Mumma, it’s Mother’s Day; and this post is for you.

I’m always somehow surprised when I look back at old photos of my childhood and realise just how young my parents really were. It’s a funny thing, isn’t it? When you are young, your parents are old by default, they are adults, and therefore they meet the only required qualification. To be clear, my parents were not young when they had me, as a matter of fact my mother was referred to as a geriatric maternity patient, when she was pregnant with my brother, and that was 6 years before I came along, before she was even 30! Oh how times have changed!

It’s sad, although interesting to reflect on, that as I was growing, I didn’t quite notice the subtle changes that my parents were also slowly growing older. That it was lost on me, until at least my mid twenties that their own journey was not over and that they too had their own lives and identities; that they too still had mistakes to make and lessons to learn. Essentially that their world was bigger than just me. (Ok me and my brother, I’ll allow him to share some attention! Haha)

Even as I learned I was expecting my own son, I leaned on my mother quite heavily. Ironically, it was lost on me that this baby I was bringing into the world would need me just as much. Probably because until I was thrust into motherhood myself, I couldn’t grasp the concept of exactly how much motherhood entailed, and how much of yourself you had to put into it by default. Now that son has grown into a teenager, who still sees me as old, shows very little interest in me as a person and basically takes me for granted (as teenagers are inclined to do) I am forced to reflect back on how negatively I impacted my own mother’s mental health at the same age!

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It’s not that I don’t have fond memories of my mother, I do. The time she got into a fit of the giggles at hungry jacks, back in the days when families dined in, and she fell off her chair laughing. Shopping trips where she reluctantly bought me the unflattering clothes I demanded despite her best advice. (Photo’s prove I should have listened!) The day she relented and let me get a dog despite her better judgement. Washing my dolls clothes and hanging them up on a little washing line with baby pegs while she did the actual washing. Her lovingly holding my forehead when I was sick. Her teaching me to make pikelets and flip them on my own on the griddle. Her lovingly placing my pyjamas on the heater on cold nights or allowing me to go for a quick dip in the pool at night when it was too hot to sleep.

I am sure there are many more. But there are also many memories of me being painful, spoilt, entitled and ungrateful. Taking way more than I would give, unless of course you count giving attitude, of which I gave plenty!  But if you count consideration, I gave none. True story. My mother worked fulltime. She got up early every day to peel and cut the potatoes and put them on the stove ready for dinner. She took the meat out to defrost. She made my lunch, and my brother’s and father’s, while she most likely went without (I don’t know for sure, because I was too self absorbed to notice.) She prepared breakfast for us all and ironed any uniforms or work clothes for the day. Then she quickly got herself dressed, applied moisturiser and a coat of lipstick before rushing out to catch the 7am bus. At the end of every afternoon, she would call home, and remind me to put the potatoes on to boil. They were already on the stove in water from this morning. All I had to do was turn it on, wait for the water to boil and reduce the flame when it did. Then she would come in and make the dinner. If she didn’t call me everyday then I didn’t do it. When she did call, I would remind her that I was not her slave and complain heavily to anyone who would listen about how unjust this was and how she treated my brother and I like slaves! HA! The irony!  I complained we ate potato with every meal ( UK heritage) and that I disliked most of the meals. I refused to help wash up after dinner, always saying I would get to it later, not understanding my mother wanted to finally finish her day and sit down to relax! As I got older and started to drive, I refused to tell her where I was going with whom, or when or if I would be home for dinner.

I rebelled and rebuffed her efforts to connect with me, finding them intrusive rather than recognising that she was merely showing an interest in my life. I told myself that she had never shown much interest before, because she “chose” working over me, and therefore punished her by showing disinterest at the stage where my life perhaps actually became interesting.

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I was a needy child. I wanted my mother’s attention all to myself. I resented the easy relationship she had with my brother and the lack of rapport between herself and I. Looking back, he was more grateful than I was, definitely more helpful, and he was an easier child. He required little attention, happy to slip into quiet imaginary worlds, read books and otherwise entertain himself. I lacked those qualities. I needed someone to talk to me, to play with me, to make a mess with me. (My mother doesn’t do well with mess!) I demanded more than she had to give and was wounded when it wasn’t given. I wasn’t neglected in any sense of the word, but yet I always felt overlooked, inconvenient, in the way and ignored.

It wasn’t until I had my own children that I began to revisit those early expectations. To know that a mother has so many responsibilities to juggle, that my expectation was impossible to meet. That her getting up early to do all those things was in fact her way of showing love. That she’d have loved to spend more time playing with me but as a working mother, time was the one resource she lacked. That of course she was human and wanted to connect with other mothers and form friendships for herself.  That as I grew older and gained more independence, her load lessened and that is when she had time to connect and give me that attention I craved. That it didn’t have to be too little too late.

This Mother’s Day, many of you aren’t as fortunate to still have a mother to celebrate with. Perhaps many of you never reached this point in time to let her know you saw her sacrifices and you now recognise them as love. To love her back as fiercely as she loved you. I am lucky to still have my mother. I love watching her delight in my children and understanding she couldn’t delight in me in those ways, but that she did delight in me, and she still does. My own mother never got the chance to really experience this to it’s fullest with her own mother, as she was taken too soon. A pain I cannot and do not want to imagine, whilst raising babies of your own in the midst of that grief.

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So I want this post to be a gift to my mother, and I hope those of you who still have the opportunity do the same. Let your mothers know that you see them. That you are interested in them as people. Their childhoods, their life before you were born. Their dreams and hopes. The things that made them who they are today. And most of all, how much you impacted their life, and how much you know they loved and did for you. Therapists like to talk a lot about the concept of parents “impacted our lives” however this post looks to acknowledge the impact I had on hers, and apologise for the wrongs I did. How hard I made her life. That feels equally important.  I have written a post similar to this before, and with any luck I will get the opportunity to write many more. And I will say yes to every opportunity to show love the way she has done.

I am so lucky to have a mother today. Even luckier that it is you and I can finally call you my friend. Thank you for the years of patience and love, for believing in me when I didn’t believe in myself, for being there for me when I didn’t deserve it and for loving me at my worst. As I age, I slowly morph into you, and I couldn’t think of a better person to be.

I love you My Mumma; My friend. Happy Mother’s Day.

❤ Love you,
Your Best Friend ForEver
xx

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The Unchosen



I have posted previously about “The back-up friend” and this post follows a similar trajectory. It aims to acknowledge friendships as the secondary relationships of life, while also pushing the boundaries of still wanting it to be a priority. Second place should not after all feel like last place. Should it? This post also aims to recognise what a huge role personal circumstance plays in our values and expectations around friendships, but yet also how those values impact our perspectives. However the main aim here is to underline that friendships are a choice, and that many of us feel unchosen, regardless of how many friends we have.

I am only one person, so I can offer only my own perspectives on this which have been based on my experiences. That is not to say that I am right, or that there is no other way to look at things. The nature of this blog as a whole is to always remind readers that rejections in friendships are almost never personal. But the reason I need a whole blog about it is because when you are in the thick of friendship drama it FEELS personal. Not only that, we almost want it to be personal…. Because our friendships are personal.

No matter how many times I experience this feeling of not being chosen, it still hurts. No matter how much I can rationalise it or think logically about all the reasons I shouldn’t feel hurt, I think it is important to hold space for the fact that it does. The part of our brain that feels emotion often fires first, which brings me back to “are your feelings fact or fiction” (spoiler alert, they’re not facts.)

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Many of us do not anticipate friendships ending. We aren’t living in a society that gives the concept of friendship much conscious consideration, but regardless the general ideas that float around are that true friendships last forever. Which hasn’t been helpful in my experience because many of them have ended. So not only is it unexpected, there is also no script of how to feel or act in this situation. My blog wants to address that! If feeling unchosen in romance feels bad, at least you can console yourself with the fact that every person chooses only one other. It stands to reason people want to thoroughly explore their options before choosing that one person. However, when you can choose as many people as you like, and you are still not even among the collective group of chosen ones, it does hit a person where it hurts. Right in the ego perhaps?

For someone like me, who is very conscious of friendships and the pleasure and value they add to my life, I am also very conscious of giving a lot to my friends. Being that no 2 people are the same, no 2 friendships are the same either. So yes, some require more than others. But I like to think I am conscious of the baseline requirements for each person and aim slightly higher than that.

For me, this means I tend to be the social planner, the one who will suggest time together. In some ways it is the best way to assure my seat at the table, assuming responsibility for the name cards. It means remembering special occasions without social media and making a fuss. It means being there for someone even if they are stuck in the same pattern they never escape and they come to you with the same problem over and over and over. It means reassurance and effort to be someone worth choosing, because when time is so valuable and limited, you have to be rewarding and valuable if you want people to choose to spend it on you.

I am well liked in my social group. All of my friends have wonderful things to say about me. My ex friends probably don’t, because they will be the people with whom I ceased putting in the effort when I felt unchosen in some way.

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I don’t love it that friendships are secondary. However I have no choice but to accept it and I run a pretty good race for someone who knows second place is as good as it is going to get. I can accept a secondary place in a friend’s life. I observe their lives and how they spend their time and try to be convenient, not ask for a primary spot. I will allow you space at the beginning of a new romance to build what you need to with a partner, or not ask for time on the weekends because you are family oriented and that is when you see your family. I will however ask for the same energy I give you in return.

If I make time for you when my partner is available, I will expect that you will return the favour once in a while. If I am prepared to get up and message with you during a crises at 3am, I will expect you to be there for me when I need you. Sometimes it falls out of balance and I ask for more than I give, but more often than not I make sure I give more than I ask for. Maybe the problem is that I give more than they ask for even if they are willing to take it?

However, there always seems to come a time when no matter how much I have given, if something has to give, I will be the neglected party. I will be the person people choose to walk away from. No matter how valuable I was as a friend, it seems time and time again that friendship just isn’t a value to most people. The same thing that attracts them to me in the first place, will eventually drive them away.

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And I used to wonder what specifically was driving them away. How could I be more valuable to people. How could I be less disposable? How could I find someone that would choose me when it was hard? How could I find someone that was giving what I was expecting not out of obligation but out of true desire to do so? How could I feel chosen?

Friendships are reciprocal, or at least they are meant to be, however I now know when someone doesn’t choose me, they are choosing themselves. And what a wonderful powerful realisation that is. I can choose me. I don’t need to walk around choosing friends, giving to receive. I can walk around with confidence knowing I am worth being chosen, being friendly, and seeing who gives to me before I reciprocate. I don’t need to control my seat at the table.

If I sit alone, with room for others, the right people will approach me for friendship. And I can choose if they will earn a seat with me. Because it is better to sit alone at your own table than to feel invisible at someone else’s.

To all the friends that didn’t choose me; thank you for leading by example. You chose yourselves. I wasn’t right for you. That is ok. Just know that I tried. We both deserve happiness and when you left my life, you made room for someone who actually wants to be there. I am good enough to be at your table, but from here on I have my own table and I choose me.

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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The Fall Back friend

How familiar are you with the friend who says “my partner is out of town, let’s catch up?” or does the friend who always calls when they are on leave from work sound familiar? Maybe the friend who is your bestie between partners but suddenly drops of the face of the earth the minute they are coupled up?

Whatever the reason, this friend tends to come and go from your life in unpredictable spurts, leaving you confused as to your actual meaning in their life, right? They think it is acceptable just to ditch you and roll on back to you later when the other people in their life are unavailable. If you are anything like me, you value consistency and this coming and going from your life is unnerving?

I am the first to admit that I have high expectations of my friends. I need them to carve out time in their lives on a semiregular basis to actually show up face to face and spend some quality time with me. I prefer it if there isn’t a long silence in between those times and that we maintain some level of basic communication or interaction.

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That said, I am also the first to admit I will take a step back when a friend takes a partner. Obviously initially I respect the fact that they are attempting to build something meaningful between them and they will need time and privacy to do that. (Once that initial awkward dating phase ends that bring us closer as we debate the meanings of emoji’s in texts and what to wear on dates of course.) I assume responsibility for my friendships with my single friends.

That means I will suggest events, regularly message and invite them to go places etc… however, I have noticed an unspoken, and perhaps misunderstood pattern whereby I will pull back on these things and expect my friends to take the reins when they have entered a relationship. Not wanting to step on toes, and wanting to respect the new relationships my friends are exploring can possibly come off as a sudden disinterest from me.

Of course, if any of them appeared to notice or ask me about it, I could communicate that, however what tends to happen is that they get blissfully happy and start doing all the partnership things like sleepovers, family events, moving in, getting engaged, having kids etc…. whatever feels right for them. And sometimes, some of my friends have been known to kinda forget about our friendship and don’t remember until the first Saturday night they face alone for whatever reason. Then they suddenly reach out with the I miss you messages….

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And of course, I am torn by this. Because part of me wants them to be happy and accepts that they are, which is why I haven’t heard from them. While the other part of me feels annoyed because all the while I made the effort when I was partnered. I will allow for the fact that my husband and I are settled. We have passed the honeymoon phase, cohabited, married and had kids. I will also allow for the fact that his hours are such that most of the time he isn’t actually around anyway, so maybe I am no better, just by design more available when he isn’t.

I accept the nature of friendships is to grow in the cracks of one another’s time, which is constricted by so many other roles and responsibilities. Yet, it still stings when a friend only rolls around when whatever else they have going on suddenly shift or end. I agree that forgiveness and going with the flow are imperative elements of long term friendships, and that these friends were not ill intentioned in our friendship. After all, any time they have needed me, I was there, so they have no reason to suspect that anything has changed between us.

Because when I needed them, they didn’t always know. Even if I was brave enough to reach out, if their best attempt to console me was a brief message saying “It will all be ok, sending love” I don’t feel loved and I am unlikely to ask for any more support, IF I asked for any to begin with. Of course I can’t entirely blame a friend for not offering me the support I didn’t ask for and they didn’t even know I needed.

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However, I am always pretty clear that what I need is time, fairly regularly. If they don’t want to put in the time, then I will be less inclined to humour the odd request when they do have a spare moment. If the friendship is meaningful enough then I will make the time and try to treasure it based on its rarity and appreciate that with this only small nugget of time they have they chose to spend it with me! Change the way you look at things and the things you look at change indeed!

On the other hand, I also can’t deny I am torn. If a friend behaves in this manner, especially the kind who disappears and resurfaces only when single, I wont invest as heavily. I wont be the best version of a friend I can be, because I know that even if it’s not about me, that this person will leave again. When someone has already chosen to discard you, maybe more than once, is it ok not to continue allowing that behaviour?

I don’t want to advise anyone to cut off their nose to spite their face, however I think it sounds reasonable to say I want to be chosen by my friends. Actively chosen against perhaps better options. I don’t think it is a healthy pattern for me to continue allowing people to come and go from my life in this manner because it is hurtful to me and most of them do actually know that. I am not respecting myself, or asserting a boundary that I require consistency.

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Moving forward I will have this conversation more candidly with people. I will also ask them single or otherwise, what their ideal relationship style looks like. Because maybe I am just not compatible with people who expect their partner to also be their best friend. That doesn’t leave much room for me and I would be wiser to accept this from the start. Most people, when asked directly how they handle friendships and relationships will deny they ditch their friends for a partner, so asking what they would ideally like in their future is a less direct but usually more effective way of assessing this.

I could risk losing some great people by limiting myself this way of course, I wouldn’t necessarily refuse to have anything to do with someone, just to limit the time and investment and keep it at a level I feel we can both maintain regardless, because once bitten, twice shy. Trying not to be extreme in your thinking, (or too rigid,) but also trying to still protect yourself is a difficult balance.

Thoughts?

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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Do opposites attract in friendships?

My love of trashy eighties pop music is no secret, so you won’t be surprised to hear I was happily listening to my Paula Abdul album while pondering new fodder for blogs. When the song “Opposites Attract” came on I wondered if that was applicable to friendships. Does attraction come into friendships at all?

I always like to compare the similarities and differences between friendships and relationships, and am resigned to the fact that the ways that most people differentiate the 2 is by drawing a boundary physically. I know some situations challenge this idea, as we looked at in recent weeks. There are many more complicated dynamics in some situations or friendships, but for the sake of simplicity, today I am only referencing strictly platonic connections.

I suppose it is fair to say attraction would be the appropriate term to describe what draws us to a friendship with one person over another, but I am referencing physical attraction. Are we more attracted to individuals considered to be conventionally attractive? Or are we more likely to actively select less attractive friends on the basis of feeling more secure in ourselves? Or is it more accurate that we align ourselves with people we feel are of a similar social standing/appearance as ourselves?

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Having observed my own patterns and those of the people around me, the answers to this seem to vary based on an individual’s self-esteem and their values. One friend reflected that most of her friends tend to be thin, while she is not. Although she aspires and admires this quality in her friends, she also quipped that it can make her feel insecure in those friendships and she doesn’t always feel completely able to be herself around them for fear of judgement. The people she aspires to be friends with are often people she feels are better than herself in some way, although these friendships can fail to launch due to her self-esteem telling her not to bother those beautiful people too much, and that if you must try, usefulness is key for lack of a more svelte physique.

I have also come across people who actively admit that they prefer to surround themselves with lesser attractive people. Some claim they have found these people to be nicer, in a way exploiting their low self-worth! However the pursuer has no higher self-esteem either, that is why they choose this path. This person wants to be the best house on a bad street rather than the worst on a good one, like our last scenario. By comparison to their friends, they appear more attractive, and at times consider that they are doing their friends a favour in socialising with them at all, almost an act of charity. However one has to assume deep down this is based on the fear that they are not quite good enough for people they would like to consider themselves on par with. Perhaps they also feel it is less effort and their friends are less likely to leave them.

In my own experiences I think it would be fair to say most of my friends seem to be on par with where I would rate myself physically. Each of them with their unique beauty, however probably traditionally average in terms of appearance. What I mean by that is that I like friends I can relate to. As weight has always been a struggle for me, many of my friends have struggled too. This is by no means code to say we are all overweight, simply that we have all struggled and weight tends to fluctuate. None of us would likely be chosen for a supermodel competition, however I would not say any of us are remarkably unattractive. I don’t recall selecting persons based on these attributes, but I would be lying if I didn’t admit I noticed or even felt more comfortable around people I felt I could instantly relate to, or who wouldn’t judge me based on size alone.

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This reflects that similar to my friend in the first example, weight is something I notice and which influences my thoughts and feelings if I like it or not. Being self-aware generally means to observe yourself without judgement, just to notice things and be impartial to what you notice. This of course reflects more on myself than my friends, showing that I feel judged in general based on size, and it does influence my choices.

My last example is a friend who seems to have no active preferences when it comes to her friendships. Open and warm to all people, she has friends of varied levels of attractiveness, and does not limit herself based on anything physical. I have to hope this means she is very comfortable in herself, unconcerned with judgements of others, and does not allow her fears to rule her choices or limit her. When discussing this topic she described her attraction to others as more of an aura or presence. She felt she was similar to me in that she was drawn to people she felt she could relate to, but those relations were not swayed or limited by appearances alone.

I suspect she is onto something there, however I do tend to believe that in some circumstances, like in the second scenario opposites do attract. Not always a good thing though as it is portrayed in the song! And unlike magnets, sometimes similarities attract too, but is this limiting potential? All of us need to be more mindful that people are not tools to be used to gain social standing or acceptance. They are not stepping stones to a better life, nor charities.

Because attraction is not usually something we choose, I cannot ask you to change yourself. What I can suggest however, is that you are more aware of the connections you are forming with people and if they are fulfilling and meaningful and reciprocal. If you notice you have unhealthy patterns, try approaching your next friendship with more confidence and inner security and see how it changes things?

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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If you want the friendship to stay the same then your effort has to also stay the same.

In the past few weeks, I have reflected here on a friendship which had become very close over the past few years, and then abruptly changed last year because circumstances for both of us also changed. While I have written about this situation before, when speaking with a friend about a similar situation between her and one of her friends more recently, I had a little epiphany about it I thought I should share.

Previously my friend’s friend lived close by the dog park where my friend takes her dogs walking most days. As a consequence of that, my friend often stopped by on the way to or from the dog park. It may have been for 10 minutes or an hour. Sometimes it was a social visit, or to deliver or even borrow something. Whatever the reason, those small increments of time added up. These small interactions meant they knew the little details of each other’s lives.

They knew if one of them had a bad day, they knew if something funny happened, and they knew the general schedule and ins and outs of daily life. They felt connected. My friend felt like a part of the family, she even had a key for their house. Not that she needed it because she would just let herself in through the open door. They left it unlocked for her.

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It felt warm and safe and very secure. It felt forever, as family does. However, things changed. Distance started creeping in first when my friend became more involved with her own family when another new member arrived. Then a group friendship issue seemed to spill over a little into the bond and widened the cracks, although it wasn’t spoken about. Then my friend’s friend moved around half an hour away.

All of a sudden, in a short space of time, daily drop in’s had become every few days, then weekly, then monthly, and wittered down to birthdays and Christmas within a year. My friend felt very low about this as she expressed to me that it felt she was still making the effort but they were not. She said the friendship felt distant, strained, and unimportant and essentially she felt pushed out. She no longer had a key to their lives or their hearts, and she missed them.

But during this discussion we landed on the fact that her friend had never really made any effort in this friendship. My friend came and went from their house while they got on with their daily lives. It wasn’t her fault, this was just convenient for them both. It could also be said while my friend was the one making all the effort, it wasn’t actually an effort, as she was passing anyway. Like, she wasn’t specifically going to visit them, but happened to stop by before or after the activity which she was doing anyway.

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Now, all of a sudden this friendship was heavy because it required planning and effort to go and see them. Foresight to make invitations and suggestions. Thought about one another. They hadn’t been weighed down by this before. Of course we think about loved ones on birthdays or Christmas or other special occasions, but day to day? Probably not really.

So my friend was only partially right when she said her friend couldn’t accuse her of not making an effort. Before she was making much more effort to keep in touch with them daily, however now she was only making minimal effort. Her friend has continued to make the same minimal to no effort that she always made. The difference is that where it was convenient to make the effort before it no longer is.

So the moral of the story, boys and girls, has to be that if you want the friendship to be as rewarding as it always was, you must maintain the same amount of effort you always did.

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I am not suggesting it should all be my friend’s responsibility just because it always has been. It would be fantastic if she could speak with her friend and ask with some help carrying the load. I have recommended it. However my friend is likely insecure she won’t be worth the effort because she never asked for that before.

What I am suggesting is that my friend made more effort before because it was convenient. Now it is not convenient she IS making less effort and that IS why the bond isn’t the same. She could still make time to do a quick video chat, send memes or messages to keep the connection alive, but because it isn’t in her face, like driving past their house, she doesn’t remember.

You have to make conscious effort, you have to be mindful of your connections. My friend could put a weekly reminder in to call them. She could invite them to her house if she doesn’t feel like driving there. She could make plans to meet someplace half way for a meal. She could send notes in the mail or send memes or messages. Gifts or articles that say “I saw this and thought of you.” Things that keep them connected.

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At the end of the day, if you change the amount of effort, the amount of friendship changes too. It is not always convenient! It is not always easy. But it is always worth it.

My friend eventually took my advice and talked to her friend. Invited her, and the group as an olive branch to a brunch at her house. Her friend, and the group accepted this invitation gracefully, and my friend is already feeling happier.

Just like anything in life, effort is everything. Rewards don’t come for free. Resilience is key. Keep trying. The friendship probably won’t be the same, but that doesn’t mean it won’t still be meaningful because they made the choice to stay connected!

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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Is the enemy of my enemy my friend? Is the enemy of my friend, my enemy?

So you used to be a group of 3 or more, and 2 of the people have parted ways. What does that mean for you? Or the new friend you just made turns out to be the enemy of your best friend’s sister? What then? How about if you happen to run into your ex friends other ex-friend? In complicated circumstances, should those circumstances dictate the terms of your friendship? Are there certain circumstances where you shouldn’t be friends with someone or whereby you should even?

Friendships are meant to be the simpler relationship on the menu of life, however, in my experience that actually isn’t true at all. They themselves can be complicated within the dynamic between 2 people, and just like romantic bonds, third parties can indeed get involved and complicate matters, as in the examples above.

Let’s start with the latter example. You have a falling out with a close friend. Over the course of your friendship, they had a falling out with another friend, and no longer speak. You were not friends with that other person, even if you were familiar with them travelling in similar circles, or just knew of them through your once mutual friend.  Then life happens, and circumstances bring you and this person together…. Can you be friends? Should you be? Would that seem like a weird alliance or alternatively do you owe your ex friend some loyalty even though you are no longer on good terms?

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Honestly, there is no right or wrong answers to this. If you sought this person out on the sole basis that perhaps your issue with the middle person was similar, and you wanted to fact check and vent, I’d probably advise against it. Therapy or time to resolve your feelings about the middle person might be a healthier step than seeking out someone to discuss them with. On the other hand, it is possible that perhaps verifying certain things will give you closure and help you move on. Whichever way it happened, make sure you have more in common with this person than the middle man, so to speak and grow your connection away from that source?

If however, circumstance brought you together after a long while apart from the middle man, I see no reason why you shouldn’t befriend this person, nor why you should. If you like them, proceed, and try and forget anything the ex-friend said about them. It is always important to use your own judgement to make up your own mind about a person based on your own experiences of them. Within reason, that is. What your ex friend thinks shouldn’t play into it. And, for that matter it still shouldn’t even if you are still friends with that person. They don’t own you or control you or have any say in who you can be friends with. If someone tries to dictate who you can be friends with or can’t be that is a red flag about them!

Ok, so what about the first scenario, where you end up playing piggy in the middle between 2 squabbling friends? Don’t play. It really is that simple. If you like them both, you are perfectly capable of maintaining clear friendship boundaries. Don’t encourage them to talk about one another, and do not break confidences if you do end up catching things in the middle. Simply maintain that you hope they can figure out their differences but that you won’t be getting involved. It is pretty important you are clear with both parties that you like the other person and consider them a friend. Otherwise you will drown in the secrets and lies of trying to keep your friendship with each of them quiet from the other and open yourself up to unfavourable gossip that may later come back to bite you.

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In the middle scenario, you are one step removed. The person you have met is the enemy of your friend by proxy. This person had a falling out with someone your friend is close to. You really like them, but then when you are excited and talking about them with your friend, they figure out the connection and warn you not to proceed. They share a pretty nasty story about this new person and you feel conflicted about it. The information they shared seems to conflict what you know about them, but, you have to admit that you don’t know them that well yet.

My advice here is proceed, but proceed with caution. There is 2 sides to every story, but actually the story didn’t concern you and it isn’t your business. There may be things that you don’t know that would explain this further, and as it wasn’t your friend who was involved, but someone else, you can bet it was a game of Chinese whispers. The information you are receiving is tainted. Do not believe everything you hear.  At the same time, be aware of red flags that validate any concerns you may have.

At the end of the day, friendship is an optional relationship. You are not obligated to become friends, or stay friends, with anyone, ever. Every friendship has its own risks and rewards, and it is up to you and only you who you proceed with. But I advise you to make those decisions for yourself and avoid temptation to give in to gossip. Worst case you learn a lesson and best case you make a wonderful friend.

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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Scraps of time; Friendship Fertiliser or Weed Killer? You decide.

I tell people all the time to be more mindful of their friendships; to mentally put aside time and reminders to reach out to their friends. This is particularly important for super busy people, who can easily go months without really speaking to anyone “just because.” I don’t believe friendships are a waste of time, and nor do those people, however some people strive on more focused time and goals and friendships just don’t fit well into that narrative.  

So I tell these people, invite a friend to meet you for lunch near your office on your lunch hour, or send a quick message every Friday night just to get into the habit of dedicating that time to friendships, because they ARE important. I stand by this advice, but I want to point out that this alone will never be enough. It is like watering your plants with only a drop of water instead of a sprinkle.

These steps are the maintenance during the drought to make sure the crop survives the harsh conditions to flourish again when the time is right. How long the drought lasts is entirely your call, however you better know your crop well enough to know how long it can handle the dry before it dies of thirst.

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The good thing about friendships as opposed to plants is that they don’t need daily attention, and they can alert you when it is time for a good watering. The bad thing is that when we see a plant starting to droop or brown, we water it or actively decide to let it die, we don’t get angry at it for needing more attention, whereas with friendships sometimes we do. On the other hand, a thirsty plant will quickly absorb any drops of water offered willingly and gratefully, and that isn’t always the case with a friendship.

I have a friend who only calls in the car. That is her purposeful time for friendships where she can multitask and use her driving time effectively to water her friendship garden. Sometimes there is purpose to her calls, but most often she is just calling to say hello and touch base. Her intentions are good, and yet I struggle to accept them that way. I don’t know why it bothers me that she calls while driving, but I cannot deny it does.

Or perhaps, what bothers me is that she ONLY calls while driving. The other day she called me while I was getting my hair done and I couldn’t answer her call. I texted her to tell her that I wouldn’t be able to speak on the phone at that moment and I would call her when I was done. But I knew she had called because she was driving and if I didn’t call her back before she reached her destination, I wouldn’t get to speak to her! Sure enough I called when I was finished at the hair salon but no answer. Again, no answer when I called an hour after that. She did message that she would call me later, but she didn’t.

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Well, that isn’t true, to be fair to her, she did call. She called the next morning, when she was driving to work! Now I understand that is when it was convenient for her to call. However, she knows I have school aged children to get organised for the school day and that it was not the most convenient time for me to take her call. I should also note that it was my choice to take her call that morning. I could have said “sorry, not a good time for me, I will call you later.” However by the time she is driving again I will be in the dinner, bath, and bed routine with the kids. So by that logic, it is never convenient for me to take her call at the times it is convenient for her to make them.

This makes me feel that although she was the one making the effort to call, that (A) the onus is actually on me to inconvenience myself to take the calls because she wont inconvenience herself to speak at other times, and that (B) I am not important enough to speak to when it is inconvenient. That doesn’t make what I feel fact, however if I feel it then it is still valid. And surely I have a point.

Something else that bothers me about it is sometimes she calls with news or conversations which warrant more time than she has to discuss them? Why call to ask how I am, only for you to tell me as I begin sharing that you have to go now? It frustrates me no end!

Only call me when you actually have time to talk!

Only call me when you actually have time to talk!

But that is probably because I enjoy long meandering conversations and she doesn’t. She finds them pointless and a waste of time! It is because I assign a meaning to her calls that she doesn’t intend to attach to it herself. That I am a not a priority and calling me is just another thing to tick off her list and fill the silence in the car! As she is the one making the call, I can only assume her intention is quite the opposite and what she means to portray is that she used what little time she had to call me and that is because it was important and she didn’t want to just not call at all?! Should I not focus on her intentions when it is her call and her time?

Why do I find this hard to accept? I find it hard to accept because I separate myself from my inner plant! If I have a need to talk to her, I should drink up the drop that she called and accept it for what it is. I should not reject the drop, or the call, because it isn’t enough for me! But what is the solution to this conundrum, short of dying of thirst?

Simple, I don’t use these calls for conversation as much as I use them to secure some of her time face to face in person! Short calls for arranging plans are fine. It doesn’t have to take more than a few minutes to agree that you will go to the new local Mexican place for dinner on Friday night, or invite her over for a coffee on Sunday afternoon.  By doing this, I am letting her know that my inner plant is still thirsty, while respecting her limited time to make the call.

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And by continuing to call, she keeps in touch, keeps the connection alive. Being that she has figured out by now that I will ask for time when she calls, her continued calling assures me that our friendship is important, and that is why she calls. If she stopped calling or I stopped answering then it would die. The calls have now become the light rain in between catch ups.

If all we had were the calls; that would not be enough. But I know she is busy, and she doesn’t like to message. This is her communication style and preference, and I accept that about her, even if it irritates me sometimes. I know I irritate her sometimes too with my own habits, like my preference for long winded wordy messages! Haha So we compromise and make allowances.

Friendships are a bit like weeds that grow in the cracks of spare time in people’s lives. With love and positive intention, they thrive in most conditions and often actually bloom into beautiful flowers that make you wonder why it was labelled a weed in the first place. A bit like why this blog questions why friendships aren’t given the attention they deserve as a concept, or a place of priority and recognition in society……

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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 7 Signs someone is trying to befriend you!

We hear often these days about how friendships are hard to make as adults. I don’t deny this to be true, but I tend to question, is that because we are missing the signs or attempts of others to become our friends in the first place?

Making friends as a child or young person seems so much easier, but is that just because we are more open to new friendships then? More trusting and less selective? Maybe that is not such a bad thing? As we grow older, we have learnt from experience that not everyone is our friend, and that can leave us wary of new people. Added to that, we may be closed off to new people because of all the judgements we have learned to make along the way?

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Not only that, but our social circles are more well developed, and we may have more strict criteria we are looking to fill. Not to mention that of course, we prefer to make friends of our own selection than perhaps be the passive selection of someone else.

I am not suggesting all of these things are negatives, I am just as guilty as anyone else of having a quiet preference for the type of friend I am open to making, or should that be hoping to make? What I am saying is that perhaps these things all add up over time and make us blind to some of the subtle, or not so subtle hints and signs that people around us are putting out that they are available for friendship!

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1. They take an active interest in your life.
You might hardly know this person, or perhaps only know them in a casual or professional sense, yet every time you see them, you notice they remember details you told them last time you met up. They follow up with you about how your holiday family dinner went, or remember that last time you spoke they considered buying an air fryer and ask if you decided to get one. Sure, maybe it is just polite conversation, but if you don’t remember anything they disclosed, you might be missing a new opportunity for connection.

www.baggagereclaim.com

www.baggagereclaim.com

2. They mention places they have been
What if every time you cross paths with someone they are telling you all about the latest new bar or comedy club they have been to? You might think that they are just bragging, and making you feel bad for the lack of places you go, but in reality maybe they are hoping you will take an interest and ask to join them sometime or maybe hoping to meet you there?

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3. They invite you places
Maybe this person is always hosting a pyramid scheme party and inviting you along and you think they are just trying to make money. Or maybe they always seem to be hosting dinners or parties and say you’re welcome but you feel it is more of a pity invitation than an actual invite, because the party came up in conversation. Chances are though, that they do actually hope you will come along. One of my very close friends and I started this way, and she said that she liked that I always said yes, even though I didn’t really know her or anyone else there. Haha Maybe this is in line with my quality time love language, or maybe I was just a new mum desperate to get out of the house away from the baby at any given opportunity to have adult conversation!

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4. They compliment you.
Ok this might make some of you squirm a little, but friendships aren’t that different to relationships at the onset. If someone always has something positive to say about your clothes, scent or personality, chances are that is their way of telling you that they like you. You might think they are just being nice or trying to flatter you…. But why would they do that? Because flattery gets you everywhere, that is why! Not to mention that we generally like people we admire, and we generally compliment people we admire…. So you do the math….. A person who expresses love by means of words of affirmation is most likely to use this tactic to make friends.

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5. They buy you things.
Ok, so I should start by acknowledging friendship is not something that can be bought, but if your colleague often buys you a coffee in the morning, it may be their way of telling you that they thought of you and remembered your order. Or if they often say they saw something they just had to get for you, however small, a magnet or a pen, they are probably trying to reflect in their behaviour that they consider you a friend. Everyone has a different love language and theirs may be gifts.

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6. They are always doing favours for you, or even asking you for favours.
Obviously, working love languages into this piece brings us to acts of service. Some people measure friendship by how helpful 2 people can be to one another. So, if the person sitting next to you suggests an exchange of favours, for example, they will type up your meeting minutes if you wouldn’t mind scanning in some papers for them instead, you may find they are actually trying to befriend you. Or if they walk past 4 people to ask you to borrow a pen, or are the first person to offer you one when yours stops working, chances are, they are interested in friendship!

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7. They hug you hello and goodbye.
Ok, for some people this might simply be a cultural thing, or others may feel it is the polite thing to do. However, for many people this is another way they indicate that they feel comfortable and close with you, as most people don’t customarily hug strangers or acquaintances. Even an over enthusiastic hand shake can indicate interest and excitement! Of course this touches on those people who have a love language of physical touch, which does extend to friendship in subtle ways. Arm touches when they laugh, or a loving embrace during a tough time.

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This is not meant to be an inclusive list, these are just a few of the things you might be missing when someone is interested in being your friend. We tend to relate better to people with the same styles or approach as our own, however we may be missing out on some fantastic people because we don’t recognise the signs.

At the end of the day, not many people will approach friendships in a direct blunt manner and simply ask you for friendship. It is a more subtle dance than that, whereby you make increasing reciprocal steps until it feels safe to define it as a friendship. If you don’t recognise the steps, you may be out of sync!

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

OF FRIENDSHIP

OF FRIENDSHIP

3 types of friendships; Aristotle's philosophy and why it matters.

Thanking a fan mail from Anika for this suggested topic on Aristotle! Keep writing in folks! =)

Back in history, a well-known Greek Philosopher named Aristotle described 3 types of friendship. The categories were:

Friendships of Utility
Friendships of Pleasure
Friendships of the Good.

(Wikipedia reference here)

The first type of friendship – friendship of utility, was meant to describe what we would likely refer to today as an acquaintance. It didn’t require you to like the person particularly, or for them to like you, but offered you both some sort of reward for cordial interaction. For example the lady who sells dog treats at the local dog park. You might know her name, and act friendly toward her. She is familiar with you and your pet’s names or behaviours. However you know nothing more about one another and have no desire to know more. You are friendly to one another on the basis that you want discounted organic dog treats for your pets, and she wants to make money from selling her goods. You are useful to each other, however the term friend would not really accurately describe your association.

This is not to be confused with a friend who uses you, and only makes contact when they want something, although by all means I would hesitate to use the word friend in that circumstance too! Nor is it used to describe acts of service between 2 friends of a different category. Friends in this category are people you recognise, you have pleasant conversation with, but said conversation is surface level and inconsequential generally speaking. You will have many “friendships” in this category over your lifetime and none of them will be likely to stand out or be remembered. You are unlikely to notice or to care when the association ends. It wont be a painful parting.

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The second type of friendship is what Aristotle named Friendships of Pleasure. These are friends that we spend time with regularly because you delight in their company – or perhaps the activity which brings you together. For example you may have a good friend in art class. While you are there to practise and learn about art, you very much enjoy the wine and gossip with your friend you made in the class too. These are commonly colleagues. You genuinely like these people. You spend time regularly and consistently, however, the bond doesn’t seem to grow outside of the bounds of its birthplace. Maybe you tried and they weren’t interested or vice versa, or neither of you ever thought to expand the friendship. Sometimes you did try and it turned out the friendship only flourished under quite unique circumstances. For example, you both love art and wine, however the similarities end there. You live in a fancy apartment in the city, work a corporate office job and spend weekends at the theatre, whereas they live in a beach shack on the coast, write for a living and spend their time surfing. You might enjoy hearing about one another’s lives, but not enough to participate in that lifestyle.

Friends with benefits may fall into this category. Just shy of being something meaningful. You will remember these people after you part, but the chances are high that in time, you will part. There will be many of these people that come and go from your life. They are meaningful and should you meet again, it is likely you will be flooded with memories and fondness. However, the interactions are still not likely to rekindle. Once the flame dies out in these connections, it usually doesn’t respark. This doesn’t mean you were never meant to be friends or that the friendships weren’t real, only that they weren’t lasting.  You will miss these people, but you are unlikely to long for them or feel heart broken by them.

I guess in my own life, these are my activity friends. The people I enjoy because I like their company, but in equal measure because I enjoy the activities we share. Movies, day spa’s, dinners, escape rooms, hotels, nails, shopping….. there may or may not be a valuable emotional connection with depth, it may vary, it may be reciprocal or one sided, but you hang in there because it is fun, more than fulfilling.

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I, myself, wonder if most of these pairings could have become more, except each person’s quota was full for making more connections. Neither had the energy to sustain more, even if they were compatible in theory. Even if one person makes the effort, it takes 2. If both people are not open and available for the connection to grow, it wont. It took me a very long time to understand that wasn’t always personal.  

I think it is quite common, actually for only one of the 2 people in any close friendship to put the friendship in this category. I am quite certain I have friends who only do this level, the next level being reserved strictly for family. One person in the pairing tends to have a much more casual attitude towards the bond than the other. I have actually wondered if we all don’t do this to people without being aware of it. Limited how close we could be or limited the potential for whatever reason even if we knew or suspected they wanted more.

The third type of Friendship Aristotle named was the ultimate tier of friendship. Friendships of the Good.  These are the friends we let close to us. The ones that truly know our strengths and weaknesses and love us for it. They are the ones who we trust, rely on and let see behind the mask. The ones we offer support to and celebrate. These are friends we give and expect loyalty to and from. These are the friendships that will break a heart if they shatter, because they are so valuable and meaningful.

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Friendships of this nature require reciprocation, you would assume and that is, I believe, the context in which it was meant. However, as I stated above, I think sometimes we might love somebody at this level while they kinda keep us in type 2 or vice versa. However, we are usually somewhat blind to this. If we love a friend to tier 3 then we assume perhaps that this sentiment is returned.

We expect these friendships to last, and often times they do, assuming the character of the people involved stay basically the same, we will continue to seek each other out and miss each other during periods of absence. These are the friends with whom we are likeliest to make effort to keep in touch. They are the ones we will be willingly useful for without personal gain. They are the friends we confide in and who’s secrets we guard with respect not judgement.

These are the friendships of great love stories and tragedies, although they may never have had romantic flair. Because they are meaningful, they are celebrated and mourned equally and in many ways become part of us. These are the friends worth fighting for.

Know which friendships belong in which categories in your life. Mistakes in not knowing your place or theirs can be costly. Be careful who gets to level 3, but when they do get there, be careful to show them the respect they deserve and the care your friendship will need to sustain itself. You’ll be glad you did, and sad to learn one day if you never really understood the difference.

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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Almost……. More than Friends……..

In the spirit of the recent topics touching on queer platonic relationships and Boston Marriages, I wanted to write a piece about friendships that don’t seem to quite fit in either category, but feel much more a blend of the 2 romantic versus platonic bonds, but stay in a bit of a grey space…… So if you and someone you are close to are less than lovers, does that make you friends? Can you be more than friends if you are less than anything else officially speaking?

Keep in mind I am not necessarily talking about friends with benefits here. Today I am writing about those super close friendships, that feel more like relationships…… but aren’t. They aren’t, in the way that benefits are lacking, but that is the only way that they aren’t.

If you are, or ever have been in one of these friendships, you will understand what I mean when I say that the word “best friend” feels too distanced, doesn’t exactly capture the essence of the bond or they way you interact or structure your relationship, and yet, it seems the only acceptable terminology to use?

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You might consider this person a love of your life, a soulmate or a sibling, depending on your beliefs and values surrounding these issues. You may do many of the things that romantic couples do. Daily good morning messages or good night texts, or just conversation. Valentines dates, plus one’s at weddings, weekends away. If there is a new place you want to check out, or show you want to see, you immediately assume they will be joining you and never really consider taking anyone else.  If a third party comes along, it might even feel awkward, like  they are somehow diluting the closeness you share by their presence.

This is probably because you feel you can talk to them about anything and everything, something you do often and you dislike it when someone else interjects and you find you have to filter yourself. Although you don’t touch this person, you probably feel the need to be close to them. For example if a third party were to sit in the middle of you, you might feel disgruntled and far apart from them. You may even feel the need to reach out and touch them to reassure each other that your bond is still “felt”.

These friendships tend to be intense, at times obsessive and usually exclusive. There is no boundary on qualifications. You may or may not share the same gender, orientation, situation, cultural values or beliefs etc…. it’s not as important as the deep love and connection you feel. If you do happen to be of the same gender it wouldn’t be uncommon for people to question your relationship and rumours of homosexuality may swirl around you. If you happen to both be straight and of opposite genders, I can safely assume that people refuse to believe that you are NOT a couple and insist you should be one.

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Except, for whatever reason, sometimes reasons you don’t know yourself, you aren’t a couple. Often, one of you, sometimes even both of you want to be, but some sort of fear holds you back. It might be as simple as fear that you will ruin what you have, or as complex as fear that people would not accept or understand your pairing that does not fit into the boxes they offer.

I have lived my life having serial monogamous almost relationships that I have called friendships. It could be because I am not heterosexual and these friendships are an attempt to have relationships with women as far as possible within the context of marriage and sexuality. This pattern predates those obvious constraints though. Could it be a pattern I developed to explore closeness with other girls before I was even consciously aware of sexuality? That makes sense, but what of the women who do not share any homosexual tendencies? Why do they participate in such pairings with me… or with each other?

I can’t say I know for sure, although I would like to, if any of you know. What I can say is that these almost relationships are as painful as they are pleasurable and they almost always end, the same as relationships do, I suppose, until you meet that one person you are with forever. But this leaves me wondering if it is possible to meet that one person, in an almost situation?

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Not all of the friendships have died, but eventually the intensity dies. The connection just isn’t the same and the feeling of closeness and togetherness is eventually shattered in one way or another. Anything from circumstantial changes, to emotional ones can alter the dynamic. And when these changes start happening, it is nothing short of agonising. Sometimes it is only then that you may question if the term friendship was strong enough to describe your relationship when your pain appears to outweigh it rationally?

There have been times where I knew that I would have liked to share more with them, but most of the time this is an unspoken thing on both sides that you just love each other at full capacity, well….. almost!  

These connections can be somewhat intoxicating, impossible to resist, and although the people in them don’t want to continue this pattern because of the pain it brings, time and time again the reward outweighs the risks. As they develop, people get so lost in them that they don’t even realise that it is happening again. Until it ends.

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Should these people just stay out of the water and not share deep emotional connections with friends because it is too risky? Or should they accept that sometimes you get dunked, but riding the waves is too fun and they haven’t died yet? I’m not sure.

What I personally have learnt along the way is never to have only one. Although I referenced a monogamist approach, this is unwise. It is even unwise to have one that takes priority of place. I think you at least need to exploit the nonmonogamist fundamental concept of friendship and experience deep and meaningful connections with a range of people, and this should extend to having more than one potential plus one for an event in your mind.

Do you have one of these friendships? Is it consistent? Or something you fall back in and out of depending on your circumstance? More on that next week!

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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Boston Marriages

Last week I posted about Queer Platonic Relationships. That is, the pairing of two people presenting as a couple regardless of sexual intimacy involved. This is not an entirely new concept.
Wikipedia describes a Boston Marriage as the historic cohabitation of two wealthy women, independent of financial support from a man. The term is said to have been in use in New England in the late 19th/early 20th century.

Historically the pairing was specific to women, assumed to be heterosexual, however choosing to couple with a female for the freedoms it offered her lifestyle. In modern times, the structure of the dynamic still thrives, however it is no longer limited to females. Any person, of any orientation may enter one with any other person of any orientation even if those orientations or identities would appear to put them at odds. Similarly, they can occur between 2 people between whom a romantic or sexual connection could be possible, however the distinction is generally that such a connection does not exist.

These partnerships operate as platonic couplings, however as I touched on in my last post, that does not diminish the strength of their bond, nor define how they communicate love and affection for one another. Each partnership is unique to the people or persons in it. However, they do identify it as their primary partnership for love and support if not also for affection. For example, the couple will generally expect to bring each other to family events such as weddings or holiday celebrations. They wish for the same privileges that sexual couples experience.

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Wikipedia reports that Boston Marriages were, in their time, a socially acceptable option for women, until approximately the 1920’s when suspicions arose about them being homosexual pairings. I can only assume this is around the time that homosexuality among women was beginning to be recognised and frowned upon. I personally have to wonder if this had anything to do with men feeling put out by the new freedoms of the working women and not needing to take a husband for financial support, and fear perhaps that they would no longer be needed!

Regardless, it happened, and women started to shy away from such arrangements under social scrutiny, because also under scrutiny was their love and affection for one another. Before such scrutiny was cast upon them, romance between women in their friendships was actively encouraged, not just accepted. It was considered “training for marriage: as girls would kiss, hold hands, share a bed and be openly affectionate. (Source)

Letters from the era, and later books such as those of Jane Austen are open examples of such friendships, with women expressing their feelings towards each other in terms we would now widely consider to be uncomfortable, if not incompatible or even inappropriate ways to express platonic love. However, in the modern day queer platonic pairings, the people involved may well share a bed, hold hands, kiss on the lips and exchange “I love you” quite regularly.

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Why do we assume this makes a connection sexual in nature, and why, even if it does, is that important? As I referenced in my last post, many many marriages settle in a deeply loving but non sexual place anyway, and it isn’t the business of any outsider to know the details. If they are not having sexual relations on the dinner table at Christmas for example, why does that factor alone make them more worthy of a place around it?

Perhaps it is our obsession with monogamy that makes it seem more worthy? Because queer platonic relationships can and do stretch out into the realms of open marriage or polyamory. This is because although they deem each other to be their significant life partner, they often do entertain romantic or sexual connections outside of the partnership. I can only deduce that our inability to separate love and sex plays into this.

As a society, the assumption tends to be that if a person is having 2 relationships, one of a sexual nature, and one of a non-sexual nature, that the sexual one trumps the non-sexual one in some way, but why is this? Why is it unthinkable to maintain both relationships with equal importance, or even to give the platonic connection priority? I wonder why this is unthinkable when so many studies have recently shown that women would rather isolate with their best female friend than their partner, or that we prefer the company of our friends in general! Not far behind is the new emergence of the bromance, indicating many men may feel the same way as women and prefer their own company for social interaction.

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Surely we can all by now accept that even when 2 people who have the potential to become sexual are friends, based on their preferences, that we aren’t always attracted to that person and that alone is a good enough reason not to act in a sexual manner. However that does not mean we cannot love and value that person in a very high manner?

As someone who has found their identity to be somewhat ambiguous sexually, I can assure you that does not mean I have not loved, and the value of those connections has never been based on the sexual component. I believe I could live happily with a partner without a sexual component, and why that should have to be questioned baffles me. I also don’t feel I should, or that I do prioritise my husband above any of the other relationships in my life. Friendships are relationships! They are warm and loving and fun and affectionate. (Then again, it is also not lost on me that I write this blog not due to my success at friendships! haha So maybe there is value I fail to see in keeping them so separate?!)

However I know this is an unpopular stance. A Boston Marriage or queer platonic pairing may not be right for you, and that is fine. The point of this piece is to address that they exist, they are real and they matter and question why the taboo? And why it is our business how they interact to help us place them in a category we respect and understand?

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Love is love. I love each and every one of my friends, irrespective of attraction or lack thereof. We should spend less time worrying about who loves who and how, and pay closer attention to those among us incapable of love at all!

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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Queer Platonic Relationships – What are they? Are you in one?

In line with GALentines Day or PALentines day tomorrow, I wanted to write a post about the importance of platonic pairings and validate the strong bonds of friendship which are just as likely (if not more so) to last a lifetime!

Queer Platonic Relationships (QPR’s) are not well-known or spoken about in our society, however they are more common than you think. So common in fact, that you might even be in one and not even know?! Before you click away from this article because you do not identify as queer, let me explain.

Queer platonic relationships can exist between 2 queer people, however they can also exist between any 2 people of any orientation.  My understanding or interpretation of the term is that they are queer in that they are not understood as the typically accepted romantic pairing.  In a well defined QPR 2 people acknowledge their pairing to be of significance and priority despite the platonic nature of their connection. 

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People in existing QPR’s may or may not have external romantic connections, sexual partners and or any other type of relationships. However they choose to be in some way monogamous to a friendship as their primary life partner. They may live together, raise children or animals together, share finances or any other means of partnership usually associated with a married couple for example.

They may be 2 heterosexual women, an asexual woman and a gay man, a heterosexual man and woman or any other pairing that could exist. The point is that they do not define their relationship as romantic but it is the primary relationship. However, I think people are sometimes hesitant to label or discuss it openly – at times, even with each other.

Do you live with your best friend? Do you share finances? Do you automatically know when you need a plus one that this person will be your date? Maybe it isn’t your best friend, or it is but it is technically a sibling, a parent or another relative? Family pairings of this nature are quite common. 2 sisters living together and raising their children as a unit for example?  It may have started as a way to save costs, and ended up being everything you didn’t know you wanted or needed. Sure, maybe you both have a lover on the side, but actually, you can’t imagine ever not living with this person. You’re happy with your life in this manner, however unconventional it seems. This works for you.

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When the party involved is not a relative, there is sometimes the potential; that it could develop into a romantic relationship, however the general premise is that it doesn’t and never will. The idea is that the lack of physical or sexual intimacy is one of the strengths of the pairing, that they choose each other because platonic love is real and it matters and it is in many ways less complicated….. or is it?

The problem with QPR’s, apart from the fact that they aren’t acknowledged or supported as legitimate partnerships, even if they survive a lifetime, is that when they are not discussed openly between the 2 people, sometimes expectations may differ. Although each of them may talk about the arrangement continuing happily forever, without a real discussion about commitment to that idea, one party may actually still be open to starting a new life with a romantic partner should they meet one who wants this, which can leave their platonic partner blindsided, lost, heart broken and alone.

Not only does this person feel these things, if they have not declared their relationship status as a priority, then it is likely they will also face these feelings alone and be shamed if they attempt to express themselves. Society has this way of minimising friendships and making people feel like they are being dramatic or unkind if they lose a friend to a relationship. And for the person left, it IS a loss. Those feelings are real and valid and they matter. QPR’s are hard to come by actually, so if that is your preferred partnership style, not only may it take years to recover, you may actually never re-partner which is sad.

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I want to bring attention to these relationships to validate them and to encourage these conversations. Within the partnership itself, and within their family networks to respect the place of the partner as a platonic partner. And also among the general community because these pairings aren’t invisible, we just tend to fail to acknowledge them.

I’d like to add that the friends in question may not live together, that was purely an example for the article’s sake. They may have individual lives, however the point is that they do have a plus one in this life which shouldn’t be minimised based on the lack of sexual intimacy. Many married couples afterall end up quite comfortably in this category. Just because they were once intimate (we assume) does not make any real difference does it? QPR Partners do often, (although not always) express affection and love towards one another in similar ways to other couples despite the platonic nature of their relationship. (More on that to come soon!)

So let us all acknowledge all relationships and respect our partners and each other. Friendships are relationships if you like it or not. About time we treated them that way don’t you think?

Happy GALentines/PALentinest day for tomorrow folks, don;t forget those yellow roses. In line with Covid, let’s go digital this year, image below! Forward it to your friends tomorrow!

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

Just crop out the bottom if you want to use this image!

Just crop out the bottom if you want to use this image!

 

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Judging Versus Perceiving Personality Types; PART 2; Can We Be Friends…. With Each Other?

Ok, so last week we discussed the differences between the judger and the perceiver and what that means for us. What it means for our friendships however, is that we will frustrate one another quite significantly.

As a judger type, I know I frustrate my perceiver friends. I ask them too far in advance to lock in plans, and they are either reluctant because they cannot think that far in advance, or they are willing but resentful and will be just as likely to cancel anyway because the time of my suggestion seemed so far into the distant future they just assumed it would work out. When it doesn’t, they don’t think it is a big deal to change their plans.

This, in turn frustrates me no end as a judger. Why would I go to such extremes to book things in with you so far in advance if your attendance was not important, or if the plans weren’t important? Some things need to be booked and paid for in advance, and I expect if you have agreed to attend, and I have purchased tickets for us that you will infact treat it as important enough to remember and show up.

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So the question remains, when we are so fundamentally different, how can we be better friends for each other? I know I have blogged before about some of my friends offering feedback about my inflexibility and now this is really making sense to me in ways that it didn’t quite penetrate before. It doesn’t matter if we end up having lunch at the local pub instead of the café, if we are still having lunch, I should let it go and roll with it, without unnecessary comments about the plan. Haha

What my perceiver friends need to understand is that there is a reason it was important to me. If I suggested the café, there was a reason for it. Maybe it has a playground for my kids that the tavern doesn’t have, or maybe it does the vegan menu that someone accompanying us will love. Added to which, if we all agreed on the café, you better believe I looked at the menu, decided what I was going to order and probably brought only around that amount of money, because I live by a budget. If the tavern is more expensive, yes, I can put it on the card, but I still have to then sit down and rebalance everything to make that work.

All of this doesn’t mean I can’t be flexible, I can be and I should be, but it is easier on me if you acknowledge why this will be a concern and not just call me inflexible. In return I should acknowledge that when you are flaky it isn’t always your fault. If your family frequently makes last minute requests for your time and you are a people pleaser, I should acknowledge that I know it isn’t personal when you change plans, but that you have found yourself in a bad position letting everyone down somewhat in an effort to please everyone.

Remember this is true on both sides, and you are both probably frustrated.

Remember this is true on both sides, and you are both probably frustrated.

Ultimately neither of us can or will change who we are or how we live, nor how the people impacting us live, but this understanding of the position of the other person goes a lot further than frustration in helping the situation. As I prefer absolutes, don’t agree to plans with me on your grandmother’s birthday even though you are fairly sure her party wont be on the actual day. Because murphy’s law says if you make plans with me she will celebrate that day, and of course, you will have to go. But I will be annoyed you didn’t think of that BEFORE you said yes. However, if the plan is we have to see the 9pm movie instead of the 7pm movie to accommodate this birthday, I should be cool with that and accept that it isn’t ideal, it will impact my morning walk, but that is my problem and isn’t more important than Grandma’s 90th birthday party.

When I take time to reflect why so many of my friends are perceivers, it is probably because we are more compatible than we think. Perceivers like that I take control, make the plans and they just show up and have a good time. I like that when life throws a spanner in the works and I have to adjust made plans; that they are totally flexible and just go along with whatever I decide needs to happen instead.

When 2 judgers get close, each one wants to be the one making the suggestions, and gets resentful at helpful hints to change things somewhat to suit the other judger. Each one wants to impress the other with his or her knowledge of cool places or suggestions and it can become a competition of sorts. And each one would rather be in control of meeting when it suits him or her and not at the call of the other. It can be harder to co-ordinate.

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When 2 perceivers are friends, they can go a very long time without making contact at all. When they do make contact it is usually impromptu “I am in town, come to the local for a drink, I am there now?” If their friend is free, they are excited by the invitation. However they are just as likely not to show up and not call because they decided to do the washing first and then they got distracted doing something else. Plans are often forgotten, rescheduled perpetually or cancelled at the last minute.

So this means we’re more compatible with our opposite than our counterpart. But it doesn’t mean we can’t be better friends to our counterparts too.  For perceivers this means deciding to stick to a plan after the 3rd reschedule. It means putting reminders in your phone to contact that friend at least once a month and it means holding each other accountable for flakiness and silly excuses.

For judgers it means taking turns at making the plans and trying to enjoy the plans your friend made for you. Don’t criticise, make suggestions or talk about the time you did the same thing and it was better because…. Just enjoy it. Compliment their choices, appreciate the effort they went to and attempt to enjoy relinquishing control and responsibility. Trust them to know you can’t eat seafood and not to book a fish dinner. And if they do book one, ask for a salad and don’t make a big deal about it. One light meal wont kill you but a sour attitude will kill the ambience.

Only drive when you are in the drivers seat with the keys to the car.

Only drive when you are in the drivers seat with the keys to the car.

My best advice is this. If your friend is a judger, understand they would rather have no plans at all than plans that are unlikely to happen, and give as much notice as you can to any changes so they can process these and make allowances and be flexible for you. If your friend is a perceiver, treat plans with them as though they are penciled or tentative. Don’t pressure them to commit too far in advance and if you have to, always have a back up plan in mind.

It is ok for judgers to stand their ground and be inflexible when they need to be, and it is ok for perceivers to make changes when they need to. Sometimes these things happen. But judgers are at risk of saying it is easier not to have friends at all and perceivers are just as likely to end up with none because of their flakiness. So we really must try harder to understand each other and accommodate instead of asking each other to change totally.

One way is not better than the other, they can complement each other if we let them. So let’s all try to compliment our friends good points and what we can learn from them!

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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Judging Versus Perceiving Personality Types; PART 1; Which One Are You? What About Your Friends?

For those of you that don’t know, it is summer here in Australia, and the long hot school holidays are upon us! I have never professed to be the perfect mother, and I admit I find the holidays tedious and stressful as they stretch out for what feels like an eternity, even if it is only 6 weeks! The problem isn’t time with the children, as much as it is the stress that goes into planning these weeks.

I enjoy, or, perhaps, it has been a coping mechanism, or some combination of both factors, keeping us busy and social during the summer holidays. I have usually prepped for Christmas well in advance, so come November I can turn my attention to the tedious task of planning the time. Sitting down with the children and listening to what is important to them, such as sleepovers with friends and screen time, and where they want to visit, like ALL the waterparks and hotels etc…. is enough to slightly elevate your blood pressure alone! Haha

Once I have made note of their input, and we have decided on a fair compromise of activities and a balance of home time and social time, it is time for me to print the calendar templates and start penciling things in.  This step in of itself requires much research. What places are open what days? What times? What food places are nearby? Can I pack a lunch? Do I need sunscreen and bathers, or membership cards and coins? Then there is the budgeting aspect – taking into account entry prices, added with likely incidentals like food, drinks, snacks, paid photography opportunities or gaming machines for example.  This research and planning takes hours alone.

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Figuring out the logistics of it all is even worse. Friend A only has Friday’s off work, but wants to visit the place that your discount tickets (I always have discount tickets!) are only valid Monday to Thursday?! Or Friend B always babysits for her friend on Mondays, and wants to see you, but your kids are older and don’t have much interest in the same activities as the younger child? Or you usually see friend C on a Tuesday but the hotels were cheaper midweek, so you booked getaways those days and can only offer her a Thursday catch up? It is so difficult to navigate fitting everyone and everything in the right place that I am proud of my masterpiece when it is complete. I have planned which days we will go where with which people. I have scheduled sleepovers and home days and getaways. I have planned the meals around all of it and the prices and tickets. I have booked in advance everything that can be booked in advance and I finally feel prepared! Bring it on Summer Holidays, I am ready for you!

Have you heard the expression “In the beginning there was a plan, and the plan was good?” Well, that, ladies and gentleman is my reality! I know I have posted before about how much I love my friends that come together out of the woodwork like a social support network during this time, and also my frustrations at those same friends when they cannot keep their plans. I wont lie, it REALLY UPSETS me, changes to my plans! I feel invalidated and like they don’t respect my time. Either the time I took to make the plans or the time it will take to accommodate changes. No, we can’t just do next week instead, because I have plans with other people next week!

I have one friend in particular who really helps and supports me through the holidays. As she doesn’t have children of her own, she can be more flexible and available to tag along with us. Last year, she appointed me president of her social calendar and basically said “tell me when and where, and I will be there.” Except she wasn’t. Her brother’s wife returned to work after maternity leave, and that meant she was expected to have the baby any time her sister in law worked a shift. This meant movie tickets had to be refunded in favour of trips to the mini train stations, and waterparks were discarded in favour of indoor play centres. Where plans couldn’t be changed or abandoned, it meant I was watching the baby while she was off riding the rides with my kids as agreed for example. I noticed a pattern and gently enquired about the baby’s day care schedule! I thought I was well prepared to boycott the system this year, planning outings with this friend on days when the baby was at day care and leaving her free.

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Alas, my friend still ended up bringing the now toddler to a waterpark and making us work around his nap. She still changed a movie date because she ended up having her other nieces and nephews sleep over instead, and she still changed our climbing adventure, which I specifically needed her for, in favour of a camping trip. I understand my friend has strong family values and I love this about her, I don’t expect to be a priority, unless you have made plans with me first. In which case, I kinda do expect if you have said “tell me when and where and I will be there” that, you know, you will actually be there. Especially if you know I am relying on you to be there. This is fair. My friend knows I hate these changes, although I try to accommodate them I had to be very clear with her that these impromptu changes are pretty difficult for me to navigate.

Recently however, she brought the toddler with us to an outing and it was fine. Lovely even, and I had to wonder why I get so upset about things that don’t matter just because I planned it to be a certain way! As my oldest has Autism, I do have to schedule and he doesn’t like changes, however it was more than that, it was ME who also didn’t like them. Wondering if I too have autism, I googled why I find changes to plans so frustrating, and I came across articles referencing the Myers Briggs personality types; Judgers and Perceivers.

I, my friends, am a Judger. I cannot relax until I have done what I needed to do. Much of my thought goes into the future and planning for all possible outcomes. I have a school holiday schedule before they start until after they end. I have a budget always to a year in advance, and I get up early to do 10000 steps, even on holidays, so that it is done and I can relax. I cannot relax until I have done what needs to get done, and I know I am prepared for what needs to be done tomorrow too!

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My friend, actually, almost all my friends, appear to be perceivers. Plans make them feel locked in, whereas they prefer to keep their options open. They like to see how they feel on the day. They like to see what offers they get, and they are especially adaptable to change. They are flexible and confident they will get everything done, get to all the places without a plan, and don’t lose sleep over it if some things are missed.

Knowing this fundamental difference really helped me understand and tolerate these changes and accept my friends can’t help their nature any more than I can. Question is, can we be friends? And if we can, how can we be better for each other? Stay tuned next week to find out!

To find out what personality type you are, take one of their free tests here. Please note, in relation to the Perceiver or Judger type, these are usually listed last. Your type will have 4 letters, ending with a P or a J. If you are a judger you will see J and if you are a perceiver you will see a P. It is possible to have traits of both. For these specific personality types only try this test here from www.brainfall.com.

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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Conflict and Compromise

I am the first to admit that I tend to shy away from conflict and confrontation. The idea of it can be paralysing to the point that it is easier just to withdraw and walk away than actually have those hard conversations. However, as I have reflected here in that past, that tendency has not been helpful. You cannot resolve conflict if you won’t confront it.

That’s all very easy to talk about in theory. What isn’t as easy, is putting that theory into practise and putting your money where your mouth is. When I wrote that piece about confronting conflict, issues were brewing, but none had bubbled to the surface just yet.

Over time, that brew started to simmer, and I knew it was time to suit up for battle. Not having had much practise at confronting the issues head on, I am going to be honest and admit my first attempt was feeble. So feeble in fact the friend in question still seemed relatively unaware I had raised an issue and was continuing on as if everything was fine between us. I was conflicted by this, because ultimately things continuing on well was my desired outcome, however, our ideas on the health of our connection were quite different, and continuing was not a reflection of how I felt. I did not feel everything was fine. How would my friend know if I didn’t say anything more direct about it?

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Feeling frustrated that she had missed my first attempt ensured that my second attempt went down like a lead balloon too. I knew that I was not handling the conversation well and yet, I couldn’t seem to stop making it worse. My first mistake in this instance was attempting to have this important conversation via instant messaging.

In large part, my issue in our friendship was the lack of quality time we were sharing. Our friendship had become very activity focussed recently, and I was not feeling that connection that comes from spending time actually just talking and being present with one another. While I enjoyed the time my friend and I spent, and the activities we shared, I felt we weren’t being present with each other. My friend had been a large part of our everyday life over the past few years and this year circumstances changed and it led to a bit of a disconnect for me.

Curiously, my little implosion happened after a really lovely afternoon spent together when my friend stopped by impromptu and stayed for a few hours like old times. She texted what a lovely time she had, and instead of returning the sentiment, I took the opportunity to launch into a tirade on how it seemed to have been her choice recently to disengage in our casual company and conversation and I was beginning to think it was more about the activities for her. Naturally, my approach made my friend defensive and annoyed. She did apologise, and she did acknowledge her withdrawal, but it seemed it wasn’t good enough for me. Once I got started, I couldn’t seem to stop. I don’t know what I thought I would achieve, but can only reason that perhaps I was trying to express the depth of my hurt, to get my friend to acknowledge not only that she had withdrawn but that I was wounded by this. Instead it just came across as nasty accusations. '

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Eventually my friend stopped reading or replying. To be fair to her, it was late at night by then and we both needed to sleep as we were obviously emotional and tired. However, it hurt me that this conversation wasn’t even important enough for my friend to lose any sleep over. I stayed up ruminating over how she might have responded to me if I was anyone else in her life, while she slept peacefully to escape her anger and resentment at me for actually asking her to start showing up to our friendship again. I eventually accepted that I couldn’t possibly know how she would respond to anyone else, nor could I know what she was feeling, how well she was sleeping or what she was thinking. So instead I considered her points, that things in both our lives had changed this year, and as a result of that circumstance she no longer had the time to devote to us. That she probably felt attacked and misunderstood and I may feel angry about that too in her position.

Above all else, I decided I had handled the conversation exceptionally poorly, so when the morning came, I acknowledged that and apologised, saying this was a conversation best had in person, if at all and that I did hear her perspective and it had merit. I had forgotten that we were 2 members of the same team, not opposing ones, and we shared a common goal – to make things better between us. I needed a reminder from my previous musings that people feel lonely because they build walls rather than bridges. That is essentially all I was achieving that night.

My friend took the opportunity to reassure me that she wanted to make our friendship meaningful to me again and suggested some ways to go about that. I was able to express that I would appreciate some effort on her behalf to make that time happen, without making the scheduled demands that I have been criticised for in the past. However it was hard to accept this effort on face value, because when you have to ask someone to make more effort, the unfortunate side effect of getting what you asked for, is not knowing if the other person wants to give it to you or if you’re only getting it reluctantly because you forced their hand, and they quietly resent you for it.

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This meant there was more work to be done. More understanding. More awkward painful conversations. During these conversations we had to really hear each other and validate the points each of us made. We had to remember one of us wasn’t “wrong” – that we could both be right. My friend was right when she said she didn’t have as much time to offer, and I was right when I said friendship requires you to make time. It’s about her making SOME time and effort, and me appreciating that time and effort. It’s about understanding the ways in which we feel connected to one another and accepting our fundamental concept of friendship differs.

I’ll be honest, at the time of writing this piece, I can’t say for sure if this friendship will endure, or if the season has passed. Even if we revive it, will we have what it takes to sustain it? It might never be what it was again, but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t good while it lasted or that it can’t still be meaningful in the future. Even if our attempts ultimately fail, we will both know we tried. I have said before if a friendship is painful enough to push you to the limits of walking away, it is probably worth saving, and this one is definitely worth trying at least.

On that note, I would like to thank my friend for stepping forward. I have noticed the extra effort, and it is enough. I don’t want to ask of you more than you can give. I don’t want you to resent these efforts as though they are not making a difference, because they are. I know you‘re still a bit angry and you know that I am still a bit hurt, but the good news is that an emotion shared is an emotion halved and we care enough to try and help each other let go of these emotions instead of continuing to lean into them and blame one another for them. The fact that I can come to you safely and trust you to work with me and not against me means everything and gives me much hope for our future. I hope you feel safe to do the same when the time comes, because I do love you, for whatever it is worth.

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

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PART TWO: Balancing Your Buddy Budget

Ok, last week I encouraged readers to view their friendships like a budget, (to read this post first, please click here) to carefully manage their investment to bring about the ultimate rewards. This week is about how to manage and balance that budget so it is not too restrictive, but equally doesn’t leave you in debt or all used up!

The budget should comprise of income and expenditure equally. What you would expect to spend or give of yourself to meet your needs, and what you would expect or hope to gain in return. As a general rule, these columns should be pretty equal. You can’t expect to give nothing and receive everything. Similarly you shouldn’t expect to give everything and receive nothing either.

I recommend that you make columns for the things you hope for. Humour. How many rows of humour you include in the column depends on how important sharing a laugh with a friend is to you. Other columns might include shared faith, values, political views or sharing of opinions, quality time spent relaxing, time spent on activities or going out, active time, deep or personal conversation, and even a column for truth, bluntness or alternatively gentleness and kindness, and if it is important to you, acts of service. This means how much you expect a friend to do helpful things for you to help you out. (Examples include babysitting, grabbing things at the shops for you if you are there, helping plan for a party, driving you places when you need a ride etc…. things that are of benefit to you and make you feel like the person cares enough about you to do them although there may be no direct benefit to them to do these things for you.)

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For me personally, I probably do want all these things and more in equal measure, however I have 5 different spreadsheets. While one person may give me 60% humour, 10% personal conversation, and 30% acts of service, and other friend might offer 90% personal connection and conversation and 10% humour. So over the 5 spreadsheets I have 100% balance, and each need has 100% been met, albeit by different friends at different times.

This method requires you to be acutely aware of what each person you call a friend is offering you and what they are getting from you in return. Sometimes what you are giving isn’t always the same as what you are getting in return. Sometimes it is. For example, the friend who is giving 60% humour, might be asking for in exchange 60% acts of service. So they make you laugh all the time, but in return they seem to ask you for a lot of personal favours. It really is unique to each person if this equation balances for you. Personally I require more depth and connection than humour to balance acts of service. I need to feel quite close to someone to lighten the burden. Other people prefer acts of service and feel burdened by heavy conversation.

There is no right or wrong way to be, as long as you are aware of how each connection balances for you, and allow room for some flexibility when life gets in the way of someone’s ability to offer what they usually do. If your equations balance, then you are already wealthy. However, how do you ensure you have enough left over for aforementioned flexibility?

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Invest. As friendships grow, we invest minimally, but regularly and consistently to test their potential. As time passes, we decide if it has the potential to grow, if it has reached it’s full potential already, or if we think it wasn’t a good investment to begin with. It is important to note that just because one person wasn’t a good investment for you doesn’t mean they wouldn’t be great for someone else. That also translates to understanding that you might not be a wise investment for someone either, and that is ok. Better not to throw good money after bad either way.

Anyway, as I was saying, if you feel the friendship has the potential to grow, you invest a little more and a little more. Over time, you will find that the friendship starts paying off slightly more rewards than you ever imagined possible. And that is where the credit comes in. That is where you draw the strength to give a little more at times when they need it and don’t have as much to give. Equally it is where they get the credit to be forgiving of your times when you have less to offer. Because the friendship has reached a point of mutual reward, where the investment means enough to both of you that you would rather not stop investing.

Sometimes we do stop investing, we don’t give the friendship the time and effort and attention it needs, and slowly the monthly account keeping fees eat away at the funds. If you don’t keep an eye on this, one of you might ask for more that the other has to give. This will certainly apply a strain and you will feel the tension. That simply means you need to invest more. Regardless of who made the big withdrawal, you need to reinvest more, and hopefully your friend will follow.

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You can’t let your account get into the red. It wont last long if you do. The minute you feel that it is in the red, you must act if you wish to save it. Of course, people change, friendships change and you might decide you want to invest elsewhere instead. It is ok to close your friendship accounts, just make sure you do the mental maths a few times to be sure this is really what you want to do. It’s not impossible to reopen a closed account, but you wont likely transfer whatever balance you had, and starting from scratch again so it can feel like a much riskier investment the second time around if it ultimately failed the first time

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Friendships are hard sometimes, but it’s maths, not magic! Ok, maybe it’s a little of both?! Hope so, because friendships are magical if you invest in the right people!

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

 

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Is friendship like money, hard to make and even harder to keep?

My close friends will happily tell you how I live by our budget. I have a spreadsheet, multiple actually and I spend hours on it, carefully doing the numbers to see how a purchase today will impact us in a year from now, or alternatively the benefits of cutting back in one column to another and vice versa. Naturally, the first step is finding an income source, and then working the budget to maximise your potential. This is possible if you earn more or less, as long as your income source is rich enough to cover your minimum living expenses and needs. I like to think of friendships in the same way.

Some of us are lucky enough that we have some form of inbuilt government support pensions from the get go. In terms of friendships this may be a neighbour you grew up with, your mother’s best friend’s kid or old school mates. The friends you made before you even realised that making friends was a thing and actually not an easy thing! Those of us lucky enough to still have these connections into adulthood are definitely going to have a healthier budget in the black than those without. If you are starting from scratch, seeing your numbers in the red can add a sense of pressure to finding those base core friendships.

For some this pressure will be more helpful than for others, however, making friends as an adult can be daunting and difficult either way. However all is not lost. Your friendship budget starts with you and with the qualities you feel make a friendship a healthy, strong and rewarding one. So that is where you begin! Make a mental list of those qualities and practice what you preach! Everybody will have a slightly different list depending on lifestyles and values.

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One person might value lots of time and attention, another person may value independence and low maintenance. One person may find it important to share hobbies and activities whereas another may think it is more important to share values or circumstances. For some people their list varies depending on the friend in question and they might have multiple spreadsheets to manage too!

Once you have your list, or lists, as the case may be, in mind, you can start looking around your world for people who might meet those criteria, and finding ways to grow your friendship with them outside of whatever context you already know them. If shared values are important to you, then extending an invitation to a coffee after church might be your avenue, whereas if shared interests are more your thing, inviting someone over to watch the game on the weekend might be a better option. If you’re like me, and you like to really talk to people and connect with them, the best way to go about this is to actually open up a little and share something of yourself that is a little deeper to let that person get to know you and see if they are interested enough to follow up with more support, conversation or questions, or if they also share something more personal in return.

Once you have your base group, I recommend a circle of around 5 people, but the number is ultimately up to you, (you’ll know when you feel fulfilled enough to stop searching for new friends) it is time to invest in the friendship. That means assessing your life and seeing how much effort you could potentially put into your friendships and what rewards you may reap from that investment. Initially this is a mental challenge for your eyes only. This is paper, not practice, yet.

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Look at your life, your responsibilities, your time and how you spend it. If you spend hours scrolling on your phone each day anyway, then you might like someone who is messaging you while you do so. If however you can’t be on your phone the majority of the day except your time off on the weekends, then a friend who is equally busy during the week, but loves to catch up for a drink or whatever on the weekend is a good match. Now, for arguments sake, let’s pretend you only make one new friend and you decide you’re going to make them your priority every weekend, all weekend. Will the benefits and risks of doing that balance? You might love the idea or hate it, but will it burn you out? In which case the rewards are not great enough for that level of investment. On the other hand, if you love the idea, is the risk too high that this person may change circumstances and leave you high and dry? If so, the risk is too big for that level of investment. Is this making sense? You need to assess how much time, energy and effort you are willing to invest to achieve the level of satisfaction you desire. No more, and no less. Maybe we would all like a friend who requires nothing from us, however gives us everything we need when we need it and quietly disappears when we don’t without issue. Sadly that is not the way friendships work. You will get back what you put in just like everything else. Increased effort equals increased income! If you invest in the right people that is!

How much do you have to give in return for what you hope to receive? Tune in next week for the tips on how to manage your buddy budget to get the best results!

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

investment in friendship pays the best interest.jpg

New Year, New Friends?

Happy New Year Friends! This year I want to remain open to newer connections for friendship. Now that the kids are gaining more independence, and I have left the workforce, my opportunity for meeting new people is getting smaller or harder to stumble upon less purposefully. However, a few months back, a fellow blogger, Claire from www.datingsidekick.com reached out and shared an article of hers with me about Stashing. (Click the link to read it, it’s awesome and relatable.)

Stashing is another recent dating phenomenon, closely related to ghosting, gas lighting and orbiting etc…..  It is kind of like an affair I suppose, in that it appears you are essentially a hidden aspect of their life. Nobody who knows them would know you exist, there is almost no trace of you at all in their life…. While this is uncommon in platonic pairings, it isn’t completely unheard of.

Essentially, there are only 2 real reasons I can think of, romantically or platonically that would explain the situation….  Either there would be negative consequences for one or both of you should your friendship be discovered, such as strict workplace rules around dating colleagues, or forbidden matches such as doctors and patients becoming too personal and causing a blurred boundary. It might be something less formal but equally discouraged like 2 employees of rival companies for example. The less attractive reason would be that one or both of you is ashamed of the other. They do not feel like the people in their lives would accept you. Maybe shame isn’t always the right word for it. Say you are of a particular race or religion and one’s usual circle tends to be discriminatory against whatever category you fall into, it wouldn’t fit to say that they are ashamed of you exactly, but true none the less that it may feel true even if it isn’t quite accurate from their perspective.

I can’t say I encourage these pairings, it is damaging and triggering to the person being hidden. Added to which if you are doing something you cannot be open and honest about, that is usually a pretty good indicator that you shouldn’t be doing it, or that you should at least respect that person enough to show them that you do own it! Whatever IT is.

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For further signs, reasons or possible explanations, do refer to Claire’s post. I don’t think either of us need to tell you what to do about it, but Claire basically said it in her post and I will say it again here….. You teach people how to treat you. You cannot continue to allow this behaviour if you want it to stop. You deserve better. And all the other stuff Claire says!

I don’t need to write a huge piece about it, because Claire has already covered that. What I did want to add is that I can understand that this secrecy adds an illusion of greater intimacy. You are sharing a naughty secret, and overlooking that the secret is you! (Or someone you profess to care for.) The forbidden fruit is not a new concept, and although it is less common in friendships than relationships it is still easy to get caught up in, particularly if you have low self-esteem.

Friends are meant to be the people who lift you up, who cheer you on, who are proud of you even if you are different, loud or embarrassing. That does not mean you have to be actively involved in their life in all the ways. As a friend, you may not always meet the family or work colleagues. Although the longer you are friends the more likely it is that these things will naturally happen anyway. You may not always connect on social media, for whatever reason. But if someone never wants to go out in public with you, or constantly makes excuses as to why you have to be isolated in their world and doesn’t want to integrate you into any part of their lives even if they are happy to take up space in yours, then Claire is right. You’re being used.

And that is just as rampant in friendships as relationships…. Maybe even more so! It is not ok. If your feelings tell you that you are being used, regardless of how much your head tries to talk you out of believing it or how much the other person denies this, trust your gut!

From the awesome Facebook page of Melanie Tonia Evans at https://www.melanietoniaevans.com/

From the awesome Facebook page of Melanie Tonia Evans at https://www.melanietoniaevans.com/

Anyway, the point of this post wasn’t stashing, it was making new friends. So although I was hesitant and a bit slack in offering Claire the support she requested, this is part of my new year’s resolution to make new friends, and be open to new connections the universe brings my way. In her communication to me, Claire seemed like a genuinely funny and warm person, and I really enjoyed hearing from her. (I admit she had to pester me a bit to make this happen!) Sorry about that Claire. If you like this post, I hope you will reciprocate the sentiment and write a post directing your awesome readers to my posts too. But more than that, I would love to hear from you again.

Maybe we can help each other, or maybe not, but the offering of friendship is there regardless! Thanks for getting in touch and I wish you great success!

This year, I will join a friendship swiping app, reach out to more people online, perhaps take a class or join a hobby group and whatever other ways I can think of and report back on the success or failure of these pursuits to make new friends. I might even go back to the café where I met a delightfully charming older gentleman writing a movie. Keeping an open mind will be key!

What are your resolutions this year? To be fair, even without them, surely this year has to be better than the last? Out with the old and in with the new! Ok, bad advice for friendships but 2020 was truly toxic!

❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx

 

image from https://joygoesnatural.tumblr.com/page/3

image from https://joygoesnatural.tumblr.com/page/3