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Ever been on the short end of a three-way friendship?

I am friends with two wonderful women in my real life, but I would say they are definitely closer with each other than with me. I always accepted that, but I am really struggling with it lately. The one friend has been someone I have known for over 40 plus years and shared a close friendship with, the other is an old high school friend of [i]my[/i] friend. This other friend came into my friend's life over a decade ago and became part of our friendship. They knew each other in high school, but did not hang out until recent years.

I really like this other friend and we all seem to get along famously when we are together, but there are things that leave me dry about being in a three-way friendship these days.

The latest was another planned outing where we agreed to meet at a certain time in a restaurant. Our outings only happen a few times a year and they usually take a bit of texting and calling to set up. So we agreed on a time and I was there with time to spare. My two friends were already seated, drinks in hand. It really wouldn't have been a big deal on its own, but this has happened more than once; and yes, I did say something at the time about how I [i]thought[/i] we agreed when to meet. They just laughed it off and I did my best to not overthink it. It [i]does[/i] sound trivial on its own, but there are many other similar scenarios that has left me feeling like an after thought.

Maybe being in a three-way friendship is something I am not comfortable with anymore and I am losing my ability to not overthink things.

In the day, my old friend and I could talk about anything, whether it was something on her mind or mine. We were definitely close in the day. Now, there is no such intimacy since my friend always needs to share with the other. The few squabbles we have ever had in the last decade has always ended up being the two of them vs. me. And no, I have never shared any negative feeling about one to the other, but I don't think I am given the same respect.

Forty years is a long time for a friendship, so this is not something I take lightly and it certainly is not the first time I have felt this way. Perhaps the writing is on the wall and I will have to decide what is and isn't worth it.

So my question is twofold;

Has you ever been in this scenario? How did it end up for you?
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DrWatson · 70-79, M
I know this is hard.

But even if the two of them feel closer to each other than they do to you, this particular incident at the restaurant might [i]not[/i] be due to that.

I meet with a group of friends for breakfast every Saturday morning. Some regularly show up a half hour early. One guy shows up almost exactly 2 minutes after the time we set, every week. And there is everything in between. People have different ideas of what "let's eat at ...." means.

Still, I do not want to seem to minimize the more general problem you write about. Yes, I have been in that situation. In some cases, it hurt. In other cases, it was no big deal. My whole life seems to be one of rotating friendships, unfortunately.
Peapod · 61-69, F
@DrWatson I do appreciate your thoughts and you are likely right about some people showing up early for a meeting. I think the next time there is a dinner date, I could try and be extra early, just to see if it stops me from being the last one there. I just know there was a time we always met in the lobby for each other. The few times I came as the second one in, it was always suggested we wait for the third before getting our table. We always have reservations, so there has never been an urgent need to grab a seat.

With the dinner scenario aside, I do know through many other interactions that I am on the outside of this circle. Social media like Facebook makes it worse and I find I don’t go on it much because of it. I found myself trying too hard to acknowledge them with little in return. Actually, the girl that came into our friendship probably tries harder than my old friend to include me on occasion. And trust me, I would get rid of my account in a heartbeat if it wasn’t for other connections I have with other great online friends and relatives that don’t live nearby.

Yeh, it hurts and I wish it didn’t.