• When Tomiwa* (23) and Toriola* (22) became close friends, she truly thought she had found her forever best friend. Things were great at first, but when they moved in together as flatmates, their friendship began to unravel under the weight of their different personalities and the strain of caring for Toriola’s sisters.

    In this story, Tomiwa shares how the distance between her and her best friend grew, and the accusation that changed the nature of their relationship permanently.

    This is Tomiwa’s story as told to Betty:

    Toriola and I met back when we were in secondary school. I was a year ahead of her, but we weren’t friends at the time. I didn’t like her personality; she was loud, confrontational, and boisterous, while I was more on the cool-headed, introverted side. We also didn’t have much in common back then, so we didn’t click.

    Fast forward to university, I had to write JAMB twice, so we ended up getting into the same uni in the same year. We started talking online when we found out, thinking we’d run into each other occasionally.  But it turned out we were in the same hostel, and our rooms were almost next door to each other. It was like fate was giving us a second chance to get close, and this time, we did.

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    Everything between us was great. We cooked together, did laundry together, and stayed up late gisting about everything. I started seeing her not just as a friend, but as family. As our friendship deepened throughout our first year, our mums and families also became close.

    In 200 level, things shifted. Toriola and I didn’t want to spend another year in the hostel and planned to get an apartment off-campus. Her family got involved at this point. They already knew me well, so they offered to cover the whole rent of the apartment. Even though my mum offered to pay half, Toriola’s family insisted, and I was happy to accept. Toriola shared that her younger sister would be living with us since our place was close to her school and her family lived in a different state. I didn’t mind. Her sister was like a younger sister to me as well. Plus, her mum paid for the apartment, so it felt like a blessing.

    At first, it was calm. Just the three of us. Aside from the normal ways a young child can annoy someone, we didn’t have any serious issues. My main problem was that, because of Toriola’s personality, she could say mean things unconsciously. 

    For example, in June 2022, I lost a side gig I had as a social media manager, which meant I got a bit broke. Toriola knew this and offered me ₦5,000 to tide me over until I got some more money. I used it to buy toiletries and restock on some things I had run out of. When Toriola found out, she was livid. She angrily asked why I would buy soap and perfume when I knew I didn’t have money. I didn’t like the way she spoke to me, so I took the last of the money I had, sent the ₦5,000 back to her, and left the house to sleep at a mutual friend’s place. 

    Toriola and I had this thing where, if she offended me, she’d apologise by sending me an email. After I left that day, she sent an email apologising for her tone and promising to treat me more like one of her sisters. She sounded so sincere, so I forgave her, and we made up.

    Fast-forward to our next year in school. Another of Toriola’s sisters moved in with us. She had just gained admission into our university, so she was finding her feet. I didn’t think it would be an issue, but their move put a big strain on our relationship. Toriola’s younger sisters were very messy people. They left their dirty shoes and plates strewn about the apartment.

    It was annoying, but I ignored it and cleaned up as much as I could. The bigger issue was that they had no sense of boundaries. I would be going about my day in school and see her younger sister wearing my clothes or my shoes without permission. I tried to bring this up with Toriola, but her response left much to be desired. She said I was overreacting and shouldn’t complain about cleaning up after her sisters because, according to her, “It wouldn’t cost me anything to do so.” 

    It was like she didn’t want to help me get them in line at all. She seemed irritable every time I reported her sisters’ behaviour to her. She even suggested that I beat them since I could “see them as my own sisters,” which I thought was insane. I drew the line there. I wasn’t going to shout at someone else’s kids when even their sister wouldn’t, and I told her as much. This strained our relationship, but we tried to maintain our friendship.

    Things started getting weird in January 2024 when we resumed for our 300L second semester. I noticed Toriola’s behaviour had changed. She started dating someone new, staying out till late, and lying about what she was doing. I tried to tell her to reduce the late nights because it wasn’t safe and wasn’t setting a good example for her sisters, but she resorted to lying. She would also lie about the cost of things I asked her to buy, like suya or snacks. It was weird.

    We had one of our biggest fights that semester when she forced me to sleep outside so her boyfriend could spend the night, even though I begged her that I had nowhere else to go. I ended up sleeping at an acquaintance’s place. She apologised afterwards, and we made up.

    But Toriola had also become notorious for picking fights with the gateman and our neighbours. It was getting harder to recognise the girl I had first become friends with. Some of our mutual friends advised me to consider moving back to the hostel, but I refused because I still saw her as family. 

    The real turning point came when she had a fight with one of her close friends. It involved a guy she liked, and she took his side over her friend’s because she thought her friend was lying. Her friend called me to talk about the fight, and I let her know that Toriola thought she was lying. She started crying, and I tried to comfort her on the phone. I didn’t know that one of Toriola’s sisters had eavesdropped and gone to tell Toriola a warped version of the conversation. She claimed  I was backbiting her, that I was jealous of her and her boyfriend, who bought her things. I found the accusations more than a bit odd because I was in a happy relationship at the time and wished her nothing but the best.

    I tried to talk to Toriola about it, but she texted, “Please, I don’t want to talk to you right now.” I figured we would talk about that night. Instead, I got a call from her mum that I’ll never forget. She was shouting, calling me a snake, saying I wanted to ruin her daughter’s destiny. She called me ungrateful and said that, after all they had done for me, I was trying to kill her daughter, and worst of all, that I was trying to push her to commit suicide.

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    I was stunned. Her mum even called my mother to repeat the accusations: that I had evil intentions, that I was a bad influence, and that I had corrupted her daughters. One of Toriola’s sisters sent me a threatening message claiming that she had evidence and would expose me in school. I lived in fear until my mum intervened. She told me to immediately pack all my things and leave the apartment. 

    The next morning, I woke up early, packed every single thing I owned into two Ghana-Must-Go bags, and left without looking back. After I left, I blocked all of them — Toriola, her sisters, her mother — on everything. WhatsApp, Instagram, and Snapchat. I didn’t want explanations. I didn’t want apologies. I wanted peace.

    A few months later, I saw her on campus, and she tried to greet me like nothing had happened. I walked past her like we’d never met. She emailed again that day apologising saying, “I’m sorry it took this long. I’m sorry for everything as a whole and I hope you forgive me.” I  saw her a few weeks later and told her I had forgiven her. I unblocked her, thinking maybe we could move on quietly. But then her sister started subbing me online. I was exhausted from their drama, so I blocked them all again, permanently, this time.

    That whole experience changed me. It made it difficult to open up to new people. I always have the niggling feeling that they’ll hurt or betray me the way Toriola did. I’m trying not to let it hold me back from experiencing new and better friendships in the future. 


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  • When Fayo* (22) first met Bolade* (21) in their first year at university, she wondered why someone so fun had so few friends. But over time, what started as a tight bond turned into something toxic, and ultimately, heartbreaking. 

    In this story, she shares how their friendship slowly unravelled after the moment Bolade chose a party over Fayo’s mental health crisis.

    This is Fayo’s story as told to Betty:

    I met Bolade in our first semester in school in 2021, and we slowly became friends. By the second semester, we were almost inseparable. We had a lot of things in common, we stayed in the same hostel, and I even tried to introduce her to my own friend group. She didn’t have many friends, and before we got really close, I used to wonder why. 

    But the reason became clearer to me as our friendship went on. Bolade had a very explosive personality. She could go from 0 to 100 over the smallest things. I remember one exam day in our first year. Bolade and I didn’t go to the venue together or at the same time, but after it ended, she called me, furious that I didn’t pick up her bag. I tried to explain that she didn’t tell me to help her with her bag, but she insulted me and hung up. I was so confused.

    Another time, my other friend group hosted a small get-together. Bolade wasn’t really close to them, but she insisted on coming even though I told her she might feel awkward or left out. From the minute she arrived, she barely said a word to anyone else and kept snapping at me when I tried to pull her into the conversation. The next day, she called me and insulted me for “allowing her” to come to the party and not convincing her to stay away.

    I have so many examples of the weird things she would pull just to maintain the control she thought she had over me. She tried to extend the same rubbish to my other friends, but they were less accommodating of her excesses than I was.

    For example, there was a time when one of my friends got a meal for herself without asking if Bolade wanted any. She didn’t say anything when my friend showed up with her food, but when we got back to my room, she started fuming. When I tried to get Bolade to open up about it, she walked out and slammed the door. I just stood there, stunned.

    My friends started warning me about her. They said the way she treated me wasn’t normal or fair, but I didn’t listen. I stayed friends with her till our final year, constantly making excuses for her behaviour. I felt like leaving her would have been the same as abandoning her, and I didn’t want that. She had good traits that, at the time, I felt would overshadow the bad ones.

    Then, I had a rough patch with my mental health in my final year. I had a lot of pent-up anxiety, and I ended up in the hospital after a suicide attempt. My other friends had rushed to my side as soon as they heard, but they hadn’t packed anything for me because they didn’t know I’d be staying at the hospital overnight. The doctors insisted on keeping me for a few nights, so I needed clothes to change into. Since Bolade and I were in the same hostel and we were close, my friends called her to help me bring some clothes to the hospital. To our surprise, she refused.

    She said she had a party to attend that night at school and couldn’t make it. The party was at 7 p.m. that evening, and the hospital was close to our hostel. We had called her around 5:30 pm, so there was more than enough time for her to bring the clothes and still make it to the party she wanted to attend. My other friends begged her to change her mind. They even suggested calling the school ambulance to bring her to the hospital with the clothes and then dropping her off at the hostel, but she still refused. Her reason? She needed to prep for the party and couldn’t inconvenience herself at all to help me.

    She didn’t try to check in on me until 1 a.m. that night, when she sent a flimsy text saying, “Fayo, I heard you were in the hospital. How are you feeling?” When I didn’t reply, she sent me another message insulting me for ignoring her. Meanwhile, she had been posting photos from the party and all the replies she was getting on Snapchat the whole time.

    I heard her roommate tried to encourage her to visit me in the hospital, but she refused. Bolade eventually came to the hospital three days later. By then, I’d been moved to the mental health unit. I didn’t want to see her, so I told my friends not to tell her I was still there. Mentally, I was done with the friendship.

    After I left the hospital, I started pulling away slowly because I didn’t want Bolade to make a big deal of our dwindling friendship. This meant we weren’t communicating as often as we usually did. During this time, I travelled from Enugu to Lagos for my internship, but I didn’t tell her.

    She sent me a voice note, shouting that I didn’t “seek her permission” to travel to Lagos. I was venting about it to the Uber driver taking me somewhere that night, and after I explained everything, he asked, “Are you possessed? Why are you still friends with this girl?”

    His response jarred me awake. I couldn’t believe how far I had let things go. I made up my mind to keep my distance and hopefully leave the friendship as quietly as possible.

    When I returned to school after the internship, Bolade texted that I hadn’t visited her room yet. I told her I was ill and would come and see her after I felt better. She didn’t take it well and started sending insulting texts. I simply replied, saying that our friendship was over and she shouldn’t reach out to me again.

    Since then, she’s messaged me countless times trying to reconcile. She says she misses our friendship, that her other friends have also left her. I hardly respond to those messages.  I’ve written my final exams and will be graduating soon. I don’t plan on ever seeing her again, and honestly, if we do bump into each other, it might be awkward for her.

    I’m still dealing with the trauma of everything she put me through. But I’ve made peace with my decision to walk away. For the first time in years, I feel free.

    *Names have been changed for anonymity.

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    READ ALSO: 6 Nigerians Abroad on Losing Their Closest Friends Back Home


  • Friendship is the best kind of ship, but let’s be honest — some icks can stop it from ever setting sail. We spoke to five young Nigerians about their friendship icks and why certain behaviours just won’t fly with them.

    Toyin*

    One of my big friendship icks is irresponsible drinking. I once had a friend nearly die of alcohol poisoning at my place after a party. Worst night of my life. The anxiety was so bad, and I couldn’t even think of how I’d explain it to his family. Now, if I see you like getting wasted at a function? I’m out.

    Tayo

    My ick is people who say hurtful and insidious things when they’re angry and expect forgiveness later. It’s so thoughtless to freely hurt others and use anger as a cop-out or an excuse. That’s a big no from me.
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    Bolu*

    I can’t vibe with someone who treats service staff— waiters, security people, anyone—like trash. I used to work as a server, so I know how awful customers can be. Once I catch that attitude in a friend, it’s over.

    Fola*

    My friendship ick has to be banger boys or girls. Especially on X, once I see you’re one of those people who make comments like  “Vawulence” or “They’re coming for you now omg” under anything controversial, I cringe so hard. I can’t do it, sorry.


    Doyin*

    I can’t be friends with a taker. It gives me a massive ick if you’re someone who has to be prompted before you reciprocate. I don’t even mean materially, but if I’m the only one calling, texting or reaching out first, it just won’t click.

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  • You have to score at least 8 on this quiz to convince us that you’re the most well-behaved among your friends

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  • Sunken Ships is a Zikoko series that explores the how and why of the end of all relationships — familial, romantic or just good old friendships.

    *Disclaimer: Alex* is gender nonbinary and uses they/he pronouns. Thank you*

    Alex* had bumped into Femi* at every summer lesson they attended. So, it was natural they became friends. From friends, they started dating. Now, they haven’t spoken in years. Here’s Alex’s story: 

    How did you meet him? 

    Alex: I don’t remember the exact way we met, but I do remember we kept meeting at various summer lessons when we were in primary and junior secondary school. When I got to SS1 in 2012, I stopped attending them. So that put a halt to our conversations. 

    Then, I graduated and didn’t get into uni immediately, so it was back to summer classes by 2015. Guess who was right there? If you meet someone that many times, you’re bound to be friends or at least talk to them. So, we became friends.

    What was the friendship like? 

    Alex: Being friends with him was pretty easy. We could talk about anything from our parents to depression and even our crushes. It helped that he liked the kind of things I did. We liked the same music and books, things people constantly thought I was weird for enjoying. 

    He was also extremely protective of me. Yeah, he spent a lot of time trying to scare me by convincing me to watch horror movies, but no other person was allowed to. He teased me in a way similar to how you acted with a younger sibling, and I found it funny because I was a year older than him. 

    How did the dynamic change?

    Alex: He was a great friend, and I didn’t want to ruin it. That’s why I didn’t tell him about my crush on him. I listened to him talk about the people he liked and the ones who liked him while seething with jealousy. 

    In 2016, we both entered uni, and I got into a relationship with another guy who broke up with me a day before Christmas. I don’t know if that’s what made him confess he’d always liked me, but he did. He even made me a playlist, which is how I started making playlists for people. 

    Any reservations? 

    Alex: Yeah, but I thought it’d be messy. I thought dating would suck, and if we broke up, I’d lose my friend. I agreed anyway because I liked him. We started dating properly in the new year.

    What was dating him like?

    Alex: Soft. He always wanted to make me happy. We would always go on dates even though we were broke 100-level students. 

    He was very intentional about showing up for me. His school was far from mine, but he still came to see me every weekend. He thought I was brilliant, and everything I said was genius. I almost believed him. 

    Sounds amazing so far

    It’s just he was a very sad boy. Sometimes, he’d just close up without telling me what was wrong. And whenever he went silent like that, I knew something bad had happened. But all I could do was worry and expect the worst. 

    He was passively suicidal, so his silence could’ve meant death. But we’d never gone off for longer than a week before. 

    RELATED: Sunken Ships: I Didn’t Expect Our Relationship to End This Way 

    So, what happened? 

    Alex: Three months into our relationship, he did the disappearing thing again. A couple of days passed, then a week, and suddenly it’d been three weeks, and I hadn’t heard from him. 

    He didn’t use social media, and he had only one friend. Whenever I called the friend, he’d refuse to tell me what was happening. I couldn’t even leave my house because my parents wouldn’t let me leave the house.

    While worrying about Femi and trying to understand why he’d disappeared for so long, I met this guy who told me everything I wanted to hear: how I deserve someone who won’t treat me that way. He was writing me poetry and all that. So one day, I kissed him. 

    When Femi eventually reached out to me, I told him I kissed someone else. I broke up with him. It felt too much like cheating. 

    How did you feel after the breakup?

    Alex: I don’t know. I didn’t feel as different as I thought I’d feel. While talking to this new guy, I was already subconsciously letting go of the relationship with Femi. It wasn’t until the relationship with the other guy scattered that it hit. It became two in one. I thought I was going to die. 

    Did you ever reach out to Femi again? 

    Alex: No. I couldn’t. We haven’t spoken in years now, but I don’t think I want any form of romantic relationship with him still. I’ve currently changed as a person, and I don’t want to be hate crimed by someone I used to love. I want the memories I have of him to remain good forever.  

    RELATED: Sunken Ships: She Chose Jesus Over Me

    Any regrets? 

    Alex: I regret losing my friend. I wish I could still talk to him about certain shows because we have history, and he’d understand why things make me feel the way they do. I wish I could tell him I watch horror movies now and send him some theories about my favourite musicians, but I can’t. I don’t miss our romantic relationship; I just missed our friendship. 

    I genuinely wish I never crossed the line from friend to lover with him. He truly was one of the best people I had in my life. He made it easy for me to live every day. I really regret losing my friend. 

    RELATED: Sunken Ships: We Should Have Been Friends Before We Dated

  • You’re definitely the boring friend if you get up to 10 on this quiz. Are you?

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  • What better way to confirm if you’re the toxic friend or not than with a Zikoko quiz?

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  • We all feel ugly sometimes, but what is it like being or feeling like the ugly friend? In this article, nine Nigerians tell us what it’s like.

    A, 23

    I know I have friends that are much more beautiful than I am.

    People don’t make jokes about it, but they suggest things to make my face better and more appealing – I have dark circles and large pores.

    My friend always assures me that I’m beautiful just the way I am. She also gives me tips on how to make myself better, but there are some days I feel down thinking about how I’ve let my face become this bad.

    Ola, 26

    My friends used to call me “monkey” as a joke, but that was a while ago. Sometimes, they would all hang out without telling me.

    I have only a few pictures with them because they almost always ask me to take pictures. I used to agree, but not anymore. I feel like I’m close to them, but they’re not really my friends.

    There was a time people would compare me to them and it bugged me. I may not meet up with the beauty standards of society, but I swear I’m not ugly.

    Ibukun, 25

    When I was in university, I had this beautiful friend and people would always wonder why we were friends. They always looked confused when they saw us together.  

    The DUFF movie came out around that time, and I was her DUFF. People would come and talk to me and act like they wanted to be friends just to get close to her. The funny thing is that it was girls that did this. I don’t think I’m ugly, so it didn’t affect my confidence, but it was very irritating.

    Zeek, 22

    I have always felt out of place because I’m the “ugly” friend. To make matters worse, my friends are entertainers, dancers, singers and performers, and I’m the plain ugly one.

    I get compared to my attractive friends, mostly indirectly or as a joke, but they aren’t the ones doing it. They keep screaming in my ears to stop saying I’m the ugly friend. 

    Sometimes I distance myself from them, and I feel lonely even when I’m around them.

    Ernie, 23

    Whenever I take pictures with my friends, I feel like I’m not attractive enough to be their friend. I’m always the odd one out. I’m the one with bad hair or awkward facial expressions and bad posture. 

    They all have phones with good cameras so they can take good pictures of themselves. I have to rely on Snapchat and photo editing apps to boost my confidence. 

    My friend once asked for pictures of me to post on his status, but he didn’t post them. I asked him why and he said the pictures weren’t nice. I felt he meant that I wasn’t good-looking.

    Sometimes I wonder why I’m friends with them when I’m not that comfortable with them. I feel like they’re fine and rich, and I’m not.

    Rachel, 20

    I have always been the fat and less attractive friend, and it sucks. My friends deny this, but it’s very obvious when we go out. Boys flock to them all the time and I’m usually left to myself. 

    The last time we went clubbing, different people asked to dance with them. Not a single person came up to me. I hardly ever agree to go out with them because I know I’d most likely be ignored when we run into other people. 

    I hardly ever take pictures with them. When I do, I never post them. I feel invisible and small whenever I’m out with my prettier friends. I always feel like people are comparing us even if they don’t say anything.

    Ife, 24

    I’m pretty sure I’m “the ugly friend”. None of my friends would agree that I am, but I’m fat, dark-skinned, and have a lot of skin issues. 

    They try to make sure I go out with them but seeing them get lots of attention while I fade into the background sucks. I’m not mad at it because they deserve it, being bad bitches and all, but being the odd one in the group gets tiring.  

    I usually end up as the undesignated mom friend anyway. I’m the one who stops guys from being creepy with them, and of course, men are weird about that. It doesn’t bother me, as long as my girls are good, but it’s not fun.

    I try to make up for it with personality and sometimes feigned confidence. People comment on my looks, but I don’t let them see it get to me.  If I say something, they’ll say it was a joke and that I take things too personally. I can do all my self-pitying in the comfort of my room.

    My family and friends are big on positive reinforcement, so they never let me forget how loved I am and how much they like me as I am, so that keeps me going.

    Kike, 24

    I think the feeling that I am the ugly friend started in JSS2. One day, people were discussing who the prettiest in our set was. Someone mentioned my name, and the whole class burst into laughter. It hurt because I had never seen myself as ugly, but my eyes opened that day.

    I am very dark-skinned, what Nigerians would call “black”, so I got called ugly throughout my teenage years. In SS1, my agric teacher said I looked like an ugly old grandma. I had classmates who didn’t want to talk to me because they thought I was ugly.

    Sometimes when I hang out with friends and they get all the attention, I think “oh well, I no kuku fine before”. I have learnt to not expect male attention when out in public. When it comes, it’s very shocking. 

    I was the ugly friend in secondary school. Now, I think I am just the bland friend. I hardly use makeup or anything to accentuate my features because I want anyone who likes me to see my real face and like me like that, not that I will use makeup, and the guy will feel like it’s not what he ordered that he got.

    It messed with my self-esteem a bit, but I think I am great now. I may not be the classic beauty to others, but I find myself very beautiful.

    Itohan, 20

    I’ve always been friends with stunning people. You know, the popular ones with thousands of followers on Instagram. They had a look I couldn’t quite achieve. I didn’t wear makeup like they did or even make an effort with my appearance, so that made me even worse in comparison.

    I was also younger, so while a lot of them had grown up faces that matched their lovely bodies, I had the face of a 12-year-old. I was considered cute, but in comparison with my friends, I was the ugly duckling. They were so gorgeous that photographers and modelling agencies would approach them when we go out and ask/beg them to model. They always laughed and turned it down.

    I guess in a way I resented my friends. People always described me as dependable and kind. Like yeah, but I wanted to be hot too. It messed with my self-esteem a lot. It made me feel like a side character and they were the main characters. You know those movies about the best friend of the main character whose life revolved around the main character? That was me.

    I was always on call because I thought I couldn’t be hot. Just kind and dependable. Now, I multitask. I know I’m not the prettiest flower in the garden, but I hold my own. I’m kind, funny, dependable, and hot as fuck.

    I still view myself as the ugly friend, but I think I’ve decided it’s not a bad thing. I’m learning to live with the fact that my friends will always be more beautiful than me, and that’s okay. On some days, I cry about it, but other days I feel okay.

  • There are friends you’ve had for years and those you have had for a short while, but how old is your longest friendship?

    Let’s find out:


    Relationships can be hard, and sometimes you just need someone to give you a bit of advice.

    Ask Ozzy is our new advice column where you send Zikoko the relationship questions that have been bugging you, and Ozzy Etomi gives you the best relationship advice.

    The column is part of our brand new category, Ships, that tackles all kinds of relationships, not just the romantic ones.

    If you’d like to send in your questions, click here

  • When your friend is dating someone you don’t like, here are six things that you should definitely do.

    1) Keep your mouth shut

    They will never listen to anything you have to say. People in love usually are unable to process information concerning their relationship because they have lost all their five senses. If you keep talking, you will land yourself in trouble.

    2) Prepare to be an enemy of progress

    Immediately you declare your dislike for their partner, you have become enemy number one. They will definitely bad-mouth you to their other friends and well-wishers, so prepare to be called a lot of bad names to your front, and behind your back.

    3) Practice your mugshot

    Deep down, your friend knows there is a reason you do not like this person. So, they keep coming to you with all the negative things their partner does, because they know you will be honest about the situation. With access to all this first hand information others do not have, murder might cross your mind a few times. That’s why you need to be prepared. Incase you give into your desires and kill someone.

    4) Social distance

    Your friend might want to constantly find reasons for you and their partner to spend time together, but you need to social distance, They are doing this because they think once you and their partner spend time together, both of you would bond. Don’t give into it. Stay away.

    5) Be there for them

    They will complain over and over again, but you love them more than you hate their partner, so you just have to be a shoulder for them to cry on.

    6) Mute them on socials

    They will make a lot of love related posts even after coming to complain about them to you. Mute them so you can preserve your peace of mind.

    For more of what is inside this life, click here