How can I handle a bisexual friend whom I think is attracted to me?

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As some background, I go to a co-ed boarding high school. I have a girlfriend back home and am straight. My wing in the dorms is filled with a large collection of my friends. We're close- we play basketball, guitar, tennis, and poker together whenever we have free time.



We're all straight except for one bisexual friend, whom I'll code name Bob.
We completely accept and support his sexuality. Bob is quite emotional, and has talked individually to each of us about his social anxiety and coming out to a select group of people as bisexual. In his talk, he has mentioned to us (individually) that he's depressed because he has an intense crush on another male at our school, who he doesn't name (to me), has a girlfriend, is completely straight, and understands that there's no chance that he would ever be in a relationship with.



The rest of us friends have talked about it, in private, to confirm that I'm the only one that has heard the talk about the anonymous person he has a crush on three times. He's offered to tell another one of us who his crush is, yet this individual honestly declined the information (wisely, but it doesn't really help me). This leads me to think that he's specifically attracted to me.



As friends, we hate to see his obvious sorrow about this impossible relationship. However, in the case that this is possibly directed toward me (and I'm very sure this is the case), I feel like I have to do something for him to get over me as a crush, while still keeping him as a friend.



What can I do to help Bob get over me as a crush while still keeping him as a friend?



Note: We're Americans east of the Mississippi.



I've looked at related questions (Reject a close friend interested in dating me? and How can I help a close friend get over me?), but the difference here is that I'm not 100% sure that his crush is directed toward me.



Bob has specified that he has had this crush for several months.







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  • Is his sexuality/gender part of what has left you needing guidance, or are you just including that as additional background information?
    – Chase Ryan Taylor
    Aug 22 at 5:24






  • 3




    It's just background - he's open about this to the rest of us friends and is comfortable with it.
    – Rohan812
    Aug 22 at 5:26






  • 2




    one thing to clarify: Bob has only told you about this crush, and not your other friends? If so, verifying this is potentially a breach of trust if he chose to tell only you; was this told to in confidence?
    – dn3s
    Aug 22 at 23:27














up vote
35
down vote

favorite
2












As some background, I go to a co-ed boarding high school. I have a girlfriend back home and am straight. My wing in the dorms is filled with a large collection of my friends. We're close- we play basketball, guitar, tennis, and poker together whenever we have free time.



We're all straight except for one bisexual friend, whom I'll code name Bob.
We completely accept and support his sexuality. Bob is quite emotional, and has talked individually to each of us about his social anxiety and coming out to a select group of people as bisexual. In his talk, he has mentioned to us (individually) that he's depressed because he has an intense crush on another male at our school, who he doesn't name (to me), has a girlfriend, is completely straight, and understands that there's no chance that he would ever be in a relationship with.



The rest of us friends have talked about it, in private, to confirm that I'm the only one that has heard the talk about the anonymous person he has a crush on three times. He's offered to tell another one of us who his crush is, yet this individual honestly declined the information (wisely, but it doesn't really help me). This leads me to think that he's specifically attracted to me.



As friends, we hate to see his obvious sorrow about this impossible relationship. However, in the case that this is possibly directed toward me (and I'm very sure this is the case), I feel like I have to do something for him to get over me as a crush, while still keeping him as a friend.



What can I do to help Bob get over me as a crush while still keeping him as a friend?



Note: We're Americans east of the Mississippi.



I've looked at related questions (Reject a close friend interested in dating me? and How can I help a close friend get over me?), but the difference here is that I'm not 100% sure that his crush is directed toward me.



Bob has specified that he has had this crush for several months.







share|improve this question






















  • Is his sexuality/gender part of what has left you needing guidance, or are you just including that as additional background information?
    – Chase Ryan Taylor
    Aug 22 at 5:24






  • 3




    It's just background - he's open about this to the rest of us friends and is comfortable with it.
    – Rohan812
    Aug 22 at 5:26






  • 2




    one thing to clarify: Bob has only told you about this crush, and not your other friends? If so, verifying this is potentially a breach of trust if he chose to tell only you; was this told to in confidence?
    – dn3s
    Aug 22 at 23:27












up vote
35
down vote

favorite
2









up vote
35
down vote

favorite
2






2





As some background, I go to a co-ed boarding high school. I have a girlfriend back home and am straight. My wing in the dorms is filled with a large collection of my friends. We're close- we play basketball, guitar, tennis, and poker together whenever we have free time.



We're all straight except for one bisexual friend, whom I'll code name Bob.
We completely accept and support his sexuality. Bob is quite emotional, and has talked individually to each of us about his social anxiety and coming out to a select group of people as bisexual. In his talk, he has mentioned to us (individually) that he's depressed because he has an intense crush on another male at our school, who he doesn't name (to me), has a girlfriend, is completely straight, and understands that there's no chance that he would ever be in a relationship with.



The rest of us friends have talked about it, in private, to confirm that I'm the only one that has heard the talk about the anonymous person he has a crush on three times. He's offered to tell another one of us who his crush is, yet this individual honestly declined the information (wisely, but it doesn't really help me). This leads me to think that he's specifically attracted to me.



As friends, we hate to see his obvious sorrow about this impossible relationship. However, in the case that this is possibly directed toward me (and I'm very sure this is the case), I feel like I have to do something for him to get over me as a crush, while still keeping him as a friend.



What can I do to help Bob get over me as a crush while still keeping him as a friend?



Note: We're Americans east of the Mississippi.



I've looked at related questions (Reject a close friend interested in dating me? and How can I help a close friend get over me?), but the difference here is that I'm not 100% sure that his crush is directed toward me.



Bob has specified that he has had this crush for several months.







share|improve this question














As some background, I go to a co-ed boarding high school. I have a girlfriend back home and am straight. My wing in the dorms is filled with a large collection of my friends. We're close- we play basketball, guitar, tennis, and poker together whenever we have free time.



We're all straight except for one bisexual friend, whom I'll code name Bob.
We completely accept and support his sexuality. Bob is quite emotional, and has talked individually to each of us about his social anxiety and coming out to a select group of people as bisexual. In his talk, he has mentioned to us (individually) that he's depressed because he has an intense crush on another male at our school, who he doesn't name (to me), has a girlfriend, is completely straight, and understands that there's no chance that he would ever be in a relationship with.



The rest of us friends have talked about it, in private, to confirm that I'm the only one that has heard the talk about the anonymous person he has a crush on three times. He's offered to tell another one of us who his crush is, yet this individual honestly declined the information (wisely, but it doesn't really help me). This leads me to think that he's specifically attracted to me.



As friends, we hate to see his obvious sorrow about this impossible relationship. However, in the case that this is possibly directed toward me (and I'm very sure this is the case), I feel like I have to do something for him to get over me as a crush, while still keeping him as a friend.



What can I do to help Bob get over me as a crush while still keeping him as a friend?



Note: We're Americans east of the Mississippi.



I've looked at related questions (Reject a close friend interested in dating me? and How can I help a close friend get over me?), but the difference here is that I'm not 100% sure that his crush is directed toward me.



Bob has specified that he has had this crush for several months.









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 22 at 19:48









V2Blast

229210




229210










asked Aug 22 at 5:21









Rohan812

17625




17625











  • Is his sexuality/gender part of what has left you needing guidance, or are you just including that as additional background information?
    – Chase Ryan Taylor
    Aug 22 at 5:24






  • 3




    It's just background - he's open about this to the rest of us friends and is comfortable with it.
    – Rohan812
    Aug 22 at 5:26






  • 2




    one thing to clarify: Bob has only told you about this crush, and not your other friends? If so, verifying this is potentially a breach of trust if he chose to tell only you; was this told to in confidence?
    – dn3s
    Aug 22 at 23:27
















  • Is his sexuality/gender part of what has left you needing guidance, or are you just including that as additional background information?
    – Chase Ryan Taylor
    Aug 22 at 5:24






  • 3




    It's just background - he's open about this to the rest of us friends and is comfortable with it.
    – Rohan812
    Aug 22 at 5:26






  • 2




    one thing to clarify: Bob has only told you about this crush, and not your other friends? If so, verifying this is potentially a breach of trust if he chose to tell only you; was this told to in confidence?
    – dn3s
    Aug 22 at 23:27















Is his sexuality/gender part of what has left you needing guidance, or are you just including that as additional background information?
– Chase Ryan Taylor
Aug 22 at 5:24




Is his sexuality/gender part of what has left you needing guidance, or are you just including that as additional background information?
– Chase Ryan Taylor
Aug 22 at 5:24




3




3




It's just background - he's open about this to the rest of us friends and is comfortable with it.
– Rohan812
Aug 22 at 5:26




It's just background - he's open about this to the rest of us friends and is comfortable with it.
– Rohan812
Aug 22 at 5:26




2




2




one thing to clarify: Bob has only told you about this crush, and not your other friends? If so, verifying this is potentially a breach of trust if he chose to tell only you; was this told to in confidence?
– dn3s
Aug 22 at 23:27




one thing to clarify: Bob has only told you about this crush, and not your other friends? If so, verifying this is potentially a breach of trust if he chose to tell only you; was this told to in confidence?
– dn3s
Aug 22 at 23:27










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
46
down vote













High school is a tough time for everybody and I understand why you feel you should do something to help your friend in this situation.



My suggestion is to actually do nothing. People have a lot of crushes in their highschool years, I have had a crush for every other female friend I have had at some point or another during that time. They come and go and that is perfectly normal.



Your goal is to keep your friendship intact. Do exactly that, don't change anything. The way you lose a friendship is to distance yourself and "give him space and time to figure it out".



I believe things will be back to normal in 2-3 weeks. If not you might want to have a 1 on 1 conversation about it. Exactly how that should go I can't really tell as it really depends on your personality and his.



I want to address some concerns about the 2-3 weeks range after OP noted that this has been going on for a couple of months. It is an arbitrary range based on my experience, it is different for everyone. Crushes generally last until the next one comes along.



Even though your situation has been going on a fair bit more than my estimate I don't believe that changes the situation. My guess is that your friend doesn't want to confront his feelings because he is afraid. He is afraid that expressing that he has feeling for you will change your friendship as rejection is certain. For him it is a lose/lose situation as telling how he feels will create awkwardnes between you two and not telling how he feels already does. I don't think there is a better way to show him that your friendship wont change than to actually not changing how you act around him. My experience has been that just doing/not doing something works better than promising someone you will do/not do something but that might not be the case for everyone. Maybe your friend needs to hear it to believe it. You should know better than me.






share|improve this answer






















  • I posted one of the linked questions and wanted to say that this is the approach I took before my friend told me her feelings, and it's the one I'd stand by. Ironically, you're kind of in a better position to help Bob while you don't know you're the target of the crush, but either way, let him tell you on his own terms.
    – Firaga
    Aug 23 at 5:15

















up vote
30
down vote













TL;DR:



I'd suggest you encourage him to tell you who his crush is. If they tell you that you're indeed the person he has feelings for, then you can tell him that that's not how you feel and so he knows and can move on. Don't push him to reveal his crush's name but let him know that you're hear to listen and help and let him decide what to do. As a friend, that's the most you can do.




Longer answer:



Personal experience



Back in high school, my best friend had feelings for me. He just found out I started dating my first SO, and suddenly he realized he had feelings for me that were not just "friendship". I was in the same situation as you, knowing my friend had feelings for someone but not knowing toward who they were directed, and it was painful to see him suffer.



He kept telling me how he was in love with someone but that a relationship with that girl would be impossible, so I kept asking why it was. He ended revealing I was the girl in question.



Be clear on your intentions



What I did and what you should do if your friend comes clean with you, is that you should gently tell him that you're not feeling the same way. He'll naturally be hurt not to be liked back but there are gentler ways to say no than others. For example, you could say something like:




Bob, you're an amazing person and a dear friend of mine. I'm sorry I do not feel the same way for you, for I would not want to hurt you. I hope it's okay and that we can still hang out with the band.




I learned from experience that people tend to keep hoping until they have a straight 'no', and that after being told nothing's gonna happen they can move on. Still, you need to reassure him on the fact that he's not gonna lose you (as a friend) for he came clean. I would not justify the no by the straight argument, because it's a rather impersonal reason. I guess that it'd be quite efficient to express that your feelings will never change though, so it's up to you.



Be patient



Now you can't force him to tell you his crush's name, so don't push him. The important thing is that he knows he can count on you, should you be the aforementioned crush. If he comes clean and that you're indeed the crush, then reassure him as proposed above, and then let him take some distance for a while if he needs to. I know from experience that many people need to stop seeing the person they like for some time to get over it, that's a normal thing. That does not mean your friendship is lost, just that he needs time to get back to the friendship relation. So what I'd say is be patient, be supportive, show your friend you're here to talk if he needs/wants to, and then let him decide what to do with this.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    First off, it doesn't matter what your friend's (apparent) sexuality is. Whether heterosexual (plenty of self-labelled "straight" people have same sex affairs/sex at some time), homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, or even asexual but romantic, it doesn't matter. What matters is



    • is it you they have a crush on
      and if so

    • do you wish them not to act on it towards you
      and if so

    • what do you want as far as friendship or other connections go.

    If they haven't explicitly said it's you, then you have no reason not to directly ask. If they then say it is you, you can gently tell them you are flattered, but not after that with them. It isn't something you want now, and won't be something you are likely to want in future either. But you do like and value them a lot as a friend, and would like them to think if they can handle that, or if they need time apart (as friends) to process it.






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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      46
      down vote













      High school is a tough time for everybody and I understand why you feel you should do something to help your friend in this situation.



      My suggestion is to actually do nothing. People have a lot of crushes in their highschool years, I have had a crush for every other female friend I have had at some point or another during that time. They come and go and that is perfectly normal.



      Your goal is to keep your friendship intact. Do exactly that, don't change anything. The way you lose a friendship is to distance yourself and "give him space and time to figure it out".



      I believe things will be back to normal in 2-3 weeks. If not you might want to have a 1 on 1 conversation about it. Exactly how that should go I can't really tell as it really depends on your personality and his.



      I want to address some concerns about the 2-3 weeks range after OP noted that this has been going on for a couple of months. It is an arbitrary range based on my experience, it is different for everyone. Crushes generally last until the next one comes along.



      Even though your situation has been going on a fair bit more than my estimate I don't believe that changes the situation. My guess is that your friend doesn't want to confront his feelings because he is afraid. He is afraid that expressing that he has feeling for you will change your friendship as rejection is certain. For him it is a lose/lose situation as telling how he feels will create awkwardnes between you two and not telling how he feels already does. I don't think there is a better way to show him that your friendship wont change than to actually not changing how you act around him. My experience has been that just doing/not doing something works better than promising someone you will do/not do something but that might not be the case for everyone. Maybe your friend needs to hear it to believe it. You should know better than me.






      share|improve this answer






















      • I posted one of the linked questions and wanted to say that this is the approach I took before my friend told me her feelings, and it's the one I'd stand by. Ironically, you're kind of in a better position to help Bob while you don't know you're the target of the crush, but either way, let him tell you on his own terms.
        – Firaga
        Aug 23 at 5:15














      up vote
      46
      down vote













      High school is a tough time for everybody and I understand why you feel you should do something to help your friend in this situation.



      My suggestion is to actually do nothing. People have a lot of crushes in their highschool years, I have had a crush for every other female friend I have had at some point or another during that time. They come and go and that is perfectly normal.



      Your goal is to keep your friendship intact. Do exactly that, don't change anything. The way you lose a friendship is to distance yourself and "give him space and time to figure it out".



      I believe things will be back to normal in 2-3 weeks. If not you might want to have a 1 on 1 conversation about it. Exactly how that should go I can't really tell as it really depends on your personality and his.



      I want to address some concerns about the 2-3 weeks range after OP noted that this has been going on for a couple of months. It is an arbitrary range based on my experience, it is different for everyone. Crushes generally last until the next one comes along.



      Even though your situation has been going on a fair bit more than my estimate I don't believe that changes the situation. My guess is that your friend doesn't want to confront his feelings because he is afraid. He is afraid that expressing that he has feeling for you will change your friendship as rejection is certain. For him it is a lose/lose situation as telling how he feels will create awkwardnes between you two and not telling how he feels already does. I don't think there is a better way to show him that your friendship wont change than to actually not changing how you act around him. My experience has been that just doing/not doing something works better than promising someone you will do/not do something but that might not be the case for everyone. Maybe your friend needs to hear it to believe it. You should know better than me.






      share|improve this answer






















      • I posted one of the linked questions and wanted to say that this is the approach I took before my friend told me her feelings, and it's the one I'd stand by. Ironically, you're kind of in a better position to help Bob while you don't know you're the target of the crush, but either way, let him tell you on his own terms.
        – Firaga
        Aug 23 at 5:15












      up vote
      46
      down vote










      up vote
      46
      down vote









      High school is a tough time for everybody and I understand why you feel you should do something to help your friend in this situation.



      My suggestion is to actually do nothing. People have a lot of crushes in their highschool years, I have had a crush for every other female friend I have had at some point or another during that time. They come and go and that is perfectly normal.



      Your goal is to keep your friendship intact. Do exactly that, don't change anything. The way you lose a friendship is to distance yourself and "give him space and time to figure it out".



      I believe things will be back to normal in 2-3 weeks. If not you might want to have a 1 on 1 conversation about it. Exactly how that should go I can't really tell as it really depends on your personality and his.



      I want to address some concerns about the 2-3 weeks range after OP noted that this has been going on for a couple of months. It is an arbitrary range based on my experience, it is different for everyone. Crushes generally last until the next one comes along.



      Even though your situation has been going on a fair bit more than my estimate I don't believe that changes the situation. My guess is that your friend doesn't want to confront his feelings because he is afraid. He is afraid that expressing that he has feeling for you will change your friendship as rejection is certain. For him it is a lose/lose situation as telling how he feels will create awkwardnes between you two and not telling how he feels already does. I don't think there is a better way to show him that your friendship wont change than to actually not changing how you act around him. My experience has been that just doing/not doing something works better than promising someone you will do/not do something but that might not be the case for everyone. Maybe your friend needs to hear it to believe it. You should know better than me.






      share|improve this answer














      High school is a tough time for everybody and I understand why you feel you should do something to help your friend in this situation.



      My suggestion is to actually do nothing. People have a lot of crushes in their highschool years, I have had a crush for every other female friend I have had at some point or another during that time. They come and go and that is perfectly normal.



      Your goal is to keep your friendship intact. Do exactly that, don't change anything. The way you lose a friendship is to distance yourself and "give him space and time to figure it out".



      I believe things will be back to normal in 2-3 weeks. If not you might want to have a 1 on 1 conversation about it. Exactly how that should go I can't really tell as it really depends on your personality and his.



      I want to address some concerns about the 2-3 weeks range after OP noted that this has been going on for a couple of months. It is an arbitrary range based on my experience, it is different for everyone. Crushes generally last until the next one comes along.



      Even though your situation has been going on a fair bit more than my estimate I don't believe that changes the situation. My guess is that your friend doesn't want to confront his feelings because he is afraid. He is afraid that expressing that he has feeling for you will change your friendship as rejection is certain. For him it is a lose/lose situation as telling how he feels will create awkwardnes between you two and not telling how he feels already does. I don't think there is a better way to show him that your friendship wont change than to actually not changing how you act around him. My experience has been that just doing/not doing something works better than promising someone you will do/not do something but that might not be the case for everyone. Maybe your friend needs to hear it to believe it. You should know better than me.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Aug 22 at 21:20

























      answered Aug 22 at 5:51









      Ontamu

      2,3242827




      2,3242827











      • I posted one of the linked questions and wanted to say that this is the approach I took before my friend told me her feelings, and it's the one I'd stand by. Ironically, you're kind of in a better position to help Bob while you don't know you're the target of the crush, but either way, let him tell you on his own terms.
        – Firaga
        Aug 23 at 5:15
















      • I posted one of the linked questions and wanted to say that this is the approach I took before my friend told me her feelings, and it's the one I'd stand by. Ironically, you're kind of in a better position to help Bob while you don't know you're the target of the crush, but either way, let him tell you on his own terms.
        – Firaga
        Aug 23 at 5:15















      I posted one of the linked questions and wanted to say that this is the approach I took before my friend told me her feelings, and it's the one I'd stand by. Ironically, you're kind of in a better position to help Bob while you don't know you're the target of the crush, but either way, let him tell you on his own terms.
      – Firaga
      Aug 23 at 5:15




      I posted one of the linked questions and wanted to say that this is the approach I took before my friend told me her feelings, and it's the one I'd stand by. Ironically, you're kind of in a better position to help Bob while you don't know you're the target of the crush, but either way, let him tell you on his own terms.
      – Firaga
      Aug 23 at 5:15










      up vote
      30
      down vote













      TL;DR:



      I'd suggest you encourage him to tell you who his crush is. If they tell you that you're indeed the person he has feelings for, then you can tell him that that's not how you feel and so he knows and can move on. Don't push him to reveal his crush's name but let him know that you're hear to listen and help and let him decide what to do. As a friend, that's the most you can do.




      Longer answer:



      Personal experience



      Back in high school, my best friend had feelings for me. He just found out I started dating my first SO, and suddenly he realized he had feelings for me that were not just "friendship". I was in the same situation as you, knowing my friend had feelings for someone but not knowing toward who they were directed, and it was painful to see him suffer.



      He kept telling me how he was in love with someone but that a relationship with that girl would be impossible, so I kept asking why it was. He ended revealing I was the girl in question.



      Be clear on your intentions



      What I did and what you should do if your friend comes clean with you, is that you should gently tell him that you're not feeling the same way. He'll naturally be hurt not to be liked back but there are gentler ways to say no than others. For example, you could say something like:




      Bob, you're an amazing person and a dear friend of mine. I'm sorry I do not feel the same way for you, for I would not want to hurt you. I hope it's okay and that we can still hang out with the band.




      I learned from experience that people tend to keep hoping until they have a straight 'no', and that after being told nothing's gonna happen they can move on. Still, you need to reassure him on the fact that he's not gonna lose you (as a friend) for he came clean. I would not justify the no by the straight argument, because it's a rather impersonal reason. I guess that it'd be quite efficient to express that your feelings will never change though, so it's up to you.



      Be patient



      Now you can't force him to tell you his crush's name, so don't push him. The important thing is that he knows he can count on you, should you be the aforementioned crush. If he comes clean and that you're indeed the crush, then reassure him as proposed above, and then let him take some distance for a while if he needs to. I know from experience that many people need to stop seeing the person they like for some time to get over it, that's a normal thing. That does not mean your friendship is lost, just that he needs time to get back to the friendship relation. So what I'd say is be patient, be supportive, show your friend you're here to talk if he needs/wants to, and then let him decide what to do with this.






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        30
        down vote













        TL;DR:



        I'd suggest you encourage him to tell you who his crush is. If they tell you that you're indeed the person he has feelings for, then you can tell him that that's not how you feel and so he knows and can move on. Don't push him to reveal his crush's name but let him know that you're hear to listen and help and let him decide what to do. As a friend, that's the most you can do.




        Longer answer:



        Personal experience



        Back in high school, my best friend had feelings for me. He just found out I started dating my first SO, and suddenly he realized he had feelings for me that were not just "friendship". I was in the same situation as you, knowing my friend had feelings for someone but not knowing toward who they were directed, and it was painful to see him suffer.



        He kept telling me how he was in love with someone but that a relationship with that girl would be impossible, so I kept asking why it was. He ended revealing I was the girl in question.



        Be clear on your intentions



        What I did and what you should do if your friend comes clean with you, is that you should gently tell him that you're not feeling the same way. He'll naturally be hurt not to be liked back but there are gentler ways to say no than others. For example, you could say something like:




        Bob, you're an amazing person and a dear friend of mine. I'm sorry I do not feel the same way for you, for I would not want to hurt you. I hope it's okay and that we can still hang out with the band.




        I learned from experience that people tend to keep hoping until they have a straight 'no', and that after being told nothing's gonna happen they can move on. Still, you need to reassure him on the fact that he's not gonna lose you (as a friend) for he came clean. I would not justify the no by the straight argument, because it's a rather impersonal reason. I guess that it'd be quite efficient to express that your feelings will never change though, so it's up to you.



        Be patient



        Now you can't force him to tell you his crush's name, so don't push him. The important thing is that he knows he can count on you, should you be the aforementioned crush. If he comes clean and that you're indeed the crush, then reassure him as proposed above, and then let him take some distance for a while if he needs to. I know from experience that many people need to stop seeing the person they like for some time to get over it, that's a normal thing. That does not mean your friendship is lost, just that he needs time to get back to the friendship relation. So what I'd say is be patient, be supportive, show your friend you're here to talk if he needs/wants to, and then let him decide what to do with this.






        share|improve this answer






















          up vote
          30
          down vote










          up vote
          30
          down vote









          TL;DR:



          I'd suggest you encourage him to tell you who his crush is. If they tell you that you're indeed the person he has feelings for, then you can tell him that that's not how you feel and so he knows and can move on. Don't push him to reveal his crush's name but let him know that you're hear to listen and help and let him decide what to do. As a friend, that's the most you can do.




          Longer answer:



          Personal experience



          Back in high school, my best friend had feelings for me. He just found out I started dating my first SO, and suddenly he realized he had feelings for me that were not just "friendship". I was in the same situation as you, knowing my friend had feelings for someone but not knowing toward who they were directed, and it was painful to see him suffer.



          He kept telling me how he was in love with someone but that a relationship with that girl would be impossible, so I kept asking why it was. He ended revealing I was the girl in question.



          Be clear on your intentions



          What I did and what you should do if your friend comes clean with you, is that you should gently tell him that you're not feeling the same way. He'll naturally be hurt not to be liked back but there are gentler ways to say no than others. For example, you could say something like:




          Bob, you're an amazing person and a dear friend of mine. I'm sorry I do not feel the same way for you, for I would not want to hurt you. I hope it's okay and that we can still hang out with the band.




          I learned from experience that people tend to keep hoping until they have a straight 'no', and that after being told nothing's gonna happen they can move on. Still, you need to reassure him on the fact that he's not gonna lose you (as a friend) for he came clean. I would not justify the no by the straight argument, because it's a rather impersonal reason. I guess that it'd be quite efficient to express that your feelings will never change though, so it's up to you.



          Be patient



          Now you can't force him to tell you his crush's name, so don't push him. The important thing is that he knows he can count on you, should you be the aforementioned crush. If he comes clean and that you're indeed the crush, then reassure him as proposed above, and then let him take some distance for a while if he needs to. I know from experience that many people need to stop seeing the person they like for some time to get over it, that's a normal thing. That does not mean your friendship is lost, just that he needs time to get back to the friendship relation. So what I'd say is be patient, be supportive, show your friend you're here to talk if he needs/wants to, and then let him decide what to do with this.






          share|improve this answer












          TL;DR:



          I'd suggest you encourage him to tell you who his crush is. If they tell you that you're indeed the person he has feelings for, then you can tell him that that's not how you feel and so he knows and can move on. Don't push him to reveal his crush's name but let him know that you're hear to listen and help and let him decide what to do. As a friend, that's the most you can do.




          Longer answer:



          Personal experience



          Back in high school, my best friend had feelings for me. He just found out I started dating my first SO, and suddenly he realized he had feelings for me that were not just "friendship". I was in the same situation as you, knowing my friend had feelings for someone but not knowing toward who they were directed, and it was painful to see him suffer.



          He kept telling me how he was in love with someone but that a relationship with that girl would be impossible, so I kept asking why it was. He ended revealing I was the girl in question.



          Be clear on your intentions



          What I did and what you should do if your friend comes clean with you, is that you should gently tell him that you're not feeling the same way. He'll naturally be hurt not to be liked back but there are gentler ways to say no than others. For example, you could say something like:




          Bob, you're an amazing person and a dear friend of mine. I'm sorry I do not feel the same way for you, for I would not want to hurt you. I hope it's okay and that we can still hang out with the band.




          I learned from experience that people tend to keep hoping until they have a straight 'no', and that after being told nothing's gonna happen they can move on. Still, you need to reassure him on the fact that he's not gonna lose you (as a friend) for he came clean. I would not justify the no by the straight argument, because it's a rather impersonal reason. I guess that it'd be quite efficient to express that your feelings will never change though, so it's up to you.



          Be patient



          Now you can't force him to tell you his crush's name, so don't push him. The important thing is that he knows he can count on you, should you be the aforementioned crush. If he comes clean and that you're indeed the crush, then reassure him as proposed above, and then let him take some distance for a while if he needs to. I know from experience that many people need to stop seeing the person they like for some time to get over it, that's a normal thing. That does not mean your friendship is lost, just that he needs time to get back to the friendship relation. So what I'd say is be patient, be supportive, show your friend you're here to talk if he needs/wants to, and then let him decide what to do with this.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Aug 22 at 7:55









          avazula

          7,36463549




          7,36463549




















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              First off, it doesn't matter what your friend's (apparent) sexuality is. Whether heterosexual (plenty of self-labelled "straight" people have same sex affairs/sex at some time), homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, or even asexual but romantic, it doesn't matter. What matters is



              • is it you they have a crush on
                and if so

              • do you wish them not to act on it towards you
                and if so

              • what do you want as far as friendship or other connections go.

              If they haven't explicitly said it's you, then you have no reason not to directly ask. If they then say it is you, you can gently tell them you are flattered, but not after that with them. It isn't something you want now, and won't be something you are likely to want in future either. But you do like and value them a lot as a friend, and would like them to think if they can handle that, or if they need time apart (as friends) to process it.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                First off, it doesn't matter what your friend's (apparent) sexuality is. Whether heterosexual (plenty of self-labelled "straight" people have same sex affairs/sex at some time), homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, or even asexual but romantic, it doesn't matter. What matters is



                • is it you they have a crush on
                  and if so

                • do you wish them not to act on it towards you
                  and if so

                • what do you want as far as friendship or other connections go.

                If they haven't explicitly said it's you, then you have no reason not to directly ask. If they then say it is you, you can gently tell them you are flattered, but not after that with them. It isn't something you want now, and won't be something you are likely to want in future either. But you do like and value them a lot as a friend, and would like them to think if they can handle that, or if they need time apart (as friends) to process it.






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  First off, it doesn't matter what your friend's (apparent) sexuality is. Whether heterosexual (plenty of self-labelled "straight" people have same sex affairs/sex at some time), homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, or even asexual but romantic, it doesn't matter. What matters is



                  • is it you they have a crush on
                    and if so

                  • do you wish them not to act on it towards you
                    and if so

                  • what do you want as far as friendship or other connections go.

                  If they haven't explicitly said it's you, then you have no reason not to directly ask. If they then say it is you, you can gently tell them you are flattered, but not after that with them. It isn't something you want now, and won't be something you are likely to want in future either. But you do like and value them a lot as a friend, and would like them to think if they can handle that, or if they need time apart (as friends) to process it.






                  share|improve this answer












                  First off, it doesn't matter what your friend's (apparent) sexuality is. Whether heterosexual (plenty of self-labelled "straight" people have same sex affairs/sex at some time), homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, or even asexual but romantic, it doesn't matter. What matters is



                  • is it you they have a crush on
                    and if so

                  • do you wish them not to act on it towards you
                    and if so

                  • what do you want as far as friendship or other connections go.

                  If they haven't explicitly said it's you, then you have no reason not to directly ask. If they then say it is you, you can gently tell them you are flattered, but not after that with them. It isn't something you want now, and won't be something you are likely to want in future either. But you do like and value them a lot as a friend, and would like them to think if they can handle that, or if they need time apart (as friends) to process it.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Aug 23 at 12:06









                  Stilez

                  1,649210




                  1,649210






















                       

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