Julie,
I think you've stuck a common nerve here (no pun intended, again). My experience has been that when you go through something like this, you find out who your real friends are, who wants to know and who doesn't, who you can talk to honestly, and how people handle things. Everyone is different. It is sad and unfortunate that people we consider friends cannot be supportive, but honestly I had this problem with my family when I started this journey. Still do, really, except my brother whom I had a talking to. I have a couple of theories about their lack of response, inquiry, etc. One, they just don't know how --literally. They don't know what to say or how to say it or what to do. I think it makes them uncomfortable, not from a visual perspective as you were specifically talking about, but emotionally. I think for others it is just how they handle a lot of emotional issues...or, perhaps more accurately how they don't handle them. For others I think it may hit a nerve (yikes, again! sorry) that brings up something uncomfortable and avoidance is the easiest thing for them. That, I think was my family, in part. People are complicated specimens and heavy "stuff" really shows through to what we are really made of. As Donnalyn, so brilliantly points out, we all need multiple people to meet all our needs, because this heavy stuff just isn't for everyone. Thankfully we all have each other here to meet some of our AN needs in a way most people can't.
Connie