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On-again,off-again relationships are usually doomed to failure. You hear the hopeful — and rare — tales of people being on in their young, college years, off for most of their twenties, finding each other again in their early thirties, going back off and reconnecting later in life thinking all hope is not lost. That a relationship like that can actually work because those two individuals are completely different people each time they meet. They’ve likely learned from their experiences, worked on themselves, and approach relationships from completely different perspectives. But people who carry on on-again, off-again relationships with very little off time (half a year, at best) almost never work out in the end. Because that “off” period was fake—no real growth can happen in a few months. Old issues don’t go anywhere just because you casually dated someone else for a minute. And beyond that, there are a host of other reasons why on-again, off-again relationships never work. Like these.

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Your friends won’t accept it

Your friends do not believe in this at all. They gave it a shot after the first breakup and reconnection, but beyond that, they stopped believing in this relationship. When you can feel that your friends think a guy is bad for you, it leaks into the relationship and causes a lot of fights.

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Image Source: Shutterstock

And honestly, they’re over it

Oh also—not only do your friends not believe in the relationship, but they also don’t support it. They zone out when you talk about it. They change the subject when you complain about it. You begin to feel very isolated in the relationship.

Black married couple arguing

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You stunt each other’s growth

It’s impossible to do any personal growth in an on/again, off/again relationship. Why? Because you never really feel single. Deep down, you know that guy is available anytime you want to get back together. So you’re not forced to do much reflection or self-discovery.