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the phase-out plan

kelly  |  15 March 2007 - 8:42pm

In honor of the Ides of March, I thought I'd share the Phase-Out Plan. Because when you no longer consider a certain person your friend, it's always a better idea to phase him out than stab him in the back. Et tu, Brute?

First, a few things. There's a lot of guilt associated with phasing someone out, but there needn't be. It doesn't mean you're an awful person. It doesn't mean your friend is an awful person. It just means you've changed in such a way that you don't find the friendship beneficial anymore. You've gone separate ways. Maybe the person has become someone you no longer have respect for, or maybe you just don't have much in common anymore. Whatever the reason, the friendship is dragging you down and wasting your time.

What makes this tricky is that often the other person doesn't notice (or won't admit) the troubled friendship. And this is when the best solution is to slowly phase the person out. In a romantic relationship, you can just end things outright. You know, the whole "It's not you, it's me" thing. But in a friendship (especially between two females) it's never that easy.

Enter The Phase-Out Plan. Properly executed, the process will, in hindsight, appear to the person you've phased out to be an unavoidable deterioration of the friendship. In other words, the phasing out will happen gradually and naturally enough that it will seem the two of you just drifted apart during this time, not that you were actively pulling away (even though that's exactly what you're doing). Granted, you could just sit the person down and explain that you don't want to be friends any longer. And maybe that's the honorable thing to do. But frankly, I would rather shave my head like Britney Spears than have that conversation. Often you're phasing a person out without concrete, tangible reasons; to tell a person that would damage his or her self-esteem and leave you looking like a total bitch. I maintain Phasing-Out is the more clever and compassionate way to handle this sort of situation.

(I should add that I am in no way an expert on The Plan, but I have employed it with great success and have, in fact, learned from the master, HFD, who should totally patent this.)

The key to doing this well is time and patience. This is the only downside because quite likely the person has already wasted too much of your time and worn your patience thin.

  1. Become the busiest person you know. Even if you're not. You need to start minimizing the time you spend with the person you're phasing out, and having other plans is the most painless way to decline an invitation. My phase-out liked to schedule our next 'date' at the end of our current one ("So when can we get together next week?") which made this part of the plan especially hard. ("You can't be busy every day next week!") Yes, in fact, I can. And I am. (It's okay to lie, just don't get caught.) If you don't want to lie, then search your life for any legitimate reason you can conceivably stretch. For example, JLD reminded me that I could use the fact that my dad had been in the hospital. "Your phase-out doesn't need to know he's doing fine! You can use 'My dad's been in the hospital' as a busy-excuse for at least a month!" Damn, he's good.

  2. Stop initiating. HFD recommended that I immediately stop initiating things with my phase-out, but I actually did invite the person to get together a few times after I began The Plan. I know it sounds insincere, but the truth is I was trying to convince myself that I liked this person more than I thought I did. Turned out, I really didn't. So I stopped initiating. I think gradually phasing out my invitations made it seem more natural, though.

    To stop initiating means phone calls and emails as well as invitations. I stopped emailing the person entirely, although if I received an email I would politely reply. But not right away - maybe a week later. I was, after all, very busy.

If the person lives in a different town, phasing-out is much easier to accomplish. Steps 1 and 2 should be all it takes. And even if the phase-out is local, most people's social skills are sensitive enough that if a friend (especially a not-that-close one) becomes too busy to get together and stops initiating contact, they will get the hint and slowly sidle away. But some don't. Mine didn't. This is when things get tough for you, the Phaser-Outer, because you must start doing things that feel a wee bit bitchy. But it's essential that you stay strong and follow the course.

    3. Stop being fun to be with. When you do get stuck hanging out with the person, arrive late. And develop the personality of a wet mop. I know, I know - even when you're not trying, you're still a fucking blast. Believe me, I know what it's like. But you need to tone it down. Stop telling funny anecdotes. Don't hold up your end of the conversation. Smile only enough to prevent the person from asking if you're depressed. If you're a drag to be around, the phase-out will stop calling.

    4. Except when they don't. Some still cling, much to your fury. If you've got a Saran-wrap phase-out, you must turn to drastic measures. For example, when the person decides that the only way she'll be able to spend time with you is to join your weekly yoga class, talk her out of it as fast as you can move your fucking tongue. You doubt the class times would be compatible with her work hours and the class is always too full to properly move your arms and the instructor is dreadful. In fact, this whole yoga thing is SO overrated. Besides, wouldn't it be more fiscally responsible for her to take yoga classes at the gym she belongs to? (Employ math logic whenever possible as it is indisputable.) Then, just in case, switch to a different class so if she does show up, you won't be there.

    Also avoid answering any phone calls from the phase-out (caller ID is your new best friend) and stop replying to emails. Treat the person as you would a bad date. At this point you may feel like a full-fledged bitch, but truly the person has driven you to it.

    5. Don't slip. When several months have passed since your last interaction, you will be tempted to declare success. And you should, as long as you continue to be on guard. Because mark my words, you will run into the person at some social event and she will stalk you into the restroom and start chatting you up like not a day has passed. This will remind you of why you phased her out in the first place, and you will be so happy to have ended that friendship that you will be hard-pressed not to break into a huge smile of relief. However, your joy will surely be interpreted as affection. So, stand firm. Be polite (no need to earn the bitch title now) but be reserved. Respond in conversation as you would to a mere acquaintance, which is what your phase-out is to you now. Do NOT get suckered into making plans. ("It's been TOO long...we need to get together!") Keep the conversation brief, slowly backing into the bathroom stall if you must. Then sit on the toilet and don't come out until she leaves.


If everything goes well, you will have liberated yourself from a lifeless friendship without any fallout and without even really arousing suspicion. You'll have more time to devote to the friendships you value, and you'll even be able to return to that Thursday evening yoga class you've been avoiding for months.

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JLD  |  15 March 2007 - 9:53pm

I was thinking we should get together for dinner this weekend but your post reminded me that I always do my annual household spice inventory this weekend :)

 

HFD  |  15 March 2007 - 10:09pm

Ahhh...I heart you. I have decided we should do the book together - you can be my ghostwriter.

You missed one important stop the initiation of the invitation phase step - it is important to make it gradual so as not to appear to sudden -as you pointed out. One helpful hint is to continue to invite the person to group events, that way you have backup and other fabulous people to hang out with. By continuing the invitations to group events, and stopping doing individual things with them, it cuts down on the guilt factor, cuts down on your one on one time with them, and does not seem like a sudden cutting off of the friendship. However, this only works when the subject of the phase-out plan is already friends with or knows the people at said event, because you do not want to take the chance that they will latch on to someone new at the group event, and then have the latchee try and phase you out b/c you passed on the dead weight!

 

kelly  |  16 March 2007 - 12:03am

Ooh, JLD, I love organizing spices! I'll come over and help you! It'll be so much fun! (See how I did that? I could totally write a post on how to be a cling-wrap phase-out friend...)

Hi HFD! I was hoping you'd chip in. Indeed, the group invite is an excellent strategy - rather brilliant, really. But then, all of this is brilliant. As is the book idea. ;)

 

RzDrms  |  16 March 2007 - 12:05am

i know my purse was real messy when we met and i got kinda lost on your redneck highways and hardly no restaurants were open (and also i'm a worry wart), but please don't phase me out. i mean, honestly, it's been too long...we do need to get together... ;-)

 

William  |  16 March 2007 - 6:11am

I know I have gotten in "trouble" with the way I have handled friends like this, but seriously what is wrong with just saying "Look, this us being friends thing is not working out."

That is what I would do.

 

William  |  16 March 2007 - 6:16am

By the way I do love the thoughtfulness and startegy behind the plan. When I have used the phase out plan I would use step 1 but I would make sure I was being busy doing things I knew the clingy friend would hate. Like if they were pro-life I would tell them I was going to a Pro Choice rally. Stuff like that.

 

Amy  |  16 March 2007 - 11:46am

Can you write a book already?

 

kelly  |  16 March 2007 - 7:28pm

Rz, you are not on the phase-out track! Promise. And actually, just the other day I thought, "I haven't seen Rz in the longest time! That girl needs to arrange a business trip already." So yeah, come see me again sometime soon!

I agree, William. I do. I aspire to that kind of honesty, but given that I avoid confrontation, I rarely practice it. Also, I think women's relationships with each other tend to be more complicated than men's. Not necessarily deeper or more valuable, just more difficult to extricate oneself from. Feelings are too easily hurt. That's a sexist thing to say, but mostly true. Men friends are just always cool, which is one of the reasons I love having them. And also, your strategy of doing stuff your clingy friend would hate is pure brilliance! That is being added to The Plan!!

Aww, thanks Amy. :)

 

jana  |  17 March 2007 - 8:58am

great timimg! i needed this. is there an addendum on how to do it when said person is a 'soccer mom' on the same team as yours?? kinda hard to say you're busy when you're standing at the same sidelines.

I loved this though, classic!

 

mrtl  |  17 March 2007 - 1:46pm

This is brilliant, and true to form. I can attest to that, but let's not go there.

You're still going strong! You go, woman!

Love!

p.s. Thanksgiving this year looks like a go for Maryland. Save the date! I may have to make it a longer trip this year for sanity's sake.

 

UCM  |  17 March 2007 - 5:15pm

So what you're saying is "Post dammit, or I'm kicking you to the curb!"

You know everybody's reading this and thinking it's them, right?

 

Tanya  |  18 March 2007 - 11:45pm

Well said. Excellent, in fact.

Out of town friends have a way of fading out over time. Last time I went to Canada, I was going to phase one out...ya know, one last summer before I just stop talking to her. Didn't happen. Am glad I did not let it happen, either.

I agree that group invites are a good thing. The problem is that if this friend is friends with your other friends, well, you might see her more than you want to.

Why are friendships between women so bloody complicated?

 

kelly  |  19 March 2007 - 12:12am

jana, that is a tough one. Maybe you should volunteer to be a ref? Anything to save you from the sidelines....

mrtl! I miss you! I will save the date...let me know when you'll be around! A longer trip is good for me, too, because hopefully there will be a day when I don't have a family thing.

Nah, UCM, I'm not phasing out any of you folks. Promise!

Yeah, Tanya, there are definitely some friendships worth saving, and distance alone isn't necessarily cause for a phase-out. And why are our friendships so complicated? They shouldn't be. And actually, I consider a complicated friendship is a good indication that it's no longer worth my time.

 
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