She is someone I call my friend. We live close. We cook together, gossip about life, dissect relationships, and trade secrets the way friends do. At least, that’s what I thought we were doing. Because when it comes to my life, I tell her everything. Every major decision. Every fear. Even when a man proposes and I’m still thinking, she knows. I trust her with my unfolding life.

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But when it comes to hers, I always have to find out.

I found out she was doing her master’s degree only because I stumbled upon the information myself. When I confronted her, she said she planned to tell me once she was “sure.” She was already enrolled. Already attending classes. Already living it—without me knowing.

Then she traveled abroad. I didn’t hear it from her. I saw it on social media. A picture and a caption. A whole journey revealed in pixels. When I asked, she said she wanted to surprise me. Later, she returned with a perfume as an apology, as though a gift could stand in for the sting of being excluded.

She got a new job. Again, silence. I heard about it much later, almost by accident. Her explanation was casual: it was “just a job,” not something worth announcing. I nodded, but I was hurt.

The deepest cut came recently. I learned she’s been going through counseling in preparation to marry a man she has never once mentioned to me. Not a hint or even a whisper.  The person who told me was stunned that I didn’t know. She asked, bluntly, “Are you sure you’re friends?”

How could we be so close in proximity, so intimate in routine, yet so distant in truth? How could she sit on my couch, eat my food, laugh with me, and still live an entire life I’m not invited into? It began to feel like I was safe enough for her presence, but not trusted with her joy.

About her wedding. I haven’t said a word about it to her. I’m watching and waiting. Pretending I don’t know, just to see if she will tell me or let me find out the way I always do. What kind of friend treats another like a bad omen, as though sharing good news with me might attract sabotage. As though my knowing could somehow ruin her happiness.

If she gets married without telling me, I know what I’ll do. I’ll have one final, honest conversation with her and then walk away. Quietly. Completely. Maybe that makes me petty but I’m tired of loving someone who keeps me on the outside of her life while standing comfortably in the center of mine.

—Rachel

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