12 Tips For When Your Friend is Mad at You and Ignoring You

“I think I accidentally hurt my best friend by not inviting her out with a group of our mutual friends, and now she’s giving me the silent treatment. I don’t know why this upset her so much, but now my friend is mad at me and ignoring me when I call and text. What should I do?”

No one likes conflict, but sometimes the silent treatment can feel even worse than a bad argument with a friend. When your friend doesn’t respond to your texts and calls, it’s normal to feel anxious, threatened, guilty, and sad.[1]

The silent treatment is a passive-aggressive way of dealing with conflict and hurt feelings and can be very damaging to a friendship.[2] It can be difficult to know the right way to respond to a friend who deals with conflict this way, and responding the wrong way can sometimes make things worse.

In this article, you will learn 12 ways to handle a friend being upset and ignoring you without making things worse.

Sections

  1. How to deal with a friend who is ignoring you
  2. Common questions

12 tips for when your friend is mad and ignoring you

1. Give them space and time to cool off

While you probably want to work things out with your friend right away, being too forceful or quick to react can actually make things worse. Things you say out of fear, guilt, or hurt feelings might make you feel better in the moment but are often a source of regret later.[3]

Pushing a friend to talk before they feel ready can often backfire, resulting in more conflict or conversations that feel forced. Sometimes, people need some time and space to cool off before they are ready to talk, so resist the urge to call them or text them repeatedly. Instead, try to take a step back, give them some space, and wait until they are ready to talk.

2. Check your assumptions

Sometimes, you might have assumed a friend is not responding because they are mad at you when they are really just busy or didn’t see your text or calls. Make sure that you reality-check your assumptions and consider other explanations for why they aren’t responding to you.

You may have incorrectly assumed they are mad at you if:

  • You can’t think of anything you said or did that may have upset or hurt them
  • They have a lot on their plate right now and don’t have the energy to socialize or respond to messages
  • You are feeling overly sensitive, anxious, or insecure
  • You’ve assumed they’ve been mad before, but you later realized you’d misread the situation

3. Put the ball in their court

It’s often best to let your friend come to you on their terms, especially if you’ve said or done something to anger, hurt, or upset them. While you might be ready (and eager) to talk things out with them, they may not be. If they aren’t responding or say they aren’t ready to talk, respect this boundary while also letting them know you are there when they are ready.

4. Self-reflect on what happened

Use the space and time away from your friend wisely by doing some self-reflection about what happened. Sometimes, you will be able to pinpoint exactly what upset them. Other times, it won’t be as clear. This is where self-reflection can help you get a clearer understanding of what happened.[3]

Here are some questions that can help you figure out what happened:

  • What happened last time you talked with your friend?
  • Was there a moment when you noticed a shift in their mood?
  • Can you identify something you said or did that may have hurt them or offended them?
  • Is conflict an isolated incident with this friend or part of a frequent pattern?

5. Put things into perspective

It can be hard to keep things in perspective when someone is mad at you, especially when it’s a close friend. Strong feelings, insecurities about the friendship, and self-critical thoughts can all skew your perspective, making it hard to know what happened or what you may have done wrong.

In order to get a clearer perspective on the situation, consider:[3]

  • Asking a close friend or family (who doesn’t know your friend) for honest feedback
  • Consider your friend’s thoughts, feelings, and experiences as well as your own
  • Consider what you would think, feel, or do if the situation was reversed
  • Take a step back and consider the overall closeness and importance of the friendship; think of the times your friendship has enriched your life. The current period of your friendship might not be significant compared to all the good times you’ve had together

6. Don’t engage with unproductive thoughts

When you’re feeling guilty, sad, or angry, you may get stuck ruminating on thoughts that are unhelpful or unproductive. This can make you feel worse, more exhausted, and less able to respond in a positive way to your friend. When you find yourself stuck in an unhelpful thought, try to pull your attention away by focusing on the here and now, your breath, your body, or by focusing on a task.

Some examples of unhelpful thoughts to pull back from include:

  • Replaying parts of an interaction that make you feel angry, upset, or bad
  • Thinking of times you’ve been a good friend to them and of how unfair they are being
  • Being overly self-critical and beating yourself up for things you said or did
  • Rehearsing heated conversations or arguments with them in your mind
  • All or nothing thoughts of ending the friendship or taking other drastic actions

7. Resist emotional reactions

While your initial response to a friend who is ignoring you may be feelings of guilt and wanting to apologize, these feelings can quickly sour into feelings of anger, hurt, and resentment about being ignored. When this happens, you may have urges to tell your friend off, do or say something hurtful, or even end the friendship, but these are likely to be actions you later regret. Resist acting on heated emotions and urges to prevent making things worse.[3]

8. Ask to talk in person (if possible)

After an argument or conflict with a friend, it’s often helpful to see them face-to-face instead of trying to work through things via text, messaging, or even on the phone. Miscommunications and misunderstandings are less likely to occur in person when you can read each other’s body language in real-time.[4] This way, you are more likely to get clarity on what happened with your friend and where you both stand now.

You might also like this article on having difficult conversations.

9. Don’t get defensive

It’s natural to get defensive when you feel attacked or criticized by a friend, but doing so often makes conversations less productive. When talking with a friend who is mad at you and has ignored you, try to notice when you feel defensive and avoid putting your guard up in ways that would end the conversation or make things worse between you and your friend. Instead, try to ask respectful questions that will help you understand their point of view.

Some examples of defenses to avoid when talking things out with a friend include:

  • Blaming them, accusing them, attacking them, or other statements that start with “you”
  • Interrupting them, talking over them, or not letting them speak
  • Getting loud, aggressive, or making personal attacks on their character
  • Bringing up the past or ‘snowballing’ other issues that aren’t related
  • Shutting down, closing yourself off, or acting apathetic
  • Always feeling the need to argue your point or defend your actions

10. Make an effort to make it right

When you avoid getting defensive, it gets easier to have conversations that are helpful, but many people still feel afraid of confrontation. Still, confronting an issue head-on is often necessary to find a resolution, although this doesn’t always mean you and your friend will be on the same page.

In fact, it may be necessary to agree to disagree, find a compromise, apologize for how you made them feel, or just let things go. While these might not always feel like they ‘resolve’ an issue, they can help you and your friend move forward, especially when the conflict was petty or unimportant.[3]

11. Ask for more open communication next time

Giving someone the silent treatment isn’t a healthy or emotionally mature way to respond to someone, even if they really hurt your feelings.[2] It’s OK for you to confront your friend about not responding to you and to ask them to communicate more clearly the next time they are upset.

You can ask for more open communication by saying something like:

  • “Next time, can you just send me a text letting me know what’s going on?”
  • “Please let me know next time you feel that way.”
  • “I know you were upset, but I felt really hurt when I didn’t get a response from you. Could you give me just a quick response next time, even if you aren’t ready to have a conversation about what happened?”

12. Know when to pull back

Not all arguments with friends can be resolved. Unfortunately, sometimes it will be necessary to let go and work through the grief of being ghosted by a friend. This is often a sign that your friend was not invested enough (or mature enough) to put the time and effort into making things right.[5]

When this is the case, the best thing to do is not to chase after them trying to force the friendship, but instead to take a step back and re-evaluate. It may be necessary to let the friendship go or at least pull back and set some stricter boundaries with them.

Final thoughts

Getting the silent treatment from a friend who is upset with you can feel really bad, and it can be hard to resist the urge to repeatedly call or text them, force them to talk, or even make things worse. Sometimes, it will be possible to make things right with your friend and resolve things, but other times, it will be important to pull back, take care of yourself, and even distance yourself from a friend who has become toxic.

Common questions about what to do when a friend is mad and ignoring you

What should you say to a friend that’s mad at you?

If your friend isn’t responding to you, try sending a text asking them to call you when they are ready to talk and then give them time and space to cool off. When they’re ready to talk, hear them out, apologize if needed, and try to make things right.

How to tell if your friend is mad at you over text?

Miscommunications are common over text, with many people misunderstanding a simple reply. If you’re not sure, ask a friend directly if they are mad at you. This is the best way to know for sure if they’re upset.

Why is my friend ignoring me all of a sudden?

Your friend may be ignoring you because they are hurt or angry, or it could be for a reason that has nothing to do with you. For example, they may be working, have no phone service, or their phone may be out of battery, so try not to jump to conclusions too quickly.

How do you apologize to a friend who won’t talk to you?

Send a sorry text or message to your friend saying, “I’m really sorry for what I said. Can we talk?” Alternatively, call them, leave a voicemail apology and ask them to call you back.

Show references +

Hailey Shafir is a licensed mental health counselor, licensed addiction specialist, and clinical supervisor working out of Raleigh, NC. She has a Masters in Counseling from NC State University, and has extensive professional experience in counseling, program development, and clinical supervision. Read more.

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  1. I have this friend currently who has many grudges against me. Most of these are from 3-6 months ago, and she wont let go of them. I will recognize and say yeah, the things i said were bad to a certain extent, and i deserve the backlash to a REASONABLE EXTENT. But that was a long time ago. She has done some pretty bad stuff to me, like ditch me with a table group (for a project). You can say that was miscommunication on my part because I can’t see the chat (don’t have 5g data). She had told me that she had somehow conveniently forgot about the countless times i told her I can’t see it. And after that I did get very mad,, i said a lot of bad things, but i eventually just let the whole situation go. After that she made up excuses about doctor appointments and other things so she didnt have to see me at lunch. Spontaneously left me without explanation, and now she is blaming me for things i have literally done 6 months ago. She said something along the lines of “I don’t want to be with a person who talks like that.” And “that” is the dark humor side of me. OKAY I think it is fair that you think those are hurtful and bad, because they can be. But if I am the only one here receiving backlash and consequences, then I don’t know what you want from me. First of all, those are from the past, and during that moment, you didnt seem to be very hurt, and you never brought that up. Secondly, I have changed. I learned a few things, and i barely say mean things anymore. Sure, I did say mean things a long time ago. But now its just limited to slightly dark humor. It’s not very offensive, and sometimes it is at an offensive level. This offensive level has happened once and she is making a huge deal about it. If anything, i feel like she is the one who needs to get served a steaming hot plate of common sense. I know what i have done, and i am open to resolve it. She thinks that abandoning me is somehow right. No it is not in any way. I feel like that is an unreasonable punishment. I understand how offensive it can be, but not to that extent. And i have apologized countless times. She has never said sorry to me for anything she does to me unless I literally ask her “r u gonna apologise”. She even went on to block my phone number because i was apparently “spamming her” which I was but those times were very important and she never replies to my text messages. But the last few days were absolutely the last straw for me. She got mad at me for complaining about the result of my “poor decisions” I sent her a message back explaining that those “decisions” are something that i cannot control. (I have suspected ADHD and a lot of signs point to yes) I wish that she would be more accepting to me. Then, she sent me a messsage back telling me she was unwilling to listen to me, which i completely understand. But then she started to blabber about all the apparent “mean stuff” I said to her. Yes, they were mean. But if i have apologized, then your grudge is unreasonable. And note that all this happened months and months ago. During the periods which i said those things, she has never reacted negatively. I feel like she is trying to use all my mistakes against me. If she had not don’t something in the form of reaction during that moment, then it clearly isn’t my problem that she suddenly feels bad about it now. She thinks that her many friends can cover up me, which they obviously can’t. Then, she goes on to tell me she doesn’t want to be my friend. I still want to be close to her, and gave the idea of how about we just be aquaintances and she completely denied that idea. Just because we are not friends, doesn’t mean we can talk. She started to blabber about cutting ties. Ties are basically impossible to cut. It almost makes me feel like her actions are done to me as a consequence. I really want to serve her a steaming hot plate of backlash but don’t want to hurt her. She has friends that treat her and others the exact same way I do. She got mad at me for asking for help, she got mad at me for complaining, she got mad at me for my past, but she never brings up the idea of those other people. There are a lot of things i cannot change, and complaining is like a part of me. Note that she has never brought up any of these. These just came out of the blue. It’s not reasonable to be so dominant when you have literally never brought most of these up. I really want to know what to say to her because now all she does is think of me as an annoying individual, ignore me, and bring up OLD, ANCIENT things i did as a way to make me look bad and vulnerable. If anyone is reading this, it would be amazing if you know what i could do. Im trying to give her what she wants, but i wish that she would cut it out because most of this isn’t even my fault and she is blaming me for it. Email me/respond to this if you have anything i could say to her

    Reply
  2. So like my friend has a crush on this girl (who’s also friends with me) and my whole friend zone knows about it. Today we had a hangout at the girl’s house with other friends and the guy was not there since he went to watch a movie with other friends. We never knew this since his phone got sold by his mother for “better-to-not-be- mentioned” purposes. We had a lot of fun while baking cookies. Eventually then we were chilling in the living room and maybe I went a bit too far with the jokes with the guy’s crush. Another friend who was there was videoing the scene and sent it to the friend group that had my friends and the guy’s friends (his friends are also my friends). When the guy saw it, he got really mad since he thought I stole his girl (we were close friends) and started getting really mad. His friends also saw the video and they also got mad since they were very into the ship the guy and the girl was in. Luckily one of the guy’s friends and my friends that were at the hangout understands the situation and saw it as a joke that might have gone too far. But now all of the guy’s friends hates me (excluding two of them) and I really want to get back with them since they are very close to me. And I especially want to get back with the guy since we are technically brothers (not in a biological way or adoptive way) and are very close. What do I do?

    Reply
    • I get that. I’m currently in 12th grade. My good friend has been bullying me discretely since 6th grade. We’ve been friends since 2nd grade. She’s always ignoring me and making me look bad. She loves to make jokes about how much I annoy her.
      HELP!!

      Reply
  3. So my friend is mad at me and won’t talk to me she won’t even sit by me I’ve tried to say sorry but she’s keep on running away from me and I don’t know what to do:( She said that I talk about boys too much and that I hang out with boys too much even though I don’t she’s the one who’s best friends with slot of boys and she’s mad at me for talking to or hanging out with boys when I don’t and I don’t know what to do

    Reply
    • She is jealous of you and unfortunately there is nothing you can do. Find yourself another friend, you will have tons of them in your life time that will come and go. Even the ones you think that will never happen to, it will. Life is ever changing and you just gotta roll with it. Hold on to the memories and let them go.

      Reply
  4. So one of my guy friends went to a tournament and they got defeated. And when that guy texted me they got defeated I said “Suits you right”, well I just send the text without putting much thought into it because that guy does pranks every now and then and I was angry so I didn’t pay much attention but that guy friend has told one of my other friends that he’s so very angry with me and had blamed me a lot! I sent a text as soon as I heard it saying I did it without much thought and I’m really sorry but it seems he is ignoring me… I just want to know if I should say sorry when I meet him face to face or shall I wait and give him some space. And he gets angry quickly and can do some twisted things if he wishes, so I’m kinda scared to talk with him too •́⁠ ⁠ ⁠‿⁠ ⁠,⁠•̀ If anyone can tell me whether I should talk directly or wait, I’ll be more than happy!

    Reply
    • Next time you should try understanding someone’s perspective because everyone’s perspective is different. Maybe it would be better to send more comforting messages to soothe him.

      Reply
  5. I have 2 friends. We aren’t a trio but we all sometimes hang together. Friend 1 is kinda toxic and she was dating friend 2. I didn’t like that and idk why. friend 1 then broke up with friend 2 cuz friend 2 wouldn’t hang with her and she got upset. Then I got upset with them and annoyed at friend 1. I told friend 2 I was annoyed and told her I was sorry. (they r lesbian btw). friend 1 then sent me a whole paragraph (typed below). and told me she didn’t wanna be friends anymore! idc really, I mean I’m kinda gonna miss her but not really. Friend 2 is the reason I’m typing all this tho.

    Friend 2 is my best friend and I keep crying cuz she’s mad at me. she is ignoring me now. and idk why she is mad! she misread a text, but idk what one! She won’t tell me. we keep fighting and I’m starting to wonder if we should even be friends. I love her so much and when we fight I get so upset! (I’m straight so I love her friend way) I need help with it and idk what to tell her. she said she won’t talk to me and she will run away. I keep apologizing and texting her. I stopped now but ya. help!

    Reply
  6. Yeah, so I have a weird situation. I’m in a trio friendship, we all are really close. I would say I like them both very much they are just fun and deep people. So with friend 1 I live really close to her but with friend 2 I was on holiday and I’m closer to friend 2. BUT around a month ago we were all talking about going ice skating(I and friend 1 and made sure friend 2 would be able to come) after the bell rang we all sat down and then I saw friend 2 crying. We asked her what was wrong but she didn’t tell us. The thing is she has a strong character and her giving us the silent treatment happened a year ago but after a week we made it up. But this time we haven’t spoken normally for around a month. Now I think she is ignoring us because me and friend 1 live really close together and i think she feels left out. But I just don’t get it i mean we are literally 13-14 years old so it feels a little serious for this age. Also, I’m waaaay closer to friend 2 so I think she wants all the attention but we are a trio so I don’t want friend 1 to feel left out.

    I talked to her I said that I miss talking to her and all the fun things we did together. She kind of didn’t say anything so I decided to give her space BUT we didn’t talk for a month. She moved her desk away from us and talks to others which don’t bother me but every time I say something to her she instantly stops smiling and gives me a 1-3 word answer.

    I honestly don’t know what to do, I want to be friends with her because she is amazing and we have a lot of memories together, but at the same time if she doesn’t care about our friendship then I don’t know if I should go through all the trouble. I just don’t want to waste my time on someone who may not care about me.

    Reply
    • I’m so sorry abt that. u should talk to her in person and listen to what she has to say. And ask her if she still wants to be friends. If she says no then she probably is upset. U could also invite ur friend 1 and friend 2 somewhere separately. or friends 1 and 2 and one of 2s friends that way no one can be left out. good luck with ur problem.

      Reply
  7. Thanks very much! I feel guilty and angry to when they get angry lol. Its like i said something, and they snap back at me. So I pull back. So then they give me the silent treatment or make fun of me when i try to lighten up the mood. This is the 2nd time that’s happening. Not sure if I should stop hanging around with them again. they can be stubborn and just stick to their own rules. I felt like ganged up 🙁

    Reply
  8. I was just playing a game with my friend but I knew I was losing so I didn’t want to waste time and said I didn’t want to play anymore. Then he got super pissed and said I was a bloody sore loser and when I turned on my TikTok he snapped and yelled at me to go and watch TikTok at home and now he’s ignoring me and I don’t know what to do I think I may leave but im scared it may be the last time I see him because we are going to different schools we were even supposed to bake a cake together today so im really not sure what i should do☹️

    Reply
  9. My best friend has always told me that her other BFFFF hated me. Only recently did I find out she lied about that. I asked her about it and she went off on me. Now she’s blaming me for “wanting to be her” and “pising her off”. I hope these work. I have apologized many times but she told me she didn’t know if we were still friends or if she’d get over it. I just sent her an email apologizing one last time. I hope she gets over it soon. I can’t bare to lose her. She was my first real best friend.

    Reply
    • I get your situation but if you apologized a lot and your friend still ignores you or says she’s “not over it” I think you should give her space. You’ve done everything to fix the problem but if your friend doesn’t see your effort I really would advise you to drop her. I know it may be really hard but having a friend like that is not worth it at all. For now, give her space, and if she still doesn’t do anything to fix your friendship she clearly doesn’t care about it.

      Good luck tho!

      Reply
  10. I pissed off my best friend for liking a guy she told me to stay away from. I think that she liked him too, and now she isn’t talking to me, and idk what to do. I don’t want to lose her, but I can’t just lose feelings for someone overnight, in my opinion, if she was ever truly my friend, she should’ve been supportive of me no matter what, and no matter how much I’m mad at her for being a fake friend, I can’t stop myself from trying to make things better between us.

    Reply
  11. my bsf is mad at me because I was rude to her because I wanted to show her something and she didn’t seem interested and I fly really pissed so I started telling her things like “can you move” and she got mad at me and I see her Tmr so we can hang out but idk if we’re still gonna hang out and she told me when I apologized “I can’t forgive you” and yeah we’ve been friends since pre-school.

    Reply
  12. I also lost a friend as she got mad at me because of a stage performance in college which hurt her and then she stopped talking to me and now she’s very Furious at me. Can’t even talk to her because I wanted to apologize by heart but she wouldn’t even consider my apology. I wish she could forgive me but I don’t know if that could ever happen.

    Reply
  13. So me and my friend were playing normally and then because he said my dad is hot and the. I just said it to my dad and then he kept ignoring my messages and ignoring me

    Reply
    • so basically me and my friend we were playing normal Roblox and then he said my dad is hot and then I said it to my dad and then he has been mad and ignoring my messages and ignoring me I don’t know what to do

      Reply
  14. So my friend is mad at me and she’s like my best friend I didn’t know why at first but I was talking about her In a really bad way I’m trying to give her space and I’m thinking of buying her favorite snacks and candy with a card that says I take full responsibility for what I have done. My other friends are saying if I say sorry then they won’t talk to me anymore and I don’t know what to do. I just sent her a text and I’m giving her space for as long as she needs it.

    Reply
  15. I planned a Niagara getaway for my friend’s birthday, he told me the day before that he doesn’t feel like going. I really don’t want to ever talk to him. I moved land and sea to plan this and I feel so bad

    Reply
  16. So basically, I and my friends were chatting about going to a carnival and one of my friends said that they’re not going, I said something that meant “it’s not what I hoped for but I’m not surprised” I didn’t think it was offensive nor mean or anything like that, I meant literally what it means and I was upset because they weren’t going. He then left the group and said I pissed him off for saying that to him. I apologized and they’re giving me the silent treatment, I’m currently giving them some time alone and I try to be understanding, I don’t want to make them feel uncomfortable or awkward after that but I really want to talk things out, I don’t know what to do ☹️

    Reply
  17. the article is good but one point that is wrong is that if your friend is not communicating that doesn’t mean that he/she has become a toxic person its simply that they are going through a lot so let’s give them their space and please don’t call them toxic they are also trying to control their emotion but they are not able to that’s it.

    Reply
  18. my BFF thinks I’m siding with someone but I’m not and she is ignoring me. I tried everything and it didn’t work so what do I do?

    Reply
  19. hey can you please help mt cousin is ignoring me because i called her a hoe on accident because i have been saying it alot and it just slipped in apoligized and i have done everything i can but she still wont talk to me can you please help me

    Reply
  20. Thanks for the article, the information seems very helpful. I’m in the exact situation that you described at the beginning so I was wondering if you could help me out with how long I should wait before trying to talk.

    The party was Thursday Nov. 25th (I’m not in America and don’t know any other Americans right now so it had nothing to do with Thanksgiving) so I found out that she was mad at me on the 26th. I talked to her on the 28th and told her that I didn’t realize that the whole group was going to be there and she said that she might forgive me at some point but she won’t right now. I sent a friendly text today (the 30th) and the response seemed forced, which is what caused me to come looking for advice. I should note that the friend is also one of my roommates so it’s not really possible to completely keep our distance and we still both eat in the common area and just don’t talk to each other if we’re both there.

    Could you please give me any advice on how to know when she’s willing to talk again?

    Also I graduated from NC State in 2018 so that’s pretty cool, go Pack

    Reply
    • Hi i have a best friend and she is ignoring me and ive tried calling texting voice mailing and nothing works so please give a bit more advice for my bff cause without her i would feel realy tight in my cheast
      and guilty – Katie

      Reply
  21. In my opinion in the story from the beginning, the one who ignored the friend was right to do be mad. Her friend left her out and didn’t even understand why she was mad. I can tell from personal experience that this is very upsetting.

    Reply
  22. Well, I left this comment cause if anyone can help me please answer me by email. Here is my story.
    I moved to Fla from Ny in July to be with my daughter and grandchildren n my best friend of 40yrs helped me pack. n was so happy for me when I was on my
    The day I left she told me we will always be sisters n will always talk
    Well, I have not heard from her but only once when she called me she told me I was being punished by God. N she told me not to move away, (she never said that).
    I want to go back to New York but my husband likes it here. It is going to be hard to go back.n it hard not having her my like, I ???? cry almost every day n I am lonely. How should I handle this

    My email is
    [email protected]
    Thank you

    Reply
    • All you need to do hon is call her up, have a chat, catch up after a while. Underneath her hate is just that she really misses you. You don’t have to move back – just talk to her

      Reply

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