My best friends dating my ex

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YOU have done nothing to warrant their behavior. It's years later, and by now, she could si of me just as a nuisance or buzz kill, but I feel queasy when I hear her name or see something Sarah-specific-funny. You might be the rebound girl, just there to pick up the broken pieces for a while. If you're stillit wasn't that serious, or it's still serious. Limbo you could use some dating help, too. It was like a stab in the heart. Although the couple couldn't be happier today, they pissed off a few folks along the way. If unpleasant for any reason perhaps unacceptable behaviour of some sort then it's understandable that anyone would be glad. Nevertheless, Brian thought about it and decided to contact Angie anyway. Not a basis for a relationship though. Thing is, she's right not to. I hated them and everyone else who I thought could possibly know about their relationship.

A couple of years ago, I met a beautiful, intelligent, hilarious girl I wanted to befriend. We'll call her Sarah since that is absolutely not her name. We were at a Friendsgiving potluck, and I girl-crushed on her instantly. Part of it was because she looked like Jane — Daria's BFF from the MTV series — with precise, delicate features, dark eyes, and crazy angular hair. The other, extraspecial part was that Sarah happened to possess the bawdiest, blackest sense of humor that you can have without being evil inside. Needless to say, I was smitten. You know how the friends you make later in life tend to be especially high-quality? Not only did we enjoy the same wine, but we also trusted each other's advice, frequently making lists of talking points that we wanted the other's brain on. We were lucky, and we knew it. And then I ruined it. To this day, it's still murky as to why I screwed over Sarah so hard that she no longer speaks to me. Thing is, she's right not to. And for what it's worth, I'm really sorry. Here's what happened: She and Paul broke up. My boyfriend and I broke up. Sarah and I commiserated. And then — aided by exactly one zillion drinks and a coincidental run-in at a bar — Paul and I commiserated. Sarah and Paul, by all counts, had seemed to be on the marriage track. They'd been dating for forever which empirically means five years and living together for four years. They'd had two cats and had purchased a non-Ikea sectional sofa that involved fabric-swatch selection. This, as we all know, is a gesture tantamount to a wedding-venue deposit. Their party line was that it was mutual. We were stunned all the same. But probably not as stunned as Sarah when, several months later, I admitted that Paul had asked me out. This is when she asked me explicitly — to my face, eyes shining — not to date her recent ex. The relationship aftermath remained messy. There were still custody battles over pets and friends, and she implored me not to further complicate things. Of all the record-skipping moments in life I wish I could have a mulligan on, this is one. It was a big mistake. Cue Julia Roberts in a hat shaking enormous shopping bags. I knew deep down that he wasn't the prize, but I couldn't leave him well enough alone. Of him and Sarah, she was the nut. Paul was nice and had all his hair and we were decently attracted to each other's newness, but I always suspected that he and I wouldn't work out. And yet, when I heard that he liked me liked me, I went on creepy autopilot mode and activated the relationship-launch sequence. This is how I'm broken. I've been in a string of long-term relationships since I was 13. I was a child the last time I was single. As red flags go, this one could blanket Central Park and is maybe on fire. I'd had a couple of dates with other perfectly swell guys, but they were stilted and tiring. Besides and this casts me in a poor light , Paul seemed vetted. He was familiar and safe by transitive properties since Sarah was smart and normal. And then something even grosser happened. Not only was I toxic to Sarah in a craven, so-not-cool way, but I also couldn't deal with my own guilt. I'd never betrayed a friend in such textbook mean-girl fashion, and the tangly, barbed feelings about my bad behavior became so cross-wired with her disdain for me that I declared her my enemy. I never bad-mouthed Sarah. I maybe once talked smack about how I had better nail beds. I was embarrassed enough of my actions that I largely avoided functions that presented the danger of too much social overlap. Even in the aftermath of their breakup, I felt like the other woman. I simply did not belong where I'd shoehorned myself. Just before Paul and I petered out, Sarah landed a splashy, lucrative, high-powered job. I'd already worked myself into a crazy-girl competitive lather with her, and when I heard she'd snagged a dream job that wasn't even my dream job, I felt hateful and sick. The news resulted in one of the few panic attacks I've ever experienced. I knew that I'd done something awful. The part I couldn't reconcile is that it would spur a defense mechanism that made me hate the person I'd harmed. It's years later, and by now, she could think of me just as a nuisance or buzz kill, but I feel queasy when I hear her name or see something Sarah-specific-funny. She's a walking, breathing, highly Google-able testament to how I messed up. I take some solace in how much of an outlier she is — I hadn't snaked a still-fresh ex of any of my other friends before or since — but it did force me to be kinder to and more patient with the pals I had left. If I exhibit the capacity for such insensitive greediness, I can only imagine the other shortcomings they're forced to put up with. The part that makes me paranoid is when I consider the ways in which this will bite me in the ass. For months, when I began dating a really cool, sweet guy, I drove myself insane waiting for that karma spore to detonate. I was convinced he would cheat on me or find someone shinier, better, purer of heart. Truly, I just wish we were both guys. Sarah would punch me in the face, and we'd be hugging it out by now. Recently, I saw Sarah at a party in the bathroom line. I was curious to see how I'd act — what I'd say and what she'd say back. But not so curious that I didn't hightail it the hell out of there. The next thing I'm going to work on is my fear of confrontation. I'll get to it. If only searing guilt and misplaced envy weren't so damn time-consuming. RELATED: Photo credit: Getty Images.

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