2. It’s hard to keep up with friendships.
When you have anxiety and depression, your personal relationships can really suffer. As a person with depression, I have to work very hard not to fixate on irrational fears like the fact that I’m not “good enough” to be anyone’s friend.
As a person with anxiety, however desperate I might be for companionship, I find myself repeatedly cancelling plans because the idea of having to leave the house and interact is sometimes more than I can handle. It’s easy to write off a person with anxiety and depression as a “flake” or someone who isn’t interested in your friendship, but sufferers of anxiety and depression know this couldn’t be further from the case. Sometimes we just can’t do it.
Don’t beat yourself up about this if it’s something that happens to you. Your real friends will understand if you’re honest with them about what’s happening. Just make sure you continue to communicate. Better to be honest and risk embarrassment then to stay quiet and potentially lose a friend.
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