Post #4 — Why Friendships Fail in Adulthood

 Why Friendships Fail in Adulthood




When we were kids, friendship felt easy. You met someone on the playground, shared a snack, and boom—you were best friends.

But adulthood changes the math. Jobs, families, moves, and personal growth all tug at the threads of connection.

Why adult friendships often fade:

  • Misaligned priorities — one person’s all about the grind, the other’s about the good times.

  • Unspoken resentment — those “little things” add up.

  • Different growth speeds — sometimes you just outgrow each other.

The truth? Friendships require as much intentionality as romantic relationships.
If you value it, fight for it.
If you’ve lost it, let it go with grace.

Relationships evolve, and so do people. It’s not always about blame—it’s about seasons. Some friends are for a chapter. Some are for the whole book.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Post #5: Is Monogamy Natural, or Just Social Conditioning?

Post #2 — When “I’m Fine” Is a Lie

Post # 6:The Price of Silence in Families.