You did not fight. There was no dramatic blowup, no public callout, no moment where words were exchanged that could never be taken back. You just stopped calling. She stopped texting. And somewhere between the silence, you both understood: the friendship had expired.
This is how most adult friendships end with a quiet, creeping distance that neither of you knows how to close.
For Nigerian women, especially, the guilt around outgrowing friendships is heavy. We are raised to believe that loyalty means forever. That a friend from secondary school is a friend for life. That walking away from someone who knew you when is a kind of betrayal.
But some friendships are not meant to survive who you become.

The Signs You Have Outgrown a Friendship
You know the feeling. You leave a catch-up session feeling drained instead of filled. You find yourself editing your stories because she no longer celebrates your wins without a hint of competition. You realize you are the only one checking in, the only one making plans, the only one carrying the weight.
Or worse: you look at her and realize you no longer share the same values. She still gossips the way you used to in university. She still makes the same self-deprecating jokes about her life. She still wants to spend weekends the way you did at twenty-two.
You are thirty now. You want different things. And somehow, wanting more feels like a betrayal.
Dr. Marisa G. Franco, a psychologist and author of Platonic, puts it simply:
“Sometimes people grow, and their values change, and they may not be as aligned with their old friends.”
It is not malicious. It is not personal. It is just the natural consequence of becoming a different person.
Why It Hurts Anyway
Knowing that outgrowing a friendship is normal does not make it hurt less. There is a specific grief that comes with losing someone who is still alive. You mourn the inside jokes. The shared history. The person who knew your mother before she passed, who remembers the terrible ex from your early twenties, who was there when you got your first job.
Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie captured this feeling in The Thing Around Your Neck:
“The shame of not having been what you thought you were, of having believed you were a rock when you were really just a stone.”
You wonder if you are the problem. If you expect too much. If friendship should be easier than this.
But friendship is not supposed to feel like a chore. It is not supposed to be you pouring and pouring while the other person holds an empty cup. At some point, you have to stop blaming yourself and start accepting that you have simply outgrown the container.
The Nigerian Friend Breakup
There is an added layer for Nigerian women. We do not “break up” with friends. We ghost. We drift apart and send “we should catch up soon” messages that never materialize into actual plans. Confrontation is not in our cultural vocabulary, especially when it comes to relationships that are supposed to be “forever.”
So we stay silent. We stay stuck. We keep showing up to birthday dinners and baby showers, smiling through conversations that feel hollow, because ending a friendship feels too dramatic, too American, and frankly, just too much.
But silence is its own kind of ending. And sometimes it is kinder than forcing a connection that no longer exists.
What to Do When You Have Outgrown a Friend
If you recognize yourself in this, here is what you need to hear: you are allowed to outgrow people. You are allowed to want more. You are allowed to protect your peace even when it means letting someone go.
- Stop Over-Explaining
You do not owe anyone a formal resignation letter from their life. If the friendship has faded naturally, let it fade. Not every ending needs a conversation.
- Grieve What Was
Acknowledge that you lost something. The friendship was real. It mattered. It just does not fit anymore. You can hold gratitude for the past and boundaries for the present at the same time.
- Invest in New Connections
Outgrowing a friendship creates space. Use it. Say yes to the coffee date with the colleague you have been meaning to get to know better. Join that book club. Call that cousin who actually gets you.
- Release the Guilt
You are not a bad person for changing. You are not disloyal for wanting different things. You are simply becoming who you are meant to be. And that process, messy as it is, is allowed to cost you some people.
The Bottom Line
The friendship that ended because you grew up is not necessarily a tragedy. It means you are not where you used to be. It means you have done the hard work of becoming.
And the people who are meant to walk with you into the next chapter? They will not need you to shrink, nor need you to pretend. They will meet you exactly where you are.




