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-eng- Summer Memories -my Cucked Childhood Frie... Link

Here’s to the summers that broke us a little. They made us harder to fool. Have you ever been “cucked” by a childhood friend? Or have you been the one who unknowingly hurt someone? Let’s talk in the comments. No judgment — just honesty.

Jake knew how I felt. I’d told him one night while we were lying on his trampoline, staring at a sky smeared with stars. “I think I really like her,” I admitted. He patted my shoulder. “Go for it, man.” -ENG- Summer Memories -My Cucked Childhood Frie...

That summer ended the way all painful summers do: with school starting, leaves turning, and Jake and Maya breaking up by October. Jake wanted to “go back to how things were.” I nodded, but something had already cracked. We stayed friendly, but never close again. Here’s to the summers that broke us a little

Big mistake.

The summer I turned fifteen, she showed up. Let’s call her Maya. She was visiting her grandmother for the summer, and within a week, she had our entire block enchanted. My friend — let’s call him Jake — was smitten immediately. I was, too, but I kept quiet. I thought I was being the good friend by stepping back. Or have you been the one who unknowingly hurt someone

To anyone who’s been the odd one out in a summer love triangle: I see you. That ache doesn’t fully go away. But it does turn into something useful — a sharper sense of who deserves your loyalty, and when to walk away.

By mid-July, they were inseparable. I’d show up to hang out, and they’d already be tangled together on the basement couch, laughing at inside jokes I wasn’t part of. When I tried to talk to Maya alone, Jake would find a reason to pull her away. And the worst part? He acted like nothing was wrong. “You should be happy for us,” he said once, grinning.

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Here’s to the summers that broke us a little. They made us harder to fool. Have you ever been “cucked” by a childhood friend? Or have you been the one who unknowingly hurt someone? Let’s talk in the comments. No judgment — just honesty.

Jake knew how I felt. I’d told him one night while we were lying on his trampoline, staring at a sky smeared with stars. “I think I really like her,” I admitted. He patted my shoulder. “Go for it, man.”

That summer ended the way all painful summers do: with school starting, leaves turning, and Jake and Maya breaking up by October. Jake wanted to “go back to how things were.” I nodded, but something had already cracked. We stayed friendly, but never close again.

Big mistake.

The summer I turned fifteen, she showed up. Let’s call her Maya. She was visiting her grandmother for the summer, and within a week, she had our entire block enchanted. My friend — let’s call him Jake — was smitten immediately. I was, too, but I kept quiet. I thought I was being the good friend by stepping back.

To anyone who’s been the odd one out in a summer love triangle: I see you. That ache doesn’t fully go away. But it does turn into something useful — a sharper sense of who deserves your loyalty, and when to walk away.

By mid-July, they were inseparable. I’d show up to hang out, and they’d already be tangled together on the basement couch, laughing at inside jokes I wasn’t part of. When I tried to talk to Maya alone, Jake would find a reason to pull her away. And the worst part? He acted like nothing was wrong. “You should be happy for us,” he said once, grinning.