Here’s the thing about friendship: it can be felt but not seen. It can be heavy or light or big or small, yet it can’t be measured. It can be for a lifetime or a short time, as it cannot be predicted. It can be broken but not touched. It can be expressed in many different ways, and can even exist with very little expression at all.
If you have read my blogs for long enough, you will know that I do consider myself to be a good friend. I certainly try to be. That isn’t to say everyone agrees with me. I know for a fact that there are women out in the world who would scoff at this statement. Because another thing about friendships is that no 2 are the same, and it is less the person giving the gift of friendship, and more the person receiving it, who gets to deem it as good or bad.
Not to imply that we do, or should, walk around rating each other! We shouldn’t. My point is only that while we ourselves might think we are being a good friend, that doesn’t always mean it is being received that way, or that it will make our friend reciprocate in kind. But essentially I don’t think any of us out there are intentionally walking around purposefully trying to be a bad friend. If such a thing even exists.
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The problem I encounter in trying to be a good friend, is that I inadvertently make my friends feel like they aren’t as good a friend to me, as I am to them. There may be a plethora of reasons for this, starting with how deeply I value friendships, right down to nitty gritty details like a lack of time. I am the first to admit that I have more time to devote to friendships. This means I have more time to plan a girls weekender or girls night out. It means I can put more time, therefore more thought into gifts and I am more available to provide assistance by means of acts of service. So when my more time poor friends buy me something less thoughtful at the last minute, they might feel less than, in comparison.
As I said before though, it isn’t them who gets to decide if they are a bad friend. Sure it might be the case that they literally bought me a cinema gift card at the grocery store on their way to my house that night, but to me, the promise that we will spend some time doing something I love, like going to the cinema, is a wonderful thoughtful gift. So they might compare and feel they are less good, while I haven’t compared and even if I did, wouldn’t find them to come up short.
Friendship isn’t meant to be a competition after all. We are meant to give and take what we can, when we need to, and not always expect the scales to be in perfect balance. Because I have more time than most of my friends, it tends to mean I need less from them in terms of friendship favours, and more from them in terms of quality time. Sure, I will take in and collect your dry cleaning on Wednesday, if that might mean you don’t have to do it on Saturday and we can go do something fun together instead… you know?
What is interesting though, is that this makes my friends feel guilty that they are asking me to do something menial like their dry cleaning, and it makes them feel obligated to then use the time it has saved them with me. In turn, this sense of obligation can lead them to feel resentful, and can lead me to feel both needy and used. And it’s all a bit silly, because we need each other just as much, or as little, even if we need each other for different things somewhat. We are still a team.
If I remember their kids birthday, they feel terrible that they didn’t remember mine. Meanwhile, it’s not like I am putting heaps of effort into remembering, I just value remembering, so I use my phone reminders and paper diary to prompt my memory. I do not keep any one of my friends at the forefront of my mind, even if it appears to most of them that I do keep them right there. And just because I remember, doesn’t mean I expect them to remember. All I want from them is that they make effort to stay and keep in touch and make that face to face time once in a while.
It really all does come back to those pesky love languages, and the point is that we don’t always show love in the same languages in which we like to receive love. I love giving gifts for example, because my mother used gifts as a love language when I was young (and even now, really) so it is a lesson I have learned on how to show love. That said, she will be the first to admit, it was time and attention I was always seeking, and so this is the best way I receive love.
I don’t think my friends intend to make me feel needy either, any more so than I intend to make them feel like less good, or even bad friends. It just so happens that the thing I desire most from them is the hardest thing for them to offer – and most of you will understand this, because really, who isn’t short of time?
So what is the solution to this conundrum? How can we be good friends to each other without inadvertently making each other feel less than in one way or another? It comes through understanding and believing the best in our friends. I understand if a friend gets busy and forgets my birthday, even if I planned an elaborate celebration for theirs. I know they just got busy and they have things going on and it isn’t about me or a sign that they don’t care about me. And I need them to understand that the reason I remember is because I have more time, not because I am inherently better at friendship than them in any way. I understand that because they are time poor, friendship has to be a lower priority than they would prefer, coming second to work and romance and family affairs. I need them to understand that because I am not so busy, I do value friendships more highly and crave more time together.
It is never an unwritten contract that if I help friend x do this then friend x owes me time next weekend. Nor is it the case that if friend x spends time with me then I am obligated to say yes to every request for acts of service or give them a mountain of gifts for their upcoming birthday. I love them the ways I do, and they love me in the ways that they do, and that is valuable.
It isn’t a competition or a comparison. It is a companion.
❤ Love,
Your Best Friend ForNever
xx