. Usually, if there is a problem, it's the other end. When I break up with someone, and it doesn't matter who does the breaking up, it's over; I don't go back. That said, it's usually a good idea for at least a two-month cooling off period before real friendship can occur. I'm not super-close with my exes, but we stay in touch. And it feels good. I think it's a mark of maturity, and I learned the hard way that a man who is not on friendly terms with any ex of his is someone to run away from, FAST! The only exes I don't stay friends with are exes who were abusive, or exes who try to use the friendship to manipulate me back into a relationship. I just ran into this problem the other day. I dated this guy briefly a couple of months ago. It didn't last long because he insisted on a commitment (when I was perfectly happy dating him casually) and then when he had it, kept repeatedly blowing me off without even bothering to call me and tell me plans have changed. (Why is it that no man thinks my time is important? While this is egregious, all men have had some level of contempt for my time, expecting me to wrangle my life around his. I think I'm going to marry the first man I meet who shows up when he says he's going to and calls when he says he will, because he's going to be the only one!) This upset me of course, and rather than deal with my upset, he broke up with me. Fast forward to just the other day. I bumped into him at a bar I hang out at on Tuesdays. At this point, I'm no longer mad at him, but I still think he's a loser. However, he is a very fine theater director, and I need one BADLY. So I ask him if he would like to direct my play. I'm very good at separating the personal from the professional, but I keep finding out that most people are not. The conversation took an unpleasant turn when he seemed to take the invitation to direct as an invitation to come to my house for sex and he kept referring to me as his girlfriend. I told him it was NOT going to happen. I don't sleep with exes. Then he started proclaiming his undying love for me! I told him he had a funny way of showing it. "Give me another chance," he pleaded. I don't believe in second chances because they don't work and it's a waste of time. Also, I may not care about my reputation as a woman, but I care very much about my reputation as an actress, and sleeping with the director of a project you're working on is a BAD idea in every way. As a final desperate sop, I said, "Look, let's concentrate on the project at hand and then afterwards, we'll see what happens." At that point, he handed the play back to me. AUGGH!!! I suppose it's for the best, though. I've had my career torpedoed more than a few times because whoever was helping me fell in love with me instead and scuttled whatever I was working on. (Why do men do that? Why do they think that sabotaging my work will get me to love them?) It's best that I found out NOW rather than when he was fully committed to the project.

- November 06, 2009 07:25 AM

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