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Best Friends, full story about Farhan and Joy

a toxic friendship story between 2 boys

By Abdur Rohim MunnaPublished 9 months ago 5 min read
Best Friends, full story about Farhan and Joy
Photo by Jules D. on Unsplash

“Best Friends” – Part 1

Farhan and Joy had been best friends since the third grade. They knew each other’s secrets, favorite video games, crushes—everything. If you saw one, the other wasn’t far behind. Everyone said they were brothers from different mothers.

But by the time they hit high school, things started to shift.

Farhan was outgoing, athletic, and had a natural charm. People gravitated toward him without him even trying. Joy was smart—crazy smart—but quiet, introverted, and always in Farhan’s shadow.

It didn’t seem to bother him at first. But it did.

Joy started making jokes at Farhan’s expense. At first, they were subtle—stuff like “Nice shoes, bro, did your grandma pick those out?” or “Man, you always gotta be the center of attention, huh?” Farhan would laugh it off. That’s just how joy was—sarcastic, dry humor.

But the jokes got sharper. And they never stopped when Farhan asked him to chill.

Then came the rumors.

Farhan noticed people acting weird. One girl he'd been talking to suddenly ghosted him. A few guys on the basketball team started giving him side-eyes. He found out later Joy had been telling people Jay thought he was better than everyone else, calling him "fake humble."

Farhan confronted him. Joy denied it.

“Why would I ever do that to you?” Joy said, all wounded and wide-eyed. “We’re boys, man.”

Farhan wanted to believe him. But deep down, he knew.

Things got worse when Farhan started hanging out with new friends—people who respected him and didn’t talk down to him. Joy got possessive. Texts like:

- *“So you just done with me now?”*

- *“Guess I’m not good enough for your new crew.”*

- *“Hope they know you’re not as perfect as you pretend to be.”*

Farhan felt guilty. He kept trying to make it work. Remembering all the years, all the sleepovers, all the inside jokes. But every time they talked, Joy twisted things. Made Farhan feel like he owed him something.

The final straw came at a party. Joy got drunk and started airing out personal stuff Farhan had told him in confidence—things he never wanted anyone else to hear.

Farhan walked out.

He didn’t say anything. He didn’t yell or fight. He just… left.

---

**A year later**, Farhan was thriving. He had real friends, peace of mind, and no more late-night texts full of guilt-trips. Joy? Still telling everyone that Farhan switched up. Still playing the victim.

But Farhan knew better now:

Not all friendships are meant to last forever.

And some people only love you when they can control you.

Absolutely — here’s a **continuation** of the story, diving deeper into how Farhan moves on, how Joy spirals a bit, and how that kind of toxic friendship can haunt both people in different ways.

---

“Best Friends” – Part 2

After the party, Farhan went quiet.

He blocked Joy's number, unfollowed him on socials, and stopped showing up to the spots they used to chill at. He didn’t make a scene. Didn’t tell anyone what really went down. He just cut the cord.

And Joy? He noticed.

At first, he laughed it off. Told people Farhan was being “soft” and “couldn’t handle the truth.” He kept spinning stories, making himself the misunderstood victim—just a loyal friend who was “ditched” when Farhan got “too cool.”

But the truth has a way of leaking out.

People started seeing patterns. Joy would gaslight new people he hung out with. Talk behind their backs. Get weirdly jealous if they talked to someone he didn’t like. Bit by bit, the mask slipped.

Meanwhile, Farhan was healing. Slowly.

He still had moments of doubt. He’d stare at old photos sometimes, or remember random things—like that time they skipped school and spent the whole day at the arcade. Or how Joy stayed up all night with him after Farhan's grandma passed.

It wasn’t all fake. That’s what made it hurt more.

But Farhan also learned: just because someone was *real* with you once doesn’t mean they still are. People change. And sometimes… they rot from the inside out.

---

**One random evening**, nearly a year later, Joy texted from a new number:

> *“Yo. I know you hate me. I was messed up. Just wanted to say I’m sorry. You didn’t deserve that. Hope you’re good.”*

Farhan stared at the message.

He didn’t reply.

Not because he was bitter. Not because he wanted to punish Joy. But because he finally understood something:

You don’t owe someone access to you just because you have history.

Forgiveness didn’t have to mean reconnection. Growth didn’t have to include everyone from your past.

---

**Final thought:**

Some people are chapters.

Some are whole books.

Joy?

He was just a chapter Jay had finally finished reading.

Alright — here’s the **last part** of the story, told from **Joy’s point of view**. It shows what happens when someone realizes—maybe too late—that they were the toxic one.

---

“Best Friends” – Final Part

Joy didn’t notice it at first.

Farhan just started showing up less. Stopped replying right away. Didn’t laugh at his jokes like he used to. The vibe shifted, but Joy thought, *Nah, we’re just busy. That’s life.*

But deep down, he knew.

He’d seen that look on Farhan's face the night of the party—the kind of quiet disappointment that stings worse than yelling ever could. That was the night everything cracked open. People looked at Joy differently after that.

And Farhan?

He was gone.

No texts. No calls. No “what’s up” at school. Just silence.

Joy spent months pretending it didn’t bother him. He clowned Jay to mutuals, shrugged it off with a laugh—*“He switched up, whatever.”* But in the late hours, when the world got quiet, the truth pressed in.

He missed him.

Not just the jokes or the old memories—but the way Farhan made him feel *seen*. Safe. Like he mattered.

Joy realized he had pushed him away out of fear. Fear that he’d be left behind. That Farhan would outgrow him. So instead of cheering him on, he dragged him down.

He hated that about himself.

There were nights he almost called. Drafted long texts he never sent. He even hovered outside Farhan’s basketball game once, just to maybe catch a glimpse. But he couldn’t bring himself to face him.

Until one day, he did.

He sent the message. Not expecting a reply. Not even hoping for one. Just needing to say it:

> *“Yo. I know you hate me. I was messed up. Just wanted to say I’m sorry. You didn’t deserve that. Hope you’re good.”*

Farhan never replied.

And Joy didn’t blame him.

Sometimes, you don’t get the happy ending. Sometimes you realize too late that someone loved you deeply—and you broke that love without even noticing.

He wouldn’t spin it. Wouldn’t act like he was the victim anymore.

He just lived with it.

And maybe one day, he’d be a better friend to someone else.

Not to replace Farhan.

But to honor what he lost.

---

The End.

By Markus Spiske on Unsplash

Young AdultChildren's Fiction

About the Creator

Abdur Rohim Munna

Hey there thanks for visit my profile, I'm new here and I will try to write some story about ''Life Style,Love,Animal etc..

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