I can be very clingy. It’s not something I walk around and
brag about for obvious reasons. How awful would it be to say:
“Hi!, I have 5 kids,
I am very outgoing and I will cling to our friendship like a life preserver on
sunken ship. What’s your name again?”
However, it is something that I most definitely recognize
about myself and it is something that I try to work on, now more then ever. I am sure people wonder why I am this way;
well I really do attribute it to being an only child. When big stuff happened as a kid I really had
no one to talk to. Sure you have your parents but there are some things that I
really didn’t feel comfortable talking about with them. When I was about 13 and things were awful, I
mean because hell, 13 as an age is its own problem, I found my very first best
friend.
Little did I know then that she would be by my side for 26
years. You should feel sorry for her. She had a brother but he was just too old
for her to confide in so that left me. She seriously was and still is like a
sister to me. We laughed together, cried together, played pranks together, and
we fought together. In the end we always
know that in times of crisis we would drop everything to be with the other. It
was then and still is now a very wonderful comfort.
When we moved on to high school we expanded our group to
4. The 4 of us we were like our own
little family. We all had other friends but it all began and ended with the 4
of us, I loved it and it was perfect. The support and unconditional love we shared
was really one of the biggest comforts of my life. They made me look at life
differently, they molded and shaped me to who I am today (see girls it IS YOUR
fault :P)! This was all going along fabulously until the summer of my senior
year when I moved to South Carolina. I lost my little family, I lost my
friendship, I lost my sisters. Mind you it wasn’t gone, gone, but when you live
14 hours away in the days before cell phones and face time, and everyone else
is still within 3 hours of one another, you miss out and you miss out on a
lot. I would say that I probably spent
10 years trying to catch up on the 3/4 years I missed with them. This was
beyond stupid, you can’t go back in time and participate in the stories that
they share and you cannot be part of the camaraderie that they formed. It took
me years and a shove from one of my girls extremely disgruntled ex- boyfriends
to finally accept that. I did let it go
after a while and it was after I did that that we were able to create a new
kind of circle. We are all grown up now, all with families and jobs and
responsibilities of our own. We see each
other 1 time sometimes 2 times a year if we are lucky. Because of the unique
and beautiful friendship we shared then it’s really hard not to expect the same
kind of friendships from other people. However, in the end though these girls
are not friends, they are family, and that is how I like to view my friendships,
as members of my family. Not everyone
sees it that way though, and I completely understand that! I know I have been very
spoiled not only by the friendships that I have had in the past but also
because I was lucky enough to marry my best friend. Even though he is an
absolute gem and listens and tries so hard at the end of the day he is a dude
and just doesn’t get it sometimes!
Here I am an adult it’s time to make new friends right? Well, I don’t know about you but me, its
hard, really hard. You should just be able to walk into a social situation and
pop out with 3 new BFF’s right? Wrong! Now,
there is Facebook and all of those other social Medias out there that really
complicate things. Not to mention now
you have men to deal with. Your girlfriend’s husbands (or s/o) have to get along
with your husband (or s/o) or you just
can’t spend the time together. Oh! And don’t even get me started on the whole
kid dynamic! You have so many different
factors that play into creating friendships as an adult and time is your enemy.
If your family is like mine you are running kids and yourself all week, then
reserve a day on the weekend for family day that leaves the one day that you
should be spending with your s/o to reconnect. It can be very hard and frankly,
mentally exhausting to nurture those friendships and be there for our friends
when they need us the most. As women I think it is very natural to close off.
Submerge ourselves in our day to day and deal with our problems as best we can,
even if that means dealing with them alone.
We need our girlfriends, it really is as simple as that. In
most every book you read the friends are the people the heroine/hero lean on
for life changing advice. That is not a mistake, which is what friends are
there for. Sure it’s fun to party and have a good time but the measure of a good
friendship is their ability to see you break into pieces even when you are
trying not to let the pieces fall in front of them. The measure of a great friendship is when
they stick around and help you put those pieces back together. Somewhere along
the way of women’s evolution we began to think that we were weak if we shared
our issues. It has become an embarrassment for us to say to another girlfriend “I
have a problem .” Follow that with “I don’t know what to do.” Suddenly we feel
that we are pathetic individuals that have burdened our poor, dear friend that is
solely there to give us wine and makes us laugh, right? How could we ever do such a thing?! WRONG!
I would be furious with a girlfriend who thought I was only there to
play with her and not be there when she needed me! Yet, that is exactly what I
do, that is exactly what MOST of my girlfriends do, we pine and suffer through every
one of our issues big or small, alone. What
really gets me though, when I have just reached my edge and I need to talk to
someone is when they look at me and empathize OR when they say “Why didn’t you
tell me sooner! I can help!”
Ladies! We have each other there is no reason to suffer
through these big bad emotions alone, and yet we do. Why? I am guilty of it, I
would rather listen then share. Is it a
matter of trust, are we afraid that we may seem less of a person, or are we
afraid to show anyone, even ourselves our rawest vulnerabilities? Maybe. I am hopeful that this trend ends someday and
that women can once again not see their issues as weakness.
Even though it hasn’t been easy making friends as an adult
it hasn’t been impossible. I have some beautiful friendships that I adore and I
still have my girls from back in the day. Yes, people come in and out of my
life and it used to be really hard to let them go. I felt like I wasn’t enough
for them. Now, I realize that they were just trying to deal with life on their
own and sort out their own issues, much as I do. It is always really fun to
reconnect with someone and it gives me such a feeling of peace. It isn’t always easy though and I am far from
perfect, I am that “clingy” friend after all. At the end of the day though I
just hope that the friends I do have know that I love them like family. If we don’t talk for months or even if they
move on with their lives in a direction that doesn’t include me, I will always
be there for them. This is simply because at one point they made a difference
in my life and I will always be grateful for them.
Life is hard but it is also beautiful and one of the many
beauties and greatest celebrations of my life are my dear friends.
Be well.
Regina, I just now took the time to read this post. I love it when you speak from my own heart. :)
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