Spot the signs of a one-sided friendship, understand why it hurts, and learn simple ways to test the balance before it drains you.
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Get it on Play StoreI’ve had friendships where I was always the one texting first, making plans, checking in, and remembering birthdays like I was running a tiny emotional customer-support desk. And honestly? It gets exhausting fast.
A one-sided friendship is when the effort is wildly uneven. You’re showing up like a full-time employee, and they’re acting like a casual intern who “might” respond by Friday.
But the annoying part is, it doesn’t always look dramatic. Sometimes it’s subtle. Sometimes it just feels off in your body before your brain catches up.
1. You always start the conversation
If you stop texting, the friendship basically goes silent, that’s a giant clue. And I mean really silent — not “they’re busy this week,” but “it has been 19 days and the last message is still your meme.”
A healthy friendship has some back-and-forth. Not perfectly equal every day, sure. But if you’re the only one keeping the line open, that’s not a friendship rhythm — that’s you carrying the whole thing.
2. You’re the default planner
You suggest the coffee, the walk, the birthday dinner, the random catch-up. They say “sounds good” or “I’m down” and then disappear into the mist.
And if they do suggest something, it’s rare enough to feel like a solar eclipse. That’s not balance. That’s you doing logistics for two people.
3. They remember you only when it’s convenient
Some people are friendly, not necessarily friends. Big difference.
If they reply instantly when they need a favor, a ride, advice, or a confidence boost — but vanish when you need emotional support — yeah, that’s not great. A real friendship isn’t a convenience store. You don’t just show up when you want snacks.
4. Your needs feel “too much”
This one hurts. If you’re always shrinking your feelings so they don’t get uncomfortable, something is off.
Maybe you stop asking for support because “they’re busy.” Maybe you don’t bring up your bad day because you don’t want to be “dramatic.” But if your needs are consistently treated like an inconvenience, you’re not in an equal friendship.
5. You leave interactions feeling drained
Not every friendship has to be super intense and emotional. But it should leave you feeling at least somewhat seen.
If you keep feeling weirdly empty, frustrated, or kind of embarrassed after talking to them, trust that. Your nervous system is usually smarter than your excuses.
One flaky week doesn’t mean the friendship is doomed. People get busy. Life happens. Jobs are annoying. Mental health dips.
But patterns matter. So ask yourself:
That last one is huge. If every message from them feels like you’ve won a small prize, you may be starved for basic reciprocity.
I once had a friend who could talk for 40 minutes about their situationship, their job, their family drama, and their gym routine. But the second I mentioned something happening in my life, they’d say, “Whoa, anyway…” and move on. I stayed longer than I should’ve because I kept calling it “their personality.”
Nope. It was a pattern. And patterns are honest.
This stuff doesn’t just annoy you. It can mess with your self-worth.
When you’re constantly giving more than you get, you start wondering if you’re too needy, too sensitive, too much, too boring, too available, too anything. But usually the real problem is simpler: the friendship is lopsided.
And that imbalance can make you:
That’s the sneaky part. A one-sided friendship can look fine from the outside. But on the inside, you feel like you’re always auditioning for basic care.
Don’t guess forever. Test it.
Step 1: Stop initiating for 2 to 3 weeks
Not as a game. Not to manipulate. Just to get data.
If you usually send 80% of the texts, pause and see what happens. Do they reach out? Do they notice? Do they try?
If nothing changes, that tells you a lot.
Step 2: Ask for something small
Try something easy and specific like:
A healthy friend may not always be available, but they won’t make you feel ridiculous for asking. And they’ll usually try to meet you halfway.
Step 3: Notice how they respond when you say no
This one is gold.
If you say, “I can’t make it,” do they shrug and move on? Cool. If you say, “I’m not able to help this time,” do they respect it?
Or do they guilt you, sulk, or disappear? Because that tells you the friendship may be more about access than care.
I wish more people talked about this stuff clearly.
A good friendship is not 50/50 every single day. Sometimes one person carries more during a rough week. Sometimes one person needs more support for a while. That’s normal.
But over time, it should feel like:
And you shouldn’t have to beg for that.
If you’re always the initiator, always the therapist, always the backup plan, and always the one who “understands,” then the balance is off. Pretty badly, actually.
First: don’t gaslight yourself.
You do not need a courtroom-level amount of evidence before you trust what you feel. If this friendship is costing you peace, that matters.
Then, decide what you want.
Say it plainly. Not in a huge dramatic speech. Just honest and calm.
You could say:
Their reaction will tell you a ton. A good friend may be surprised, but they’ll care. They’ll try. They won’t make you feel silly for bringing it up.
You can do that too.
You don’t have to announce your exit like a villain in a movie. Just slowly stop over-investing. Match their effort. Reply when you want to, not because you’re scared of losing the connection.
And if the friendship fades? That’s painful, yes. But sometimes you’re not losing a real friendship — you’re losing the job of maintaining it.
Ask yourself these 4 questions:
That last one gets me every time. Sometimes we’re attached to the role a person plays, not the actual relationship.
Your brain loves to rewrite history. It’ll say, “It’s probably fine,” right after you spent 8 months carrying a dead friendship like a backpack full of bricks.
So track the pattern. Write down:
You can do this in your notes app, a journal, or in Trider (myhabits.in) if you like keeping your relationship habits visible. Data is brutal, but useful.
This is the part people skip, and they shouldn’t.
You’re allowed to want a friendship that feels mutual. You’re allowed to want effort, curiosity, and consistency. You’re allowed to stop shrinking your needs to keep someone comfortable.
And if you’re realizing a friendship has been one-sided, that doesn’t make you needy or difficult. It makes you awake.
So be honest with yourself. Test the pattern. Protect your energy. And if you want help building better routines around the relationships and habits that matter, give Trider a try at myhabits.in — it’s a pretty solid place to start.