The Pandemic has influenced our ability to meet with friends and make new ones. Yet, adult friendships are important to our stress reduction and to prevent loneliness. Most of us want that one or two adult friends who can do life with us. But finding those friends can be somewhat of a challenge given the pandemic and our busy lives.
When people are asked, many say they have no real serious friendships. They may have lots of superficial friends or “friends” on social media. But we need true friendship. Researchers bear this out when they tell us that friends are critical to a happy life. In fact, very happy people have five friends.
A Dutch sociologist tracked friendships and found that in seven years, your close friends won’t be close anymore. Every seven years, half of our friends fade out of our lives.
Since friends are so important, what can you do to make and keep adult friends? Here are a few tips:
- Try reconnecting with old friends. Maybe you’ve lost touch with an old friend but you have some history together. With social media, it is easy to reach out and connect again. As you reconnect over coffee or a quick lunch, ask about other people they may know who would be good to know as well. This takes a little assertiveness but isn’t that difficult.
- Be interested in other people. Don’t always talk about yourself. Listen, look for similarities and commonalities. It is the commonalities that bring people together. A friend is a good listener and celebrates positive events in a person’s life. Reacting to good news is key.
- Get beyond superficial. You don’t have to have conversations that sound like a therapy session, but you do need to open up a bit. The more you know someone beyond a superficial level, the more invested you are in their life. So open up your heart. Risk being vulnerable with a friend you can trust. It will lead to a deeper friendship.
- Make time for others. There is no short cut here. You have to spend time with someone to get to know them and invest. So force yourself out of your apartment or bed. Accept an invite. Spending time with someone means you value that person. Get off of devices and do something active with a real person.
- Become a member of some type of social group. Maybe it is a small group at a church, a sailing club, a painting group, a reading club…something of interest that will get you connected to other people. In fact, you might start a group based on an interest you have. A group that is organized around a common interest can expand your friendship network.
- Tell your friends that you value them. And don’t keep score as to who is more assertive about the relationship. Just keep in touch, be positive, get to know the person and tell them they are important in your life. Again, it is the positive feedback of a relationship that helps build it.
Now get out there and do it. Connect in meaningful ways. The benefits will be worth the effort.