Why ‘Friends Forever’ Is Not As True As It May Seem

Remem­ber back when we were school kids and the most impor­tant thing was the num­ber of friends we had? With­out ten or more friends, you were noth­ing in the social hier­ar­chy that came with sec­ondary school. This kind of mind-set was only tre­bled when Face­book came crash­ing in to our lives and com­pli­cated the term ‘friend­ship’ once more. Peo­ple quickly went from wor­ry­ing how many real-life friends they had to out-doing each other in the num­ber of vir­tual ones they could collect.

Back in the day, the glo­ri­fied num­ber of friends seemed impor­tant but as we grow older, we come to real­ize that it is not the quan­tity of friends but the qual­ity of friend­ship. Times have changed since I was a naïve twelve-year-old girl who enjoyed the 1000+ Face­book friend­ships. Now I’d give any­thing to reduce my Face­book friends to fewer than 400 peo­ple and erase those who fill my news­feed with irrel­e­vant non­sense, which stops me from see­ing worth­while posts from peo­ple that I actu­ally care about.

Why are we still ‘friends’ with peo­ple that we’re really no longer ‘friends’ with or have only spo­ken once to in our lives? This false online friend­ship masks the real­ity of the sit­u­a­tion – friends sim­ply drift­ing apart. With both par­ties fully aware of their fiz­zling friend­ship but no one admit­ting it.

My over-crowded news­feed is filled with peo­ple cling­ing on to out­dated friend­ships for fear of being iso­lated or alone. The con­stant “miss you babe, let’s hang out soon” posts that are clearly just empty promises offered for good will. If we think about how much we have changed since high school, we real­ize how nat­ural it is for friend­ships to change too.

Most kids join the ‘pop­u­lar kids,’ with the belief that their num­ber of friends pre­vents them from ever being alone. But in real­ity, sur­round­ing your­self with peo­ple doesn’t nec­es­sar­ily remove feel­ings of lone­li­ness, in fact, it mag­ni­fies them. As a teenager, bat­tling with grow­ing up can be tough enough, but when you revolve your life around cer­tain friends for so long, change seems like the hard­est thing of all.

Peo­ple walk in and out of our lives to teach us, sup­port us and make mem­o­ries with us, but only a cer­tain few will stick with us – so don’t panic, that’s OK. It doesn’t mean we have to erase all the mem­o­ries we shared with those peo­ple we’re let­ting go of or ques­tion friend­ships – no you’re not a heart­less bitch, that’s just life. We grow up, we move on and we evolve. We make new friends to make new mem­o­ries within new chap­ters of our lives.

Leav­ing for col­lege is one fail-safe way of real­iz­ing who your real friends are – who actu­ally both­ers to keep in touch as you each go off on sep­a­rate adven­tures. You find out who sticks around when you dis­ap­pear off of the radar for two weeks because you’re too busy try­ing to find time to sleep amongst dead­lines, intern­ing, work­ing and attempt­ing to have a life that you can’t return their calls. And when you do have five min­utes spare when you’re up to your eye balls in stress, chances are the top five peo­ple on that call list will tell you a lot about who your true friends are.

Of course friend­ships, like any other rela­tion­ship are a two-way street and they do require thought, care and sen­si­tiv­ity to grow or even be sus­tained, but they def­i­nitely shouldn’t be a has­sle. The moment you have to leave seven voice­mails and 50 text mes­sages in an attempt to arrange a cof­fee date for the sixth time that month – you should ask your­self if it’s worth the time.

Don’t try and resist the change and don’t waste time cling­ing on the ‘good times’ because that could be time spent cul­ti­vat­ing new and excit­ing friend­ships in the next chap­ter of your life. When I finally let go of some of mine, I fell in to the best friend­ships I’ve ever had – that fit me where I am in my life.

Along with your fam­ily, your friends are the con­stant rock in your life – so choose wisely. They will be there through the good, bad and drunk times. When the boyfriends and girl­friends come and go, leav­ing behind a trail of heartache, destruc­tion and despair – your friends should be right there pick­ing up the pieces with a tub of ice cream and a ton of rea­sons why he wasn’t the right guy for you anyway.

Per­haps we were all a bit hasty with the phrase we coined at pri­mary school – friends for­ever – more often than not it’s a promise both par­ties won’t be able to keep. Don’t spend your sum­mer chas­ing friends up and don’t ever ques­tion the num­ber of friends you have, because there comes a time that we learn not to count the num­ber of friends, but the num­ber of friends you can count on.

 

Arti­cle Writ­ten By: Geor­gia Far­quhar­son via ReadUnwritten.com 

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