Guide overview

What You’ll Learn

Everything you’ll take away from this guide, broken down into clear, practical points.

  • Recognise Your Emotional Readiness

    Learn to identify when you’re ready to be friends with an ex without hurting yourself.

  • Set Healthy Boundaries Post-Breakup

    Discover practical ways to create space that supports your healing and self-respect.

  • Manage Feelings of Hope and Jealousy

    Understand how to accept your emotions and know when to seek support if needed.

This article is part of our Teen Dating & Relationships hub, where you’ll find practical, friendly advice on dating, confidence, breakups and healthy relationships. All relationship content on TheYouthToolbox is written to support emotional wellbeing, healthy communication, and age-appropriate guidance for teens and young adults.

One of the hardest questions to answer after a breakup is whether it’s possible to stay friends when your feelings haven’t gone away. You may genuinely care about your ex, enjoy spending time with them, and want them to remain part of your life. At the same time, every conversation or message might leave you hoping the relationship could somehow begin again.

Many people find themselves in this situation, which is why our guide on Should You Stay Friends With an Ex? (Pros, Cons & Teen-Friendly Advice) explores the wider question of when post-breakup friendship is healthy and when it isn’t. This article focuses on one specific challenge: what happens when you’re trying to build a friendship while you still love the other person.

There’s no shame in still loving someone after a breakup. Love doesn’t disappear the moment a relationship ends. The important question isn’t whether your feelings are “wrong”—it’s whether staying friends is helping you heal or making it harder to accept what’s changed.

Love Doesn’t End as Quickly as Relationships Do

Relationships can end in a single conversation.

Love rarely does.

If you spent months or years building a close emotional connection, it’s completely normal for those feelings to continue after the breakup. You may still miss your ex, think about them every day, or instinctively want to share news with them.

That doesn’t necessarily mean the relationship should continue.

It simply means your heart is taking longer to adjust than your relationship status did.

Many people worry that still loving their ex means they’re failing to move on. In reality, it’s often just part of grieving the loss of someone who mattered deeply.

Friendship Can Keep Hope Alive

One of the biggest challenges with staying friends while you’re still in love is that friendship can unintentionally keep hope alive.

Every text message may feel significant.

Every conversation might leave you wondering whether they’re changing their mind.

A friendly smile, a kind comment, or an invitation to spend time together can quickly become something you analyse long after the interaction has ended.

Without meaning to, you may start looking for evidence that the relationship isn’t really over.

That emotional uncertainty can make it much harder to move forward because your attention remains focused on what might happen instead of what is happening now.

Ask Yourself Why You Want to Stay Friends

Wanting friendship isn’t automatically unhealthy.

The important thing is understanding what’s motivating that decision.

Ask yourself honestly:

  • Am I happy with friendship on its own?
  • Or am I hoping friendship will lead back to a relationship?
  • Would I still want this friendship if I knew we’d never get back together?

These questions aren’t designed to judge your feelings.

They’re designed to help you understand them.

If friendship only feels worthwhile because it keeps the possibility of reconciliation alive, then what you’re protecting may not be the friendship at all—it’s the hope that the relationship hasn’t truly ended.

Can Friendship Slow Emotional Healing?

Sometimes it can.

Healing after a breakup usually involves gradually accepting that your relationship has changed. That process becomes much more difficult if you’re constantly staying emotionally connected to the person you’re trying to recover from.

Instead of creating space to build new routines and regain your independence, you may find yourself emotionally waiting.

  • Waiting for a message.
  • Waiting for them to miss you.
  • Waiting for another chance.

If that feels familiar, our guide on When Staying Friends With an Ex Delays Healing explains why remaining in close contact can sometimes keep emotional attachment active for much longer than people expect.

Jealousy Is Often a Sign You’re Not Ready

One of the clearest signs that your feelings are still romantic is how you react to the idea of your ex moving on.

You may feel upset when they:

  • spend time with someone new
  • talk about dating again
  • seem happy without you
  • become less emotionally available

Those reactions don’t mean you’re immature or possessive.

They usually mean your heart is still hoping for something different.

Friendship becomes much healthier when you can genuinely accept that both of you are free to build separate futures, even if that feels difficult at first.

It’s Okay to Admit You Still Love Them

Some people try to convince themselves they’ve stopped caring because they think it’s the “right” way to heal.

In reality, denying your feelings rarely makes them disappear.

Being honest with yourself is often much healthier than pretending you’re ready for friendship when you’re still grieving the relationship.

Accepting that you still love someone doesn’t mean you have to act on those feelings.

It simply gives you a clearer understanding of where you are emotionally, allowing you to make decisions that genuinely support your recovery instead of working against it.

Sometimes Distance Is an Act of Self-Respect

Creating some distance from someone you still love can feel incredibly difficult because it may seem as though you’re losing them all over again. After the relationship has ended, stepping away from the friendship can feel like saying a second goodbye, even if you know it’s the healthiest choice.

In reality, choosing some space isn’t about rejecting the other person or pretending the relationship never mattered. It’s about giving yourself the opportunity to heal without constantly reopening emotional wounds or keeping yourself emotionally attached to a relationship that’s already ended. Taking that step doesn’t make your love any less real—it simply recognises that your own emotional wellbeing deserves the same care and protection that you would offer someone else.

Can Friendship Work Later?

Choosing not to stay friends now doesn’t mean you can never be friends in the future.

In fact, many healthy friendships between former partners begin only after both people have had enough time to heal. By that point, the relationship is no longer something either person is grieving or hoping to rebuild. Instead, they’ve accepted what happened, built independent lives, and can appreciate one another without the emotional expectations that existed before.

There’s no timetable for reaching that point. For some people it takes months, while for others it may take much longer. What matters isn’t how much time has passed but whether your feelings have genuinely changed.

Signs You May Be Ready for Friendship

It’s easy to mistake missing someone for being ready to have them back in your life. Before deciding to stay friends, it can help to think about how the friendship would actually feel in practice.

You may be approaching a healthier place if you can enjoy talking to your ex without constantly analysing every message, wondering what they really meant, or hoping each conversation will lead somewhere else. Likewise, although it may still feel slightly strange, you’re increasingly able to imagine them living their own life without feeling overwhelmed by jealousy or rejection.

If those things still feel impossible, that’s not a sign you’ve failed to move on. It simply suggests your emotions are still recovering, and giving yourself more space may be kinder than trying to force a friendship before you’re ready.

What If They Want to Stay Friends?

Sometimes your ex genuinely wants to stay friends, even though you’re still in love with them.

That can leave you feeling caught between protecting your own wellbeing and worrying about disappointing someone you still care about. You may fear they’ll think you’re angry, immature, or unwilling to forgive them if you say you need some distance.

The reality is that healthy boundaries sometimes disappoint other people, but that doesn’t make them unhealthy.

You are allowed to explain that friendship isn’t something you’re emotionally ready for right now. Wanting space isn’t about punishing your ex or refusing to be civil. It’s about recognising that your feelings deserve time to settle before you decide what role, if any, this person should have in your life.

What If You Decide to Take Some Space?

Creating distance doesn’t have to mean ending all communication dramatically.

For some people, it simply means reducing contact, muting social media updates, or politely explaining that they need some time to focus on healing. Those boundaries aren’t there to erase the relationship or prove a point. They’re there to give your emotions the opportunity to catch up with what has already happened.

If your ex respects those boundaries, it can also create the possibility of a healthier friendship in the future. If they don’t, that may tell you something important about whether the friendship would have been healthy in the first place.

When to Seek Extra Support

If you’re finding it difficult to accept the breakup, your emotions are affecting your confidence or daily life, or you feel unable to move forward despite your best efforts, talking to someone you trust can help.

That might be a parent, trusted adult, teacher, counsellor, therapist, or another supportive person. They won’t make the feelings disappear overnight, but they can help you process them and develop healthier ways of coping.

Asking for support isn’t a sign that you loved too much or that you’re weak. Sometimes heartbreak is simply easier to carry when you don’t have to carry it alone.

Loving Someone Doesn’t Mean You Have to Stay Close to Them

Still loving your ex doesn’t mean you have to keep them in your life.

Sometimes the kindest thing you can do—for both yourself and the other person—is accept that your feelings need space to settle before friendship becomes a realistic possibility. Trying to stay close while hoping your love will eventually be returned often leaves both people stuck between the past and the future.

If friendship is going to work, it will usually grow from acceptance rather than longing. Giving yourself permission to heal first isn’t giving up on the relationship you’ve lost; it’s giving yourself the best chance of building a healthier future, whatever that eventually looks like.

Main points

Key Takeaways

The most important things to remember from this guide.


  • It is normal to still have romantic feelings for an ex after a breakup, and recognising this can help you understand your emotions better.

  • Staying friends with an ex while still in love may unintentionally keep hope alive and slow down your emotional healing process.

  • Setting clear boundaries and allowing yourself some distance can be important acts of self-respect and support your recovery.

  • Feelings of jealousy can indicate that you might not be emotionally ready to maintain a friendship with your ex.

  • Seeking support from trusted friends, family, or professionals can be helpful if you find it difficult to manage your feelings post-breakup.

Common questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers to the most common questions about this topic.

Is it normal to still have romantic feelings for an ex when considering friendship?

Yes, it’s common to still have feelings after a breakup. Recognising this can help you decide if friendship is right for you right now.

How can I tell if staying friends with my ex is affecting my emotional healing?

If you find yourself holding onto hope, feeling jealous, or struggling to move on, it might mean friendship is slowing your healing process.

What boundaries should I set if I want to be friends with an ex?

Clear boundaries like limiting contact, avoiding romantic topics, and taking space when needed can support your emotional wellbeing.

When might it be better to take a break from friendship with an ex?

If your feelings are still strong or friendship causes emotional pain, taking distance can be a healthy way to respect yourself and heal.

Where can I find support if I’m struggling with my feelings after a breakup?

Talking to trusted friends, family, or a counsellor can provide helpful support as you work through your emotions.

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