Friend or Foe? Hard to Tell in Toxic Relationships
Youâre lunching with a Very Good Friend, the one who is more thoughtful, more giving, more wonderful than you will ever be--the one with the uncanny flair for making you feel awful.
Mid-dessert, she says youâve put on a little weight. Frankly, sheâs concerned, but only because you look soooo good otherwise, especially since you started tinting your hair and stopped wearing those silly hats.
Your other friends call her a viper. Your bewildered spouse just shrugs when you go out with her. You always come home thinking, âWith friends like that, who needs . . . .â
But sheâs human quicksand and youâre in too far to get out of the grip of . . . Toxic Friendship.
As Othello said of Iago, the wheedling friend who urged him to do in his wife:
Why has that demi-devil ensnared my soul and body?
Why, indeed.
Behaviorists say the answer is as complex as friendship itself.
You love your toxic friends and hate them over the same shrimp Louie. They know what buttons to push, and you canât seem to stop them. Stay friends, and it only gets worse. And one day you learn: You are more than half the problem.
âOur tendency is to say, âOh! My toxic friend is driving me crazy,â â says Philadelphia psychologist Judith Sills, whose book, âExcess Baggage,â analyzes blind spots that lead people into bad situations. âBut in truth, itâs the interaction thatâs toxic.â
Toxic friendships tend to happen to women more often than to men, experts say, becausewomen tend to invest more emotionally, more intimately in friends.
As with love relationships, people usually have room in their lives for only one toxic friend at a time. As with sour marriages, they tend to hang on, dig in and rationalize that the good things outweigh the bad.
It starts so innocently.
âEvery major relationship begins with something we need from another person,â says Long Island psychologist Linda Sapadin, an expert on friendship.
It feels like a perfect fit. Your pal is strong, self-possessed, fun--and laughs at your jokes.
Bullâs-eye.
âShe was attractive, artistic, interesting. She came on like gangbusters,â says a suburban Memphis college instructor whose toxic friend, an artist, offered to help redecorate her house.
Soon came the thoughtful little presents, cards, home-baked cookies, calls about what was going on this weekend and the next and the next.
âShe wanted me to know how wonderful she thought I was,â says the Memphis woman. âShe created all these little obligations. All of a sudden, it was like I should be eternally grateful. If I didnât let her know exactly what I was doing all the time, she was offended.â
The Very Good Friend started insinuating herself.
âShe physically oozed into my living room with her wonderful drapes and flowers. She oozed over every part of my life. With her, there were no limits.â
In hindsight, you see the initial attraction was more than an invitation to intimacy; it was a hook.
And now youâre stuck. Youâre ensnared, body and soul. âYou forget one birthday, she spends her life in a Hallmark store, and she never lets you forget it,â says Sills. âShe digs in, you take it.â
Itâs the you-take-it part that finally turns things toxic.
âWe know a lot about our friend needing to be more saintly, to make better orange juice,â says Sills. âWe know less about our own need to buy into it.â
Indeed, the propensity to form toxic friendships usually means weâre acting out some destructive pattern from the past, behaviorists say.
âThis is especially true in relationships that are more emotionally charged,â says Joel Block, a Dix Hills, N.Y., psychologist and author of two books on friendship.
And we manage to cross paths with someone else whose own destructive pattern activates the poison in ours. Says Block: âYou manage to bring out the worst in each other.â
The result can be a powerful, familiar dynamic. Somehow it all seems to fit.
With wits intact, youâd say: âYes, you are right! I am fatter, you are more wonderful, your spaghetti sauce does put my pathetic canned pork and beans to shame--how do you do it?â
But in your Very Good Friendâs company, wits vanish.
âI end up going along with everything she says, just so I wonât make her mad,â says a 36-year-old Bay Area TV producer whose toxic friend is a holdover from their get-high-and-forget-it days.
By now, to be against her is to risk being vulnerable to all the things she knows about you, your life, your family. But to be with her is to invite her to ooze.
âShe started inviting my other closest friends to dinner, almost as if she wanted to neutralize them,â says a 44-year-old San Francisco lawyer whose friend trades heart secrets, then stores information to use as ammunition later. âI couldnât have other friends outside the realm of her control.â
Says a Sonoma County school administrator whose friend feeds on misfortune: âShe came into our house after my sonâs accident and literally took over our house and our family. She appropriated the whole situation as her personal melodrama.â
As behaviorists are quick to point out, it takes two to be toxic.
Psychologist Sills identifies five general categories of âbaggageâ that, in certain combinations, tend to cause emotional noxiousness: needing to be right, needing to feel superior, dreading rejection, feeding on drama and cherishing rage.
You might dread rejection, for example, and your friend might need to feel superior. Itâs a perfect fit. She buys bigger presents and reminds you of it; you feel bad but smooth over it so she wonât be mad--and everyone is happy. Or at least in her dysfunctional element.
âItâs an emotional hook,â says the TV producer with the former-hippie-days friend. âThe hook (my friend) has in me is activating this residual guilt I have about career, affluence, being semi-Establishment. Itâs like hanging on to my old definition of self.â
To end or redefine the friendship requires changing your own pattern so the friend no longer hooks you, experts say. Or if you do change and the friend doesnât change too, the relationship usually ends naturally.
And if you donât change? Youâll probably end up with another toxic friend before the dust from the first one settles.
âTo end it, Iâd have to sneak out the back door,â says the lawyer. âWith those relationships, you never use the front door. They might see you. Then theyâd ask whatâs wrong, and youâd feel guilty for hurting them after all theyâve done for you. And youâd end up going over to make them dinner.â