Is This Friendship Costing You More Than It Gives?

You already know the friend I mean. She calls when something in her life falls apart and goes silent when yours does. Every visit runs on her clock, her crisis, her running commentary about the sister who wronged her again.

You leave those conversations wrung out and a little annoyed at yourself for feeling that way, because you love her, or you used to, or you can’t tell anymore.

At this point in life, the hours are not abstract. Between aging parents, adult kids who still text at midnight, and a job that has opinions about your evenings, spare capacity is the scarcest thing you own. A friendship that runs in one direction spends that capacity for you. The question worth asking is whether it gives anything back.

The tally you keep avoiding

We audit almost everything else. Bank statements, calendars, the strange noise the car started making last week. Friendship gets a pass, mostly because examining it feels disloyal. The imbalance then runs for years, unmeasured, while you tell yourself she’s going through a hard stretch.

Sometimes she is. That’s the part that makes this hard. A real friend in a genuinely bad year will lean on you more than usual, and that is the whole point of having people. What you’re testing for is the pattern that sits underneath a single lopsided month.

Try the plainest version of the question. Over the last year, when you needed something, did she show up? Not perfectly, not on command. But did she just notice, ask, follow up? If you scroll back through your own memory and keep landing on the times you carried her while your own hard weeks passed without a single check-in, you have your answer. That’s a pattern.

What a draining friendship does to your body

Here is where it stops being a matter of etiquette. Researchers have started measuring what chronic, stressful relationships do at a cellular level, and the findings are sobering.

A 2026 study published in PNAS examined what researchers call “hasslers,” the people in your life who generate steady conflict and stress. Frequent contact with them was associated with faster biological aging, higher inflammation, and worse health across several body systems. Separate longitudinal work from Vangelov and colleagues in 2025 found that strained friendships were associated with a shorter lifespan, and that poor friendship quality predicted worse health outcomes than poor family relationships did.

The draining friend registers in your body the same way a bad job does. Sustained low-grade stress from the people closest to you shows up in the same inflammatory markers tied to heart disease and cognitive decline. Pruning a relationship that wears you down protects the same systems your cardiologist cares about.

A hard stretch looks different up close

Before you decide anything, get honest about which one you’re looking at.

A friend in a hard year is usually aware of the imbalance. She names it. She says some version of “I know I’ve been a black hole lately, thank you for putting up with me.” She asks about your life even when she can barely manage her own, because the instinct to reciprocate outlasts the bandwidth to act on it. The imbalance has a rough end date, and you can feel her reaching back toward you.

A pattern feels different. There is no acknowledgment, because in her version of the friendship nothing is off. Your role was always to absorb. Bring up your own week and the conversation curves back to hers inside a sentence. The imbalance has no end date and no apology, because to her the arrangement is working the way it always has.

What to try before you walk

Ending a long friendship is a real loss, so it earns one honest attempt first.

State a plain need and watch what happens. Not a speech. Something small and specific: “I’ve had a brutal couple of weeks, can I talk it through with you?” A friend in a hard stretch will rise to that, maybe clumsily, and you will feel the direction of the conversation change. Someone locked into a one-way pattern will let the question sit for a beat and then return to her own material. You will know inside one conversation. People show you the shape of the thing when you ask them to hold up their end of it.

Deciding on purpose

Most of these friendships fade rather than rupture. They end the day you stop refilling them and notice she never once reaches for the phone. You can let that happen by accident, or you can make the call deliberately and free the capacity for the people who show up when it is your turn to need them.

Run the audit once a year. Skip the spreadsheet and the scorekeeping. An honest look at who gives, who takes, and who has been doing both for a decade while you weren’t paying attention.

If a structured way to work through your own circle would help, that is the reason The Friend Edit exists. You’ll find it, along with more on rebuilding a support system on purpose, at laylowellness.com.

LAYLO wellness centers social wellness—supported by mental clarity and movement—to help you live and work with more steadiness, connection, and longevity.

The LAYLO Editis where I share thoughtful, practical insight for real life.
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