Platonic breakups don’t get enough airtime. There’s no playlist for them. No rituals. No roadmap. But losing a soulmate-level friendship—especially one that felt like home—is a heartbreak that reshapes you.
For 2.5 years, we were inseparable. The kind of bond that felt like fate. We laughed until we cried, built dreams side by side, and held each other through the mess. Then something shifted. A work situation created distance, and when we came back together… everything was different. The silence between us grew louder. I asked, “Are we breaking up? Is this it?” All I got was “I don’t know.” There were a couple of promising conversations that ended with psychological blue balls. And then—nothing.
At first, I spiraled. Anxiety had me replaying every moment, every word, every possible misstep. What did I do wrong? Why didn’t I deserve an explanation?
Eventually, that anxiety turned into anger. Not rage—but the kind of anger that comes from being left in the dark. From being ghosted by someone who once knew your soul. And now? I’m heartbroken still… but more for her than for me.
Because I know I didn’t do anything wrong. I know she’s carrying things she hasn’t found space to process. And I can empathize with that. I really can. But intention doesn’t erase impact. And silence, avoidance, ambiguity—they can be toxic too.
I’m choosing to love her from a distance. Not out of bitterness. But out of necessity. For my own mental wellbeing. For my own healing. I’d still be there in an instant if she needed me. That part hasn’t changed. But as the silence grows louder, so do the echoes of resistance on the journey back to connection.
Friendship grief is real. Honor it. Quietly. Fiercely. Tenderly.



