People love advice. They just hate using it.
Everybody wants to vent. Everybody wants support. But the moment you try to offer something useful, suddenly you’re “judging,” “hating,” or “not understanding their situation.” Funny how that works. You asked for help, but what you really wanted was an audience.
I’ve got people in my life like this. Good people, but stuck on repeat. Same problems. Same complaints. Different day. It’s like watching a rerun nobody asked for. You already know the plot, the ending, and the excuse they’re going to use when nothing changes.
And let’s be honest. At some point, it’s not bad luck. It’s bad habits.
You can’t keep dating the same type of person and act surprised when it ends the same way. You can’t ignore opportunities to grow and then complain about being stuck. You can’t surround yourself with chaos and expect peace to magically show up like an Amazon Prime delivery.
Growth requires discomfort. Accountability requires honesty. And both of those seem to scare people more than the problems they claim to hate.
Here’s the part nobody wants to admit, and I've discussed this in the past: Some people don’t actually want solutions. They want validation. They want someone to say, “You’re right, it’s not your fault,” even when it clearly is. Because accepting responsibility means you have to change. And change means work.
And work? That’s where the enthusiasm mysteriously disappears.
So, what do you do as a friend?
First, understand this: you can’t fix someone who is committed to staying broken. That’s not your failure. That’s their decision.
Second, stop overextending yourself. Listening to the same complaints over and over without action isn’t support. It’s emotional babysitting. And unless you’re getting paid for that, it gets old fast.
Third, set boundaries. You can care about someone without carrying their problems like a second job. Offer advice once. Maybe twice. After that, you’re just repeating yourself to someone who already decided not to listen.
And finally, protect your patience. Because nothing drains you faster than trying to pour into people who refuse to hold anything.
Helping someone only works when they’re willing to help themselves. Until then, all you’re doing is talking to a wall with feelings. And walls don’t change.


