Inspiring Thread. Not sure how to make the plural: “exes” looks kind of funny to me.
Added the poll for the hell of it, but the focus here should be on the posts more than the poll questions. In my case I did manage to pull it off (I simply didn’t have the same feelings she had during the actual relationship), but afterwards we were adults about the whole thing and after a brief FWB phase we were perfectly fine, tho we’ve since drifted apart.
Yes, I’ve done it, but both parties need to acknowledge that it’s not a normal friendship. There are sensitivities involved that complicate things and make it hard work. It’s definitely more vulnerable than merely being buddies. ETA: for the first few years at least, depending on the length of the relationship.
It’s just exes. And sure, but of course it depends on the particular people and situation. I’m friends with a bunch of my exes, mostly of the “good folks it just didn’t work out with” variety.
If you genuinely *like *someone, you can usually be friends. If the reason you broke up with them is because at the end of the day you didn’t like them, or they weren’t worthy of being liked, then why be friends with them either?
My ex-girlfriend (we dated for a couple years in the late 90s) is now my best friend. We chat on the company IM system every day and we usually go on some kind of vacation trip every year. We never would have made it as a married couple due to certain issues with our families, but we get along great as “just friends”.
Someone who isn’t an ideal partner can still be a good friend. It seems silly to rule someone out as a friend just because you’ve had sex with them.
A couple of my best friends are exes. After a long enough time, it doesn’t matter what the relationship was before, it just settles into a comfortable friendship.
The basic problem is that the English language has only one word for ‘Friend’ and it is a major shortcoming that needs to be corrected. It covers everything from the person that you grew up with and eventually saved your life to the coworker that you eat lunch with once a month or so.
Given the broad definition, yes you can be friends with your ex. I still go to most holidays at my ex in-laws house with no friction. But true friends? No. Real friendship would mean that you could tell each other everything and that isn’t the case now. The better term is amiable partnership. I wish the English language had much broader terms for diffident types of relationships. It has a ridiculous amount of words for mundane things but not types of relationships.
Sure, I’m pretty good friends with all my exes, and I’m still fairly close with some of them who still run in my crowd. I mean, I originally liked them for a reason, and just because you both decide that you don’t want to stay together forever and get married doesn’t mean that they quit being a cool person. If they’re total psychos then of course you’d want nothing to do with them ever again, but if they’re just a friend that you used to have sex with and don’t now, who cares?
I agree with you that we could maybe use more words (I like words!) but first of all “partnership” implies a much more intricate relationship than “friendship”, and secondly, it may take some time, but you can absolutely be “real” friends in the way you describe with an ex. It’s a little absurd to assume that someone would be so *eternally *hung up on you that you can *never * reach a point where you can tell each other everything.
I fall on the old fuddyduddy side of this issue. Being friends with exes is more trouble than it’s worth. I think the “find a friend you haven’t slept with” attitude is a good way to go for all concerned.