How important is friendship to you?

What an interesting question to ponder, and I can only imagine that 1000 of us could answer this question and all come up with a response that is either mildly or wildly different from what I'm about to say.

The full question, from Queercoin was this:

Friendship - How important is friendship to you? Do you have a best friend? Why are they your best friend? Why do you think people need to have friends?

Source

Let me tackle these questions one at a time.

1. I feel friendship is incredibly important to me. (More on this when I answer question 3 further down in this post).

2. I do not have a "best friend".

I think this is a construct we create in school and many of us would be well served to review this term as we grow as human beings. If I was still "best friends" with the girl from my primary school days I would not have had the space to grow anywhere near as much as I have. My "best friend" from the end of high school is still someone I adore and have a deep bond with but we've also drifted apart, literally and figuratively. And we're both okay with that.

Maybe the fact that I moved around a lot as a child really influenced my thoughts on this. Maybe the fact that I struggled socially as a child had a lot to do with this. And maybe the fact that I was forced to get good at making new friends also had a hand in it; over time I learned that I could always make new friends. And that realisation has served me really well over time.

Now, I may not have one best friend but I do have a circle of very, very close friends. These are a group of women (+ one man) spread out across cities, states and countries with whom I can be radically authentic. Most of them are therapists, coaches or practitioners like myself and so I can tell them that I'm sad, or angry, or feeling ashamed and they don't shut me down or try to fix me. They're pretty good at letting me be myself and loving me as I am (and offering advice or reflections if I ask for it or think I'm capable of hearing it). They're f*cking awesome humans and I adore them.

I also have several layers of friends that circle out wider and wider; they're less close to my precious heart but I still love them. These include business friends, people I used to have in my inner circle, people I love a lot but rarely speak to and running friends. If asked, I could call every one of them my "friends" but they're not the people I tell my biggest fears, hopes and dreams to.

Source

3. Why do you think people need to have friends?

Socialising is an essential part of being human. We have entire portions of our nervous system that have been designed specifically for social engagement and thus for us to be physically healthy we must socialise.

Now in some cultures the extended family unit creates plenty of opportunity to socialise and so, in some places, people may not have a need to have friends who are not also family members. However, I live in a so-called "Western" country where we think it's normal to live in boxes (known as houses or units) in tiny family units that often only have 2 or 3 people in them. Most people need more connection than this. I certainly do. {Enter stage left, my answer to question 1...}

Don't get me wrong, I adore time alone, space to think, time to ponder. But I also need to talk to and connect with and hug other human beings who I have things in common with. I need to connect with human beings who see the world in a similar way to the way I see it.

For me to thrive I need to have friends who get the part of me that loves running, and dancing, and singing. I need friends who get the part of me that loves studying Human Design and nervous system health and all things transformation-related. I need friends who have a spiritual bent that is non-religious and who think money is a tool to do more cool and helpful things in the world (not something to be avoided, or hoarded).

I do know--as I study more and more humans through the lens of our differences--that some of us need more friends than others. Some people will only ever have a tiny handful of besties who they stay friends with for decades. Others will have an entire massive communities of friends. Others still will oscillate during different periods of their lives. All of these may be true for different people; there is no one right way to do this whole friends thing. There's just whatever feels correct and true and healthy for you.

Source


This post was prompted by Queercoin who asked the questions at the top of this post as part of their weekly contest. If you'd like to participate in this week's contest--click here.



0
0
0.000
33 comments
avatar

We are hard wired to connect - it's a survival mechanism. No wonder loneliness, a symptom of the modern world, kills people.

I do have a best friend .. intensely connected since we were 11. She's a sister to me. I don't, however, have an extended friendship group, which makes me sad.

0
0
0.000
avatar

❤️🤗😌 You don't consider some of the people on Hive as part of your extended friendship group? Or do you mean offline?

I wonder what it would take to create a friendship group that felt good and nurturing for you?

0
0
0.000
avatar

Every society and culture has its own pros and cons. In western societies there are units where you crave for people around you. Here, in my society, living in joint families we crave for solitude.

Socialising is indeed an important aspect of human life. It is a need for healthy well being. However, not every kind of Socialising is satisfying. We feel good when we are being surrounded with like minded people or atleast among those who give unconditional respect despite the differences in our thoughts

0
0
0.000
avatar

Ah, totally! And I so appreciate you sharing your experience here, sister. It's so good to get difference perspectives and I love when you chime in; I always learn something.

I can get a sense of what you mean as I am someone who prefers more alone time than most people, yet if I had to live in the same house as my family of origin it would drive me nuts. I'm sure I would feel stuck, limited and claustrophobic. Even though I love them there is much that we don't agree on.

Thanks for helping me appreciate, yet again @amberkashif, how we can all be so human and all have such different lives.

!LUV !LADY

0
0
0.000
avatar

I love when you chime in;
❤️❤️❤️
I !LUV visiting your blog too

I always learn something.

Perhaps because we are from very different cultures.

Even though I love them there is much that we don't agree on.

That's the point which is unfortunately not well understood in my society. It is just perceived that if married siblings go on for their own homes there is no more love between them. It's never the truth. Love doesn't demand to live together in a house instead love means to be respectful and helpful to them in their needs. The peace can never retain among people who are forced to live at the same place despite differences.

how we can all be so human and all have such different lives.

Isn't it the beauty? The diversity in the world makes us appreciate nature more intensely

Have s nice day !LADY ❤️❤️❤️

0
0
0.000
avatar

❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🌏🌏🌏🌏🌏🌏🌏🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗

0
0
0.000
avatar

I think the term "best friend" refers to your close or intimate circle, to those people whit whom, as you say, you can open up without fear and you can be yourself, or at least that's the concept I have of "best friend" 😉.

I really liked reading your post, thanks for joining our contest ♥️

0
0
0.000
avatar

Oh, I like it! I like that you have a different definition of the same term. To me, my only true friends are the ones I can really be myself. I try to be kind to everyone else (as long as they show they mean me no harm) but the people that, in my heart, I call "friends" are the people I truly trust my precious heart with.

I really liked reading your post, thanks for joining our contest ♥️

Thanks! And you're welcome! !LUV

0
0
0.000
avatar

That's so cute fam, I'm glad you have people you can trust in that awesome way in your life ♥️♥️♥️

0
0
0.000
avatar

Human beings are social, and therefore we need company, even if we may enjoy solitude from time to time. I don't think I have a "best" friend. Unless I consider my husband to be one;) I have had a great friend since we were in kindergarten, and I love her like a sister, but she is not the friend I go to with my fears and joys. But I do consider myself to have a good little group of friends.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Love it. And, only hours after writing this post did I realise that I too probably do feel like my partner is my best friend. He has his own special category as my lover, but I think he'd say we're best friends. Hey @new.things 😉😍😘

0
0
0.000
avatar

And it is so cool to have a partner who is also a best friend. Isn't it? 😊🤗

0
0
0.000
avatar

Hello @consciouscat

I'm part of the Silver Bloggers’ Community Team.

Thank you for sharing your excellent post in the Silver Bloggers community! As a special "token" of appreciation for this contribution to our community, it has been upvoted, reblogged, and curated.

Cheers!
@coquicoin

silver_blogsilver_white.png

0
0
0.000
avatar

@new.things thanks for reblogging my post! !LOL !HBIT !ALIVE

0
0
0.000
avatar

Dear @consciouscat,
May I ask you to review and support the new proposal (https://peakd.com/me/proposals/240) so I can continue to improve and maintain this service?
You can support the new proposal (#240) on Peakd, Ecency, Hive.blog or using HiveSigner.

Thank you!

0
0
0.000