The Sweetest Mother's Day Gift!

I’ve seen a lot of posts lately about friends falling short. They stop inviting us, they leave us out, they make us feel like we don’t belong anymore.

And I get it, I’ve been there. Heck, I’m there now.

I was once a part of a big group of ladies, though looking back I’m not sure I was ever truly a part. We came together on a nearly weekly basis, sharing meals and intimate details of our lives.

RELATED: Find Your Forever Friends and Hold On Tight

But as time marched on and my life became more complicated, I found myself invited to fewer and fewer of their get-togethers. Soon, it turned into those awkward “oh, I swore I added you to the invite!” conversations. And now I just see pictures of them all together on social media, still meeting, still sharing, still smiling, just without me there.

And in all honesty, it hurts. I think about those photos much longer than I’d care to admit.

But here’s the thingwhether or not I have fulfilling friendships in my life is not actually their responsibility.

Sure, I would love for them to love me and my family. I’d kill for someone to show up at my front door with coffee and a hot meal in hand, to invite me on weekend trips and girls’ nights, to be that ride or die you hear people gush about. But . . . that specific group of women is not actually responsible for filling that need in my life.

RELATED: What if I’m Just Not Meant to Have “Ride or Die” Friends?

They have their own needs and families and lives to think about, of which I likely don’t know all the details. They reserve the right to decide how to spend every single ounce of their own time and energy. And if they decide not to invest that time and energy into a friendship with me, that’s something I need to accept and respect.

Because it’s their choice. They don’t owe me a thing. They owe themselves. They owe their families. But not necessarily me. And that’s OK.

The truth is the one person responsible for me enjoying fulfilling friendships . . . is me.

If I initiate friendships that don’t pan out, it’s up to me to assess the relationship, cut ties when necessary, and work to make new connections. And if my next connection isn’t mutually beneficial, I need to try again. (Quick reminder: If someone’s not interested in being your friend, you deserve better anyway.)

Yes, it’s exhausting work until you find that friend who values and invests in you. And unfortunately, even when you find them, they may not be that friend forever. Sometimes a friend is just a friend for a season and then you have to start your search all over again. And that’s OK, too.

RELATED: Life is Too Short for Fake Cheese and Fake Friends

So please . . . if someone has rejected you or made you feel as if you don’t belong, don’t sit in that rejection. Don’t feel hurt or sad for yourself, at least not for long.

Friend, there are nearly eight billion people in this world. Surely one of them would be a fantastic friend to you. Go find them!

So God Made a Grandmother book by Leslie Means

If you liked this, you'll love our book, SO GOD MADE A GRANDMA

Order Now!

Deb Preston

Deb Preston is an author, editor, amateur gardener, and professional cheese lover. Originally from Iowa, she now lives just outside of San Antonio, Texas with her husband, daughter, and unnecessarily loud beagle. You can find her writing on her website (DebPreston.com), HerViewFromHome.com, or in any of her books. You can also connect with her on Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest.

Maybe that “Mean Mom” Is Just Busy

In: Friendship
Woman walking away

Ever since Ashley Tisdale wrote about leaving her toxic mom group, I have noticed something shift among women my age, moms in our 40s who built friendships through school drop-offs, soccer sidelines, neighborhood walks, and birthday parties. Here is the thing….no one wants to be labeled the “mean girls mom group.” Recently, I was out to dinner with a friend when she shared something that stuck with me. A woman had quietly left their local moms’ group and later treated them as if they were exclusionary. The final straw? She had sent a group text at dinnertime and no one...

Keep Reading

We Fell Out of Friendship

In: Friendship
Woman gazing out window with coffee

It was just a normal Monday afternoon, sitting in the waiting room at the dentist’s office. I had one kid reading her Kindle quietly, one loudly proclaiming facts about the different fish in the large tank, and one arguing with her just because he could. I had completed all the forms online before our appointment, so we were simply waiting. Then you walked in. You, who used to be the sister of my heart.  Summers of sleeping in tents in my parents’ backyard, while you told me terrifying stories. The smell of hairspray from ’90s dance recitals while we twirled...

Keep Reading

True Friends Trust You with Real Life

In: Friendship
Two women sitting, one with head on other's shoulder

I used to think the mark of real friendship was inclusion. If I got invited to the brunch, the beach trip, the weekend away, the cute, coordinated outings, then I must matter. Those moments felt like proof that I belonged. But as life kept unfolding, something softer and truer kept showing up. The deepest honor in friendship is not being included in the pretty moments.It is being trusted with the honest ones. I realized it the day a friend asked me to come over even though she was behind on absolutely everything. I walked through her doorway and straight into...

Keep Reading

The Mom Friends You Make by Default Are Pretty Great

In: Friendship
Two women sitting on back porch laughing

I never thought I would expand my group of friends in my mid-30s and 40s. As an introvert, I wasn’t seeking any new people to include in my friend circle. I was perfectly happy with my existing friends, all of whom I could count on one hand. But then I had kids, and my kids had friends they wanted to hang out with frequently. Which meant I was forced to befriend their friends’ parents—particularly their moms. Of course, this didn’t mean I needed to be best friends with every mom I met. And that didn’t happen. But I did happen...

Keep Reading

The Friends You’ve Had Since Childhood Are Special

In: Friendship
90s young friends sipping soda out of cups at table

I never thought the girl I used to hang out with in Grade 5, talking about Trolls and Tamagotchis with, would be the woman I now go on weekly walks with, talking about lack of sleep and perimenopause. I never thought the girl I used to sit beside in elementary school would end up being my maid of honor, and I hers, and that I would end up babysitting her toddler one day. I never thought the girl I used to have sleepovers and watch Blockbuster movies with back in high school would be the woman I set up playdates...

Keep Reading

The Women In My Life Have become My Lifeline

In: Friendship, Living
Group Of Smiling Mature Female Friends Walking Arm In Arm Along Path

In my early 20s, I thought all I ever wanted or needed was a man to love and who loved me back. We could ride off into the sunset and build our beautiful family together. The white picket fence dream. I met a man when I was twenty-one that I fell head over heels in love with. I shaped my whole life around him and our future together. We had bumps like anyone at first, but after a while troubling red flags began to appear. I ignored them, blinded by my love for this man. I isolated myself from friends...

Keep Reading

True Friendship Is a Give and Take

In: Friendship
Friends walking and laughing together

Have you ever had one of those friends who wants to be invited to all the things and be “in the know”—but doesn’t show up in the ways that count? They seem to take far more than they give, yet expect the world of their friends? What do you do with that? I have an incredible group of female friends, but over the past two years, it slowly became apparent that some relationships weren’t healthy. It felt like some were missing reciprocity. If we didn’t open up, if we weren’t vulnerable, if we needed time to build trust, they became...

Keep Reading

Some Friends Don’t Journey with Us Forever

In: Friendship
Woman walking alone on beach holding sandals

It was a damp morning when we arrived in the UK after a week with my parents in the US. My family and I were about to collect our luggage when my phone pinged—it was my childhood best friend back in California, and she was thoroughly disappointed with me. Astonished and barely awake, I realized my immediate response was needed. The whole drive home, I had an anxious heart. I knew exactly why she was upset with me; however, I felt equally frustrated that she lacked grace. With regular annual trips between San Francisco and London, I had always been...

Keep Reading

Friendship Isn’t Something You Have, It’s Something You Nurture

In: Friendship
Two women smiling with backs together

Why does no one tell you that making a dear friend as an adult feels like coaxing life from rocky soil? In a season when people drift in and out like the tides, forging that rare, heart-sister connection feels less like stumbling into a kindred spirit and more like tending an unruly garden. Cultivating deep friendship in the chaos of motherhood—between nap schedules, grocery runs, and endless requests for snacks—takes patience, persistence, and the gentle art of intention. Gone are the days of childhood bonds formed effortlessly in the schoolyard or college dorms. Now, amidst the ever-spinning whirlwind of family...

Keep Reading

Here’s To the Friendships

In: Friendship
Women walking on beach

Here’s to the friendships. Here’s to the childhood friends. The friends who have grown up together. The friends who have seen us at our best and our worst. The friends who know each other’s secrets. The friends who know where we came from. The friends who made us laugh uncontrollably. The friends we ran to when our hearts were broken. The friends we stayed up with all night on the phone. The friends we got in trouble with and the friends we would get in trouble for. The friends who have seen us fall on our faces. The friends who...

Keep Reading