How to reach out to an old friend
It's probably less awkward than you've built it up to be. Here's how to actually do it.
The thing that stops most people
The main barrier to reaching out to an old friend isn't not knowing what to say — it's the belief that too much time has passed and it'll be weird. But "weird" is mostly in your head. Most people are genuinely happy to hear from old friends.
The gap feels larger on your side. On their end, they probably think about you sometimes too and just haven't gotten around to it.
What to say when you reach out
How long is too long?
There's no hard rule. People successfully reconnect after years, sometimes decades. The length of the gap matters much less than the quality of the relationship you had and the sincerity of the reach-out. If the friendship was real, a long gap doesn't erase it.
What happens after you send it
Two likely outcomes: they reply warmly and you pick something back up, or they reply politely and it fizzles. Both are fine. The worst outcome — being ignored or getting a cold response — is also the least common one.
If they don't reply immediately, don't read into it. People get busy. Give it a week or two before you decide it means anything.
Tips
- Keep the first message short and warm — save the big catch-up for when you're actually in conversation
- Avoid over-apologizing for the gap — it puts pressure on them to reassure you
- Reference something real if you can — a memory, something they were dealing with last time you talked
- Be okay with the possibility that it doesn't fully revive — not every reconnection sticks, and that's okay
- Follow up after the first exchange if you actually want to maintain the friendship this time