It is a strange and exhausting kind of grief when someone goes from being your absolute favorite person to someone you can no longer tolerate. In the beginning, they can do no wrong, you willingly overlook the red flags, painting over their flaws and fiercely defending them to anyone who questions their character. But the shift rarely happens overnight. Instead, it is usually a slow, quiet accumulation of small disrespects, broken promises, and the painful realization that you are the only one pouring effort into the relationship. Gradually, the rose colored glasses shatter, and the very quirks you once found charming turn into unbearable irritations. You find yourself trapped in a cycle of trying to fix things, offering countless "Last chances" until the exhaustion finally turns into anger.
The hardest part of this transition isn't just being mad at them it is being mad at yourself for sharing your secrets, your time, and your vulnerability with someone who ultimately treated it as disposable. You have to mourn the person you thought they were while coming to terms with who they actually are. Ultimately, the intense anger and resentment are just the final, painful stops on the way to freedom. The true healing doesn't happen when you learn to hate them, but when that hatred finally fades into complete apathy, and you realize your selfrespect has finally woken back up......