Writing about friendships for the A to Z Blog Challenge shouldn’t be much of a challenge, says the woman who has only typed eleven words on the topic so far. Still, I can think of many sitcoms built entirely around friendships—Cheers, Seinfeld, Friends, Sex and the City, How I Met Your Mother, and The Big Bang Theory to name a few of my favorites. (That should tell you something about what I look for in a friend.) The characters in those shows are flawed and quirky, but sitcom writers don’t create them in a vacuum. They pull from real life and enlarge the flaws so we can’t miss the stereotypes we might meet in our own lives. Somewhere in my archives I even compared fellow residents in my continuum care community to Carrie, Miranda, Charlotte, and Samantha (Sex and the City.) I could easily do the same with the other shows.
Jess C. Scott wrote, “Friends are the family you choose,” and it would be hard to disagree. But since moving into my CCC, I’ve noticed how loosely some people use the word friend. I’ve been introduced that way by people who don’t know the first thing about me beyond the fact that I started the First Thursdays Desserts Only Club. If I were introducing someone here, I’d probably say, “This is so‑and‑so. She started the line dancing group,” or whatever fact I can tag the person with. Hearing “This is my friend, Jean,” never fails to make me wonder what makes us friends. If you don’t know a person’s last name, that’s an acquaintance in my book. But I suppose it would sound cold to introduce me to someone’s son or daughter with, “This is my acquaintance, Jean.” Not that I would care.
Experts say there are four types of friends: acquaintances, casual friends, close friends, and lifelong friends. I’d add situational friends—work friends, school friends, neighborhood friends. People we don’t see outside the bubble where we’re thrown together.
Verywellmind.com defines a good friend as “someone who respects your boundaries, supports you, and brings out the best in you.” I agree, and I’d add that a good friend is someone you can laugh with, cry with and trust with your secrets, knowing they’ll keep them in a vault. I’ve been lucky enough to have a lifelong friend since kindergarten, and I’m guessing that’s rare. Had she not moved 656 miles away after college and getting married, we probably would have driven our husbands nuts with our giggle‑fests. Distance changed the way we interacted, but not the fact that our roots are tangled from growing up within view of each other’s houses. After she married, we became avid pen pals. Then when cell phones came along, ending long‑distance charges, we kept in touch that Way. Recently, after her sons moved her into assisted living, Nancy asked them to bring her some stationery and stamps so she could write to me again. Everything old is new again.
A few years after Nancy was no longer part of my daily life, I met my husband, and Don took her place as my best, best friend. We were together for 42 years, so I’m calling him my half‑a‑life‑long friend. (Take it up with the management if you think that’s absurd.) We knew each other’s faults and strengths and supported each other through thick and thin—an overused phrase, but I can’t think of a more poetic way to describe our relationship. And with him came a group of neighborhood friends. We could laugh together over Saturday‑night pizzas, but sharing secrets or sensitive information? Not on your life. But on the surface, I suppose, we looked like I sitcom.
One reason I’ve always loved sitcoms built around a group of friends is because I could live vicariously through them. Only once in my life did I have a friendship circle like that. After my husband died and I was spending time at the senior hall, they held an event called “Looking for Friends,” or something similar—an event that, under different circumstances, would have falsely marked anyone attending as an apathetic loser. (Think teenagers with fragile egos.) But we were widows, and we started meeting for lunch, then movies—yada, yada, yada. We shared a sense of humor, laughed at the same throw‑away lines and could toss our own right back. Then Covid came along and nearly dealt a death blow to the group. As they say, friendships change over time, and even the good ones have expiration dates.
I’d be remiss if I didn’t include another kind of friendship: the ones that grow across generations within a family. I’ve watched my two nieces become wonderful mothers and grandmothers. I’ve watched them grow into remarkable human beings. And I’ve been privileged to watch our relationships shift from niece‑and‑aunt to equal adults who are also friends. I’ve seen a few mother‑daughter duels that eventually make that same transition. It’s a wonderful kind of bond to have in one’s life.
Whatever form they take, friendships have a way of evolving right along with us. They change shape over the years, but they never stop shaping us. ©
Photo: The Gathering Girls trying to teach each other new tricks on our cell phones.

I treasure my friendships, but I do suspect that many if not most are situational. That’s okay though… still better to have them than not 🙂
ReplyDeleteWe've all had them...and enjoy them but somehow, once it's not easy to see them anymore, those friendship fade. But like you said, that's okay because we still can value their place in our lives when we needed them.
DeleteI appreciated this post. Someone in my life, briefly, had ticked all your friends qualities, then suddenly with no specifics, I was quite publically reduced to nothing more than an acquaintance, and made the villain at that. It's made me rethink many friendships, current, and past, and will likely remain guarded before letting anyone new breach beyond situational or aquaintence level friendship. My husband too had been my best friend and I'm incredibly lonely most days, but now, leery to expand my circle.
ReplyDeleteBoy, you put into words how I approach relationships in my CCC. We live in close knit circumstances where gossip travels fast either out of boredom or because as we age it's harder to keep what you are told to yourself. So I hold back a lot which means people don't get to know the real me. For example, no one knows that I blog and I want to keep it that way because this is where I bear my soul and secrets.
DeleteI know what you mean about the growth of friendship within family. I think my mother and I were best friends. My daughter and I are best friends. Real, true friendships are sometimes hard to find, but are to be treasured when they are there.
ReplyDeleteI think it's normal to have only one or two really close friends and if they happened to be family as well we are truly lucky.
DeleteFriendships can ebb and flow depending on what else is going on in one's life. I appreciate anyone who is kind and friendly to me even if they come and go.
ReplyDeleteThat's really a great attitude to have about friends. It's just life to have them come and go as we move, change jobs or they do.
DeleteFriendships are so important. I'm blessed to have a good tribe of close friends and many other friends across the nation....some are more emotionally close than others but I treasure them all and i'm happy I'm friends with my young adult daughters, too! I liked your post for the letter F.
ReplyDeleteMy friends are getting fewer and fewer as I age and they die off. It is what it is and that's a good reminder to value the ones still left.
DeleteI became friends with someone I met in second grade. Sixty years later, we're still friends.
ReplyDeleteAmazing. Especially since I don't owe him money.
One of the things that keeps friends friends is when you don't borrow or lend each other money. In my humble opinion.
DeleteAnd we are on completely opposite ends of the political spectrum. But, we realize our friendship is much more important than any of that nonsense.
DeleteAmen to that!
DeleteI am so lucky as to have a daughter/friend, and I agree that there is nothing better. A nice exposition about all the types. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
DeleteMy mom is 94 and still in contact with her best friend from HS. So far, they're both alive and cogent, which is kind of amazing to me.
ReplyDeleteLike you, I would consider my husband my best friend. I had a lifelong friend who ghosted me not long after our wedding. We had been friends since college, and it was (and still is, if I think about it) devastating. She saw me through thick and thin -- first marriage, divorce, single parenting, dating, etc. I sometimes think she must have liked me more when I had "problems" that she could fix. I tried multiple times to communicate and never heard anything back. So, like Sam above, I'm a little leery. But I do have a good number of people I would call friends, just not the kind that know your history and that you can bare your soul to. I guess those are rare. You are so lucky to have a friend since kindergarten!
Nothing better than having a spouse for a best friend.
DeleteSome people do feed off the drama of other people, which could have happened to your friend. Have you tried googling an obituary for her? Maybe she ghosted because she became one?
Haha. Yes, I google her regularly. So I know her mom died and her daughter got married, but not much more. Her husband also seemed jealous of our friendship, so I wonder if that was a problem over time. So I Google him, too, just wondering if I would hear from her if he died. Sounds cold, but it’s true.
DeleteI knew someone once who husband made her choice between him and her girlfriends. She picked him because she was financially dependent on him.
DeleteGood post. There should also be a type of friend who is someone a person only knows online, yet they're supportive and engaging. It's odd to think of friends as people we've never met, but there you are.
ReplyDeleteAlso, Quakers. They refer to themselves as Friends as part of their religious culture.
“I’ve learned that you shouldn’t go through life with a catcher’s mitt on both hands. You need to be able to throw something back.” – Maya Angelou
J (he/him 👨🏽 or 🧑🏽 they/them) @JLenniDorner ~ Speculative Fiction & Reference Author and Co-host of the April Blogging #AtoZChallenge international blog hop
You are absolutely right! Many of us online are more open and revealing about our feelings, etc and friendships do form. Important friendships.
DeleteAfter retirement I reconnected with my best friends from high school. We had kept up with each other over the years but work, children, husbands - we were busy. We are all exactly at the same point in life, the same struggles (age and illness) and I treasure this new time together.
ReplyDeleteI am privileged to have lots of friend groups, church friends, workplace friends, neighbor friends. I'm not sure if I fun to be around or just like to go out for lunch.
Old friends that can pick up where you left off, even years later, are the best. Glad you have that in your life.
DeleteLifelong friends are great, or so I've heard. (My childhood friends betrayed me in childhood, so those relationships didn't last.)
ReplyDeleteGreat essay on friendships. I'm too in a retirement community and learning a whole new meaning of the term friendship.
ReplyDeleteI didn't have many friends when I was younger and I really didn't really think about it or care.
DeleteWho wouldn't want to claim friendship with the person that created the desserts only club? I bet people are clamoring to bask in that glory!
ReplyDeleteI'm drawn to "found family" stories as well.
Great post!
Lori
Visiting from the A-Z Challenge
loribossert.com
We keep growing every month. It's really causal. we meet for lunch at noon on the first Thursday of the month. We sit at the same table and we have two rules: 1) We can only eat a dessert and 3) we can't have any regrets in doing so.
DeleteI remember the adage: A man is known by the company he keeps. Recently, I read another saying: If you can't figure out how good a person is, look at his friends.
ReplyDeleteI like that. And it's true.
DeleteI remember you writing about the Gathering Girls. Those gatherings always seemed like such fun. One of the reasons I don't leave my horrible red state, always No. 1 in passing hateful laws, is a group of friends we've made and that we see regularly. Well, and the two kids who live here, although honestly it's the friends more than the kids. I'm with you on the casual use of the term friend in introductions.
ReplyDeleteFaceBook has been a surprising way for me to reconnect with friends from high school and college. Since I "retired" so suddenly (I had a stroke while driving home from work) I didn't have any time to prepare and all my friends were really work friends who disappeared when I could no longer work. But FaceBook friends, many from high school and college, were approaching retirement age and have more time and fewer constraints, and I've renewed several friendships that, without FB, would have been impossible. It's been great to catch up and share grandchildren and reminisce and realize that we're older, but still the same.
ReplyDeleteI have stalked a few people from my past on Facebook but I haven't made any attempt to contact any, but I agree with you. Facebook is especially wonderful for what the world used to call shut-ins but are the elderly and disabled now. And great, also, for aunts and grandmothers who get to see so photos and events going on in extended family's lives.
DeleteJust read a book, Ordinary Time, where the author discusses in depth the importance of casual friendships in our lives. She makes her point very well. And partly influenced by her book, I think of more people as friends now. Perhaps it’s an outlook, to introduce a casual acquaintance as a friend means that here’s a person I wish well, she does the same for me, our approach to each other is friendly in nature, and our interaction, however slight, is pleasing.
ReplyDeleteI use the term loosely, but, in actuality, very few are Inner Circle folks and most are Situational. I have Industry 'Friends', Blog 'Friends', Neighbor 'Friends', and people I see fairly often in various Situations making them quite Situational and enjoyable. The Lifelong ones of coarse are ultra-Special and share more History and intimacy. Most have moved away or passed away now and I find I'm not looking for Replacements now at this Season of Life. I don't know what it will or would require of me to have someone 'New' and feel I'm not ready to make a commitment like that or investment. The Man is a Best Friend and luckily for me my Relationships with our Kiddos, both Generations of them, now they're all Grown, has transitioned into a type of Friendship of Family who you enjoy the company of and hanging out with more than with outsiders. My Kids and Grandkids enjoy hanging out with me, and so do their Friends, so, they have become 'Friends' of sorts too, since they've known me all their lives too in most cases and so we have History as well. I often knew their Parents or Grandparents, their Kids, and now some of them have Grandkids as The Man and I have now moved on to Great-Grandkid territory. I too lived vicariously thru Sitcom and Reality Show folks I watch often so feel I kinda 'know' the Characters in each and spend 'time' watching them do what they do on their Shows. I do find I'm the kind of person whose Nice to everyone and Close to few... and I'm Good with that.
ReplyDeleteYou sums me up with your last sentence. I am friendly to all but don't allow anyone to get close.
DeleteYou are right. We have many circles of "friends". From school, employment, parents of Kate's friends, FB friends, blog friends (you are my first blog friend!), neighbors present and past, volunteer jobs and more. Great topic!
ReplyDeleteTrue of all of us, I think.
DeleteI had a close friend at high school who left to go to another school. I was devastated. For years I searched for another to take her place but realised that no one person could do that. My husband is now my best friend. I realised, reading the comments, that my daughter is too. My son is probably my husband's best friend as they text each other continually through Rugby League matches. When I was sick I had many friends visit and bring food and flowers which rather surprised me. I know I should make more effort to go out with other people but my husband is very much a person who likes his (our) own company. His hearing problem contributes to that. I also feel I should make the most of our time together while we are both still able to enjoy it.
ReplyDeleteIt's a coin toss, isn't it. We all have to do with seems right for us, knowing whatever we do will come with a few regrets.
Delete