When It’s Time to Say Goodbye

Some endings aren’t about closure — they’re about clearing space for what’s next.

If you’ve been lucky in your career, you’ve collected real people along with the business cards. The ones you look forward to seeing at conferences, trade shows, or even just in your inbox. Maybe a friendly competitor in the next town, a counterpart in another state, or someone whose name always brings a smile when it pops up in your email.

These people aren’t exactly friends in the traditional sense, though sometimes they drift closer. They’re the people who share your work world — your language, your pace, your passions. They’re the ones who “get it.” You celebrate their victories, admire their accomplishments, maybe even partner on a project or two. And when you finally meet in person, it feels like picking up an old conversation that never really stopped.

And yet, for all that shared laughter and connection, these relationships live in a delicate space. They’re woven through our work lives — and when that thread is cut, the bond can quietly unravel. Someone retires, changes careers, or moves on, and suddenly a familiar part of your world disappears. It’s natural and understandable — and still, it’s sad.

Lately, I’ve been thinking about this a lot — how some relationships fade when our professional paths change, while others find new life outside the boundaries of work. It’s worth pausing to ask: would I still want this person in my life if our careers weren’t connected? Would we still meet for lunch, still trade stories, still care about each other’s wins and losses?

Sometimes the answer is yes. Other times, it’s a gentle no — and that’s okay, too. We can miss the camaraderie without forcing the friendship. We can honor what that season brought to us without believing it was meant to last forever.

These connections are often like seasons — some long and fruitful, some fleeting and bright. Each one shapes who we are and prepares us for the next circle of people who will enter our lives, bringing new energy and new meaning.

Be open. Feel the feels. Let go when it’s time. And remember: every goodbye makes space for a new hello.

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About the author

Paula Fargo is the former owner of Curry Printing in Baltimore and has recently hung up her shingle as a business consultant specializing in helping other print and signshop owners with process, productivity and profitability improvement. Contact Paula at paula@paulafargoconsulting.com.

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