The Architecture of Friendship and Self

Throughout my life, my understanding of friendship has been shaped by moments of sudden, painful rupture.

Looking back at three distinct periods:

  • My teenage years with Lucy, Louise, and Ang 1
  • My university years with Simone
  • And my early adulthood with Marcella 2

I can now see these not just as endings, but as the challenging curriculum that taught me about boundaries, loyalty, and the importance of self-worth.

A group of friends displaying their unique footwear in an outdoor circle at Cianjur, West Java.

The Learning Journey

1. The Lesson of Perceived Loyalty (The Teenage Years)

At 15, I navigated a complex web of teenage social dynamics where I often felt I had to “perform” to earn my place.

An incident regarding a party invitation and the subsequent fallout taught me a painful lesson about “The Empty Invitation3” and the instability of groups built on shifting allegiances.

My response at the time was to close myself off to protect my heart. It was a natural reaction to being made to feel like an outsider.

  • The takeaway: I learned that I am a person who values honesty and consistency, even when it is isolating. I realised that my integrity remains intact regardless of whether others choose to believe me.

valentines day background, friendship, pinky swear, hands, union, love, holding hands, loyalty, dedication, bracelets, girls, friendship day

2. The Lesson of Vulnerability and “Girl Code” (University Years)

My friendship with Simone was a period of lightness and authentic connection. When it ended abruptly, it was linked to a difficult situation involving her partner. I acted out of a sense of care and “girl code,” but her choice to ghost me taught me that you cannot control how others receive your honesty.

  • The takeaway: This experience solidified my belief in loyalty. While it hurt, I realised that my capacity to reach out in kindness, even when it was risky, was a reflection of my character, not a failure on my part. I learned how to move on from rejection without losing my core belief in being a supportive friend.
Silhouetted group of adults celebrating at sunset with mountain views.

3. The Lesson of Boundaries (The New Adult Years)

The friendship with Marcella was the most transformative in terms of my own growth.

Looking back, I can clearly see that I had no boundaries. Allowing my own needs (like paying off my car) to be sidelined by someone else’s demands.

The fallout over something as small as photo processing fees was actually the breaking point for a relationship that was already unbalanced.

  • The takeaway: This was the beginning of my understanding of personal agency. I learned that true friendship cannot exist without mutual respect for one another’s boundaries. Leaving that social circle when I felt the “shift” was my first real act of prioritising my own mental and emotional space.

Reflection and Future Outlook

When I ask myself why my friendship circles have shifted or thinned, I no longer see it as a lack of worthiness. Instead, I see a lifetime of experiences that have refined what I need from a connection.

I was once the person waiting by the door for a friend who didn’t show up, and the person who was ghosted for telling the truth.

Today, I am a woman who understands that:

  • Boundaries are a form of self-love: I no longer need to be bullied” into choices that don’t serve my life or my goals.
  • Integrity is constant: I have remained the same person through every accusation and misunderstanding.
  • Quality over quantity: The sting of being “alone” has transformed into the strength of being comfortable in my own company and focused on the roles that truly matter, like being a mother and an individual with her own vibrant interests.

I have spent years building myself, and while these losses were painful, they were the fire that forged my current ability to stand firm in who I am. My heart is not closed; it is simply more selective about who earns the right to be part of my story.


Footnotes
  1. Names have been changed to protect privacy ↩︎
  2. Name changed to protect privacy ↩︎
  3. The Empty Invitation is asking someone to a party, knowing full well they will say no. ↩︎

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