TED Talks Daily - Sunday Pick: How to be a better friend (w/ Rhaina Cohen) | How to Be a Better Human
Episode Date: July 20, 2025What would it look like if we took friendship as seriously as we take romance? Rhaina Cohen, author of the book The Other Significant Others: Reimagine Life with Friendship at the Center, talks to Chr...is about the value of platonic relationships. They get into everything from offloading expectations from a romantic partner onto a friend can help improve relationships to how to cope with the loss of a friend to what to do when politics divide friendships. If you want to develop your friendships, Rhaina has tons of practical tips and advice.This episode originally aired on May 19, 2025.For a chance to give your own TED Talk, fill out the Idea Search Application: ted.com/ideasearch.Interested in learning more about upcoming TED events? Follow these links:TEDNext: ted.com/futureyouTEDSports: ted.com/sportsTEDAI Vienna: ted.com/ai-vienna Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hey, TED Talks daily listeners.
I'm Elise Hugh.
Today we're bringing you a Sunday pick where we share an episode of another podcast from
the TED audio collective Handpicked by Us for you.
What would it look like if we took friendship as seriously as we take romance?
To explore this question, we're sharing an episode of How to Be a Better Human featuring Reina Cohen,
author of the book, The Other Significant Others,
Reimagine Life with Friendship at the Center.
She sat down with host Chris Duffy
to talk about the value of platonic relationships,
and they get into everything from what it means
to offload expectations from a romantic partner
onto friends instead, to how to cope with the loss
of a friend and what to do when politics divide friendships. If you want to strengthen your
relationships of all kinds, this episode is for you. How to Be a Better Human is a show that looks
in unexpected places for new ways to improve and show up for one another. If you want to hear more
insights like this, listen to How to Be a Better Human wherever
you get your podcasts.
Learn about the TED Audio Collective at audiocollective.ted.com.
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You're listening to How to Be a Better Human.
I'm your host, Chris Duffy.
My college friends always make fun of me for describing pretty much everyone I've ever met
as one of my very best friends.
They're like, I actually don't think it's possible
for a person to have 10,000 best friends. One time I got into an argument with someone and when I told
them about it, their immediate response was, oh no, are they no longer one of your best friends? And
now they're just one of your very good friends? Which I have to admit is an excellent roast of me,
a very precise and cutting zing. But it also taps into something sort of essential
about me. I have always cared a ton about friendship. I'm really interested in how
friendships work. There's so much that I want to unpack and understand. What are the unspoken
rules when it comes to friendship? And should those be the rules, or do we need to reexamine them?
We're going to be talking all about platonic relationships with Raina Cohen, an award-winning
journalist and the author of The Other Significant Others, Reimagining Life with Friendship at
the Center.
To get us started, here's a clip from Raina's TED Talk.
Regardless of whether we are partnered now, we need to rely on more than one relationship
to sustain us throughout our full, unpredictable lives.
We need other, significant others.
And there's an overlooked kind of relationship that we can turn to.
Friendship.
I got the sense that friendship could be this stronger force in our lives
because of a friendship that I stumbled into.
We would see each other most days of the week,
be each other's plus ones to parties.
I went out and interviewed dozens of people who had a friendship like ours,
and I wrote a book about them.
Natasha and Linda are the first legally recognized
platonic co-parents in Canada.
Joe and John have been best friends for many decades. are the first legally recognized platonic co-parents in Canada.
Joe and John have been best friends for many decades.
When Joe was struggling with alcohol and drug use,
John got him into recovery.
And then John decided that to support his friend,
he would also become sober.
Joy took care of her friend Hannah
during Hannah's six-year battle with ovarian cancer.
And that included flying out to New York,
where Hannah got specialized treatment.
Joy had trouble actually sleeping overnight in the hospital
because she was too busy watching to make sure her friend's chest
was still rising and falling.
Some of the friends that I spoke to had this friendship occupy the space
that's conventionally given to a romantic partner.
Some had this kind of friendship and a romantic partner.
It's not either-or.
As I spoke to these people,
I realized that they were at the frontier of friendship,
helping us imagine how much more we could ask of our platonic relationships.
Okay, I am so excited that we have Reyna Cohen
here with us today to dive deep into friendship
and to explore the possibilities and potential
of platonic relationships.
Hi, I'm Reyna Cohen. I'm the author of the book, The Other Significant Others, Reimagining Life with Friendship at the Center. I'm also an editor and producer for the NPR podcast
Embedded. Let's start with what is friendship fidelity and how can that enhance our friendships?
Well, fidelity is really a word that I think we associate
with romantic relationships.
And when I was thinking about what does it look like
to be fidelitous within friendship,
it's not necessarily having one friend
who you are exclusive with,
which is maybe the way we would think about fidelity,
but caring for a friend in a way that isn't just responsive, but is also anticipating what might they want
or need from you in a difficult time.
It's being both a fair weather friend
and a foul weather friend, like being there for all of it
and not running away.
Whether something is hard for that person
or whether conflict has come up between the two of you,
it's really sticking it out through all of those seasons and all of the challenges that come up between the two of you. It's really sticking it out through all of those seasons
and all of the challenges that come up.
Having that idea of like, you're a fair weather friend,
but you're also a foul weather friend.
I feel like we often really prize that
in romantic relationships, right?
Like if someone said, oh, my boyfriend left
as soon as things started getting hard,
they'd be like, what a monster.
But if someone said, oh, my friend is hanging out with me less
because I've been having a really hard time, we don't have the same level
of judgment, I don't think, for that person.
I do think that we have this idea that friendship shouldn't be hard.
I mean, one of the people that I interviewed for my book had said
that he had gotten this message growing up that if you are
thinking that much about a friendship, you're trying too hard.
Like you shouldn't even be exhausting your emotional and mental energy on a friendship.
And I think that there's something a little bit maybe unintentionally malicious about
saying that a friendship should be easy because I think we have all experienced that the closest relationships in our lives are also the ones that are the trickiest.
You know familial relationships, romantic relationships, we get it. Like, if you are spending a lot of time around each other,
if you are invested in each other's lives,
that kind of proximity and time together
is going to create friction.
And the trick isn't to exist without friction,
it's to figure out how do you run toward it
in a way that can resolve it for the different people involved.
So maybe, you know, people want to have a respite
from these other complex relationships in their life
and see friendship as an outlet,
but that might lead to less close platonic relationships
as a result.
You talk in the book about how we have
these very set ideas often about what a romantic relationship
is, especially what a good romantic relationship is,
and how
sometimes that can be really positive to have like a set clear model, but other times it
can also lead to us being not actually aware of what each of us in the relationship thinks
about the relationship.
You talk about how there's a couple who are in couples counseling and they realized that
they had different ideas about what it meant to be monogamous and that because of that,
they actually broke up because they both thought they were like doing the thing that was just a regular old romantic relationship.
But the quote unquote regular old romantic relationship was different for each of them. And you talk in the book about how not having that kind of plug and play template for friendship is a is a strength, right? It allows us to define it for each other.
But it also can make it hard to know exactly what we want or how to how to handle those tougher conversations in that heart, those hard times.
There are trade offs to everything and absolutely having social templates is a plus and a minus. I mean, it is.
We're trying to avoid awkwardness by having social scripts and there's something that seems efficient and it just kind of.
something that seems efficient and it just kind of like takes it out of your mind and hands to know that there are certain things you're supposed to do. But that assumes that
everybody has the same expectations and people don't realize until sometimes they are deep
into a romantic relationship that they are not on the same page.
It makes me think we are supposed to get everything from our romantic partner, that they're supposed
to be our best friend and we're supposed to be extremely attracted to them physically, and they're supposed to be a cheerleader for our
professional life, and we're supposed to be inspired by their professional life, and they're
also supposed to be great with the kids. It's all of these things which are really not the same role
over and over, and we somehow think that the perfect partner would have all of those at the same time.
What I've seen is that there's this kind of interplay between our
expectations around friendship and romantic relationships
that I think we undermine romantic relationships by
expecting too much of them. And then on the flip side,
we expect so little of friendships that we
end up weakening them or not realizing
their full potential when really these different
types of relationships,
if we sort of maybe offloaded some of the romantic ones
onto friendships, that could make it
so that people could feel more fulfilled
in their romantic relationships
because they have realistic expectations of them.
For me, I feel really good about my marriage.
I feel like it's a strong one.
But I think that so much of what makes it strong
is also that we both get pieces of what we
need emotional fulfillment from outside of the marriage that we have friends, right?
Like I am a comedian.
I need like silliness and goofiness and total like someone who could just do bits.
And I also don't want to be married to that person.
It's really helpful for me to have friends who I can go and be like, we're going to spend
an hour and a half just talking in accents and it's going to be totally hilarious and bonkers. But then I like that I go home
and it's like, I can have a real conversation and she's not also like, hello, I don't want
that at night. And then a more serious piece for me is my wife and I do different things.
And so it's really helpful to me to have friends who I can have serious, long ranging conversations
about career goals who really totally get it.
And then I'm not frustrated when she doesn't totally
understand all the ins and outs of exactly what my career is.
And I know it's the same for her.
She gets plenty of pieces fulfilled
by people who are not me.
But sometimes that feels weird.
I think your book clarified for me that like,
there is this very real kind of stigma
to getting that from a friend,
to having a super close friendship
when you're in a romantic relationship.
Yeah, I mean, we distinguish between
certain kinds of relationships.
So romantic, familial, platonic,
and have certain things that we deem appropriate
and certain things that you're not supposed to do.
And I think particularly within friendship
that you're not, that's too much
that you're not supposed to ask of friends.
And I guess my question is a little bit why,
on what basis have we made those decisions
and going out and talking to many dozens of people
who have friendships that really even break our definition
of what a friendship is by going so far as
to be living together, maybe raising kids together,
taking care of each other through
cancer and in old age.
It's like, well, these people have platonic relationships and they're doing it and it's
not breaking the friendship and it's not breaking their other relationships.
So it's not like by definition friends can't do these things.
So there's something else that's shaping our ideas about, well, maybe this is asking too
much.
And then on the other point that you were making about
is your marriage strong enough
if you have to turn to other people?
And that seems like a really insidious effect
of these expectations around marriage.
I think that there are people
who end relationships too soon because,
or end up having grave doubts about their relationships
because they think that what they're supposed
to do is get everything from this one person as opposed to feeling like, yeah, this is
a great situation right now that I have somebody that I love and that I can go home to and
I can have the serious conversation with without the accents, who loves me and who's a great
co-parent and I have other people that I can go to.
I don't know that I would want to be married to a journalist.
I think it would be shop talk all the time.
I really value having different forms of separation in my life,
but maybe that means that I can't talk about everything with my spouse.
And I think it's kind of creating these unnecessary doubts in people's minds
because they're told that everything is supposed to come from this one person,
or one person or like
One person I interviewed called it a one-stop shopping approach to relationships
If you'll indulge me to like read to you from your own book. I thought this was really kind of profound
It's like the final paragraph of the book
You said experiencing a friendship like Andrew and Tali's or witnessing one can sharpen our vision allowing us to notice the trellis as art and Nick
Put it that had been directing our path all along. An encounter with just one of these
friendships can dislodge fixed ideas about who and how many people we can spend the rest
of our lives with. The trellis may be ideally suited to some of us in use, its use by so
many others, a source of meaning, and its preset structure reassuring. But for those
who have doubts or are curious, these friendships can give us the nerve to detach from the
trellis and grow towards the light.
So I'll just kind of explain that trellis idea because it did not come from me. It came
from this guy Art Pereira. He is a man who has trained as a pastor in a conservative
Christian denomination and is gay and has had a really hard time and reconciling those
two things has since done it. But it has meant that his life looks really different than
it had before.
He had realized all of this and he has forged this very close relationship with a friend.
He was making a comparison to an ivying plant and that if you put an ivying plant on a trellis, it'll grow in the shape of a trellis, but if there is no trellis, it grows toward the light. And he felt like
before he had kind of figured all this stuff out with this really close friendship
that he considers a familial level relationship
at this point, he was on the trellis
and that he and his friend needed to break the trellis
to find something that's better.
And what I really want to encourage people to do
and what I love especially Art and his friend Nick's story
for is that it's really about how do you figure out
what you want in a world that's telling you
that there are only certain things that are possible.
People who have created friendships that are so close
that they are life partnerships are one example
of people really breaking out of this narrow idea
of what's possible in our closest relationships
and showing us that there are other ways. and there might be many other kinds of things that that work for you in particular so it's really kind of a call for us to ask what would we pursue if we thought it was possible imagine anyone who heard that is going to be convinced that how do you how do you figure out what it is that you really want.
out what it is that you really want. It is not easy. One exercise that actually other people that I interviewed and ended up talking about was drawing what's called a social atom. So like you
make a circle for yourself and then you draw other people who are close, you know, who are important
to you in your life and you make how close they are to your bubble and how big they are an indication
of sort of how significant they are in your life. Just putting that on the page can be illuminating
for like, who do you want to become closer to?
If in the process of drawing it,
you're like, I feel close to this person,
but I actually don't see them that much,
that you can maybe get a sense of that gap.
You know, there are also on a societal level,
like it helps to have more models.
It helps to have more stories of people
who show you different ways of living life.
And I think to the extent possible,
trying to seek out the stories that maybe
are like a little bit different than the ways that people immediately around you might live can be
helpful for asking questions about what you yourself might want. Personally, one thing that
I really want is for us to talk so much more about all of this. But my bosses also want us to have a quick break for podcast
dance. So we will be right back after this.
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We're talking with Raina Cohen, author of the book, The Other Significant
Others, reimagining life with friendship at the center. So Raina, how did writing this
book change what you think a friend is?
I think the definition of friend feels much more expansive to me than it had before. I
mean, one of the early interviews I did, I remember talking to a woman in her sixties
who I'd asked like,
does she wish it was a term for like the friendship as close as hers? It was like a friendship
of decades where they saw each other basically, you know, as sisters. And she was like, I
don't want another term. I just want us to use the term friend to treat it with more
value to not diminish it. And I think kind of related to that, I just see all of the
possibilities that exist within friendship. And I think, kind of related to that, I just see all of the possibilities that exist within friendship.
And I really bristle when anybody says just friends,
or more than friends.
Nothing that is, I think, is categorically excluded
from what a friend can do.
I've seen now friends do just about anything
a family member or a romantic partner would do.
Let's say something in my life comes up,
like I had, I had sort of, a very difficult, sort of incident happen a couple weeks ago, and to me, it wasn't like up, like I had sort of very difficult sort of incident
happen a couple weeks ago.
And to me, it wasn't like, oh, I had the first person I contact about this is my husband.
It was like, who are the people who could be most helpful in this moment to me?
And my husband was on the other side of the country, and I eventually did talk to him
about it.
But I went to other people first.
And so I think not kind of operating by default with what are roles and more like,
what is the task or the need at hand
and who can best respond to that.
And also, if somebody, if a friend needs something,
I try to ask like, what can I do?
And that feels reasonable given what my capacity is.
With that in mind, what makes a good friend?
What makes a really good friend?
Man, simple question that feels hard.
I think good friend is going to depend on
what your, like who you are to each other.
When I think about, you know,
the friends I run into at swing dance,
my expectations of what makes them a good friend
are very different than my absolute closest friends
who I see all the time.
But I think in general, showing care for one another,
showing affection, not holding back
about how you feel about one another,
which is something that is very common in friendships
to let a lot of things go unsaid.
Not calling it quits when someone is going through
something difficult or when you, within the friendship,
are going through something difficult. There's within the friendship or going through something difficult.
There's a comedy show here in Los Angeles where I live
that is literally called My Therapist Knows Your Name.
And people instantly get why that's a funny thing to name
a comedy show because I think so many people
do have this experience of like,
even though these are quote unquote
not serious relationships, they often do take up so much
of our mental energy
and brain space.
I'm just thinking about if you were talking
to a 13 year old, who you would be like,
of course you're gonna spend a ton of your brain space
thinking about your friends.
Like peers really matter, but why is it that as adults,
we don't think that you should be?
Like that shouldn't be your focus.
I mean, I think that's not the reality for a lot of people that
their friends do matter a lot.
And they, you know, ground their lives and cause heartache sometimes, but
there is really this mismatch between what we're told is what an adult should
care about and what we actually do.
This is a very particular type of millennial complaint. But I feel like it's quite common to hear people lament
that we live in single-family homes or single-family
apartments and that we don't live in the dorm structure that
would be normal if you were living in a university where
you have your friends right next door,
you have your friends down the hall,
you have your friends at least within a walk away.
And I feel like it's so common to hear people wish
for physical proximity to friends,
to take away some of the logistics of it being difficult,
because as you get older,
there are more obstacles to hanging out.
And yet we also create these physical obstacles.
The specific obstacle that I feel ashamed about
is my husband and I were like thinking very seriously
about moving in with a couple of our close friends.
And at first we talked about buying a home and realized that that was just not going to be
feasible given the timeline of when our friends were going to move to DC from where they had
been in Massachusetts.
I was like, well, if we can't buy and we have to rent, is that really a good move?
You and I, we want to be able to save for a down payment.
This will slow down the process
because we won't have as chief of an apartment.
We had a really good deal on this one bedroom.
And he was like, do we actually care about buying?
Is that important to us?
Like, what do we value here?
And it was immediately clear like, oh, okay,
community is this thing that we've been talking about
that we value, or our friends. And I had just put this, the idea of buying a home, this kind of adult stepping stone,
in front of a value that that was the one thing that stood in the way. And I can go on and on
about about living, you know, with or near friends, and currently in the process with
there are a group of us who are trying to buy property together and we'll have some people
like living, even more people living in my house at the moment to start testing out,
do we actually want to be in such close proximity for the long haul?
And for me, I love like coming home to having more people in the house who are playing piano
and can run in and like spontaneously sing some songs with or
coming home after a long day and having my housemate, you know, having cooked a meal.
I wish the structures around it were easier.
We're kind of having to figure out a lot of things as we go.
I think the trade that you make is that you put a lot of work in the front end to get
the support and the ease and friendship on the back end.
You have to coordinate with more people to find the right kind of house, for instance,
or the right neighborhood or so on.
But then it means that you are able to have these spontaneous interactions and you don't
have to schedule three weeks out a one-hour coffee with somebody and then you won't see
them for three more months because you can't fit them into your schedule.
I think that regardless of what's the primary relationship in your life, people often experience
real, true, deep heartbreak when they lose a friend, whether that's someone passing away
or whether that's a friendship falling apart.
And yet, once again, there's not really a structure
for like friend loss, the same way that there is a structure
for a breakup with a romantic partner
or for the loss of a spouse.
Can you talk to us about what you can do
if you're in that situation where you lose someone
who's really important, but you feel like
other people just don't get it?
The first thing I wanna say is that
you are not alone in this.
I've come to expect now when I give,
do any kind of book related event
that someone will come up to me afterward and will cry
because they will tell me about a friendship
that they lost because of falling out or the person passed away.
And the sense of isolation that people feel
because nobody took them seriously
adds this extra layer of suffering
that I think is completely unnecessary
and is really imposed by our society
not treating this form of grief as legitimate.
I mean, there's, and there's a term for this,
it's called disenfranchised grief that like,
there are some forms of grieving that we,
that we do not recognize as legitimate.
If someone is suffering because a friend is,
is gone from their life,
that should be a really clear indication
of how much the friendship meant to them.
Not that they are making too big of a deal of it.
I think as a society, we're probably, you know,
we're pretty you know,
we're pretty uncomfortable with grief in general, but there's a dismissal of platonic relationships
that you should just you know, it's just not that big of a deal. But the proof is in is in the pain
that it is a big deal. The most recent encounter I had just a few days ago where a woman came up to
me crying probably in her 40s, maybe 50s and said that she felt like she had had a divorce
with her friend and that it was devastating
and that nobody understood it
and she and her friend have since reconciled.
But that is the kind of thing
that people have to sort through.
So I think to the extent possible,
removing any judgment of yourself for the pain
is maybe the best advice that I can offer.
When you lose a friend because it's more on the breakup
or the relationship part rather than that they've died
or passed away and that's the reason for losing them.
When you lose a friend, there's this weird gray area
where it's like they could float back in, right?
Like they could float back in and maybe it will just be
like it was because we don't have as clear lines. And I think in some ways that can make it harder because you're like am I grieving something that will
Return before I'm even done grieving or will it is it gone forever?
And it's it's so much harder to know I think than when you are in a in a romantic breakup
We also just don't have really good
Concepts or a language for this. I mean, I've thought about
like leveling down in friendships or transitions, but the kinds of ways that we think about loss
are really about categorical shifts. Like somebody was your partner and now they aren't,
or somebody was alive and now they're dead. This kind of gray area is a lot messier. I will say like I have dealt
with the gray area and I found it really hard both to talk about because it felt like well,
maybe am I making too much of this because it's not like we're not friends anymore. It's just we
are less close than we were. But there is a kind of loss to grapple with, but also it's not like,
okay, this person's gone from my life and now I come up with some story about how they were, you know, we were never a good fit or they were a terrible person.
It's like you're having to then rework like who are you to each other, which means potentially
ongoing conversations.
And each of those ongoing, each of those new conversations can itself be a reminder of
the gap between where you were and where you are now.
And that can create more pain, but ultimately be worth it
because you still want to be in each other's lives
just in a different way.
And I just think that there's much more kind of improvisation
that has to happen and really open communication
when you're not just kind of slamming a door
or have a kind of black and white on-off switch to the friendship.
We're going to take a quick break, but we will be right back after this. And we are back.
Okay, Raina, in a world where it feels like there is an increasingly wide social and political
and ideological divide, do you have any advice for people to navigate friendships where maybe
the day-to-day feels totally fine, but there's also this big weight of the broader political
or ideological differences that two people might have.
I have struggled with this, I think, partly because I really like my friends to be friends
with one another. And one of the ways that kind of political differences can play and
can be like, if people have views that feel like they would cut, they would be really
in conflict, even in everyday life. If you're
spending time in smaller groups or one-on-one doing activities together or spending time doing
kind of making memories in a way that don't poke at the things that are different.
It's like a gift to be close to people who are different from you. I lived for three years with friends who are very religious.
I learned a ton from them
and love having a different perspective.
I don't know that there was sort of like conflict
over that per se, but I think to the extent possible,
viewing the differences as something that isn't a liability,
but a way that you can help sharpen each other's thinking and open your minds
and to just approach the relationship with as much curiosity as possible, especially
in a time where people really kind of operate in their silos. And it just feels like actually
something to cherish and nurture if you do have relationships with people who are pretty
different from you. want to see more, don't make it so that you have to plan every single activity. So I have a friend where Thursday mornings we go
on a run together and we joke that it's our free
therapy session.
And sometimes we have to reschedule it, but the
kind of standing event really makes a difference.
The second is to rethink the idea that friendship
is something that you kind of stuff into the rest
of your life.
Like the image that comes to mind for me is like when I'm packing a suitcase and I put
the shoes in first and that that's the romantic relationship or your work or your marriage
and then the friends are like the extra pairs of socks that you fit in wherever you can.
Like to not treat friendship as this sort of added thing if you can fit it in and to
consider it as something that is actually going
to be an anchor or the central part of your life.
And one way to do that is really to think about
how is the architecture of your life set up?
Friendship can be a lot easier
if you are in close proximity to people.
And that opens up a whole process of how do you find
your way to living in close proximity to friends?
But certainly one thing is when you're deciding
where to live, consider friends.
Like consider friends as part of it.
I think for a lot of people, it is about a commute
or maybe being near a family or there are other
kinds of factors, but treating friendship as
something maybe worth making trade-offs for.
I think it can make life more meaningful.
It allows for more spontaneous interactions.
We are social animals.
We need people.
Like, let's build our lives around them
or at least consider that as an important factor.
And the third thing is something that's just maybe
on my mind right now about not expecting people
to always come to you when they need something
and not necessarily expecting that people
are always gonna accept your offer.
When you offer something and trying to make abundantly
clear that you will be there to support them. And like a
conversation I had this week was with a friend who had mentioned that she has been has been really
down late a couple weeks ago. And I spent time with her and I had absolutely not noticed that
because she's good at covering it up. And we talked about, you know, when she mentioned that,
I was like, well, how how can I notice this in the future? You know, rather than waiting for her to tell me a week after she's had a really low point
and I borrowed a kind of method from somebody else I know, which is that she would send
like a specific emoji that meant that things were not going well to, to her close friends
as a way of indicating, you know, I need some support, I can't really,
I don't really have the mental or emotional space
to explain it.
And I think that it's an example of like,
friends kind of coming up with solutions
for their friends, you know, once you've seen
something happen once, to try to get ahead of it.
And that I think for so many people,
it's really hard to ask for help.
It's really, really, really hard to ask friends for help
because we have these ideas that we shouldn't depend on them so much.
So trying to get ahead of it, and in the end,
I think you'll get it back to you once you model it
for the people in your life.
Two other things.
One is to not operate from a place
where you are assuming you are a burden.
As people in places like the U.S. get older, make more money, we farm out the things that we need.
We pay for people to move our stuff.
We pay for people to paint our walls.
Instead of asking people around us,
we pay for strangers to do it.
The office that I'm in right now,
I had two friends of mine help me paint it
and hang up this art piece that I'd had for years,
finally, behind me. And they were thrilled to be able to do it. friends of mine helped me paint it and like hang up this like art piece that I'd had for years finally
behind me and they were thrilled to be able to do it so it brings you closer to people and I think
yeah if you're questioning it drawing your own experience when's the last time someone has asked
you to do a favor and did you resent them or did it actually feel like it was an opportunity to get
closer and then the way that so many people as adults operate in their friendships is that they are doing the catch-up. So they are going for a meal or something, and then they're summarizing
their lives over the last few weeks or months to each other, which is so different from, you know,
when we were younger, we're probably making memories with our friends. We are, you know,
going on little adventures, even like in the woods or just scheming together.
And adult scheming might mean painting your office walls. That is the most fun thing you
have. But when you get covered in paint and you listen to some Lizzo while you're doing
it, or there are ways that even doing the most mundane things can become these really
wonderful experiences that you remember. But if the
conversation is all about catching up and summarizing your life, it's just, it's not
going to deepen the friendship in the way that doing things together that you're going
to remember will.
I've never thought about it that way. I think, yeah, it's, you just really shifted something
for me in the idea of like, it's really fun to be scheming as adults. Like we need that more scheme.
I need more scheming in my life.
I think that's right.
You know, sorry.
Now I'm like, I had an idea for the other thing.
We celebrate romantic relationships.
We don't really celebrate friendships.
People I know have like a,
they celebrate the anniversary of their friendship
or they have, they do things to commemorate the friendship.
That is also like a mark of really close friends this woman and her friends
They had they had they had rituals. They had a secret language
They like had these notebooks that they wrote in every day that they filled
They would do they had these like basically like holidays that they made together and like artwork that they would make
I mean it was it was very elaborate and she just felt that
Adult friendship was not doing it for her because like everything felt so stale
and just like you're having a conversation over dinner.
And it was just so different from what it was like
in childhood for her.
Okay, so the one thing I wanted to ask you about
is we haven't really talked at all about the way
that attraction or like a sexual relationship
or even the possibility of a sexual relationship
can sometimes change the tenor of a sexual relationship can sometimes change
the tenor of a friendship.
Something that I've always kind of thought is like an interesting, funny little strange
thing is how people complain like, oh, I just got friend zoned.
And I'm like, it's so hard to make friends.
That's a great thing.
Like you got friend zoned.
Okay.
Maybe you're not dating that person, but like it's a good thing that you made a friend now.
And yet I think there is this tension of like, friends isn't as good as the other. What happens when you have a relationship,
and there's this question of whether it would cross the boundary and become a romantic or sexual
relationship as well? I've seen people navigate this. And I think the one thing that I would encourage people to
ask themselves is what is driving me toward the romantic version of this relationship.
I have seen cases where friends are extremely close. And one of them is like, well, I like
I love you. So this should be a romantic relationship, right? That is the highest expression
of what love for another person looks like. And I have seen friendships absolutely dissolve
over that because somebody can't put up with the possibility of being rejected romantically.
Is the desire for a romantic relationship because you actually want to be in a romantic relationship with this person or because there is an idea that friendship is
lesser and therefore the way to frastract closeness is to be romantically involved with somebody.
There are different forms of attraction and romantic and sexual attraction are not the only
kinds. Like you can be really drawn to somebody.
There are studies on, like, a lot of people
have experienced forms of attraction
that have nothing to do with sexual desire.
And so it helps to know that if you are really into somebody,
there are different ways for that to be true.
But if you do end up pursuing a romantic relationship,
and a lot of romantic relationships
come from being friends,
I think trying to not feel like
there has to be an on-off switch,
that if it turns out that the romantic relationship
is not kind of the best way to do things,
sort of talk on the front end
about how you guys can be open-minded
about how do you change the terms of the relationship.
You call this in the book a premortem.
I think that's a really great idea.
Before it ends, what would end it?
And so we can talk about what would end it
and how do we want it to end when it doesn't.
Some of the things people most hate
is having to imagine bad outcomes.
So we like to say everything's going to work out great.
But if you are forced with this question
to say imagine a year from now we decide
the romantic relationship
isn't for us. What are the, you know, the three most likely reasons, you know, what are the things
that might lead to this not working out? And then you could potentially address them ahead of time
to prevent them. And then in addition to that, it's like, okay, if it doesn't work out, and we can't,
you know, we can't do anything to prevent it. Like what do we want our relationship to look like?
And it doesn't, you know,
you might feel very differently on the other side of it,
but I just, I think particularly
in heterosexual relationships, romantic relationships,
there's this very, you know,
strict idea that you're not supposed to be friends
with your exes.
So to enter a romantic relationship feels like you're,
you're really, really risking something.
And I think, you know, in the queer community,
there's just much, it's just much more common
because you can't hate all your exes
because you're gonna run into them,
like at, you know, your friend's party.
So I think also taking a bit of a cue
from the queer community and how this kind of toggling
between romance and friendship
actually is really okay and possible.
Reina, that is such a perfect note for us to end on.
We need to think really deeply about what shape
of a relationship is gonna work for us
and then put in the time and the energy and the effort
to make sure that we pursue that.
Thank you for being here.
Thanks for making the time to be on the show.
Thank you for your book, The Other Significant Others.
I really appreciate the work you do.
It's been so nice to talk to you.
And yeah, really just appreciate all the care
that you and the people behind the scenes
have put into the questions here.
That is it for this episode of How to Be a Better Human.
Thank you so much to today's guest, Reina Cohen.
Her book is The Other Significant Others.
I am your host, Chris Duffy, and you can find more from me,
including my weekly newsletter and other projects
at chrisduffycomedy.com.
How to Be a Better Human is put together
by a team of others who are all significant to me.
On the Ted side, we've got the platonic ideal
of Daniela Belarezzo, Ban Ban Cheng, Michelle Quint,
Chloe Shasha Brooks, Valentina Bohannini,
Lainey Lott, Tung Sika, Seung Min Lee Vong,
Antonia Lay, and Joseph De Bruyne.
This episode was fact-checked by Julia Dickerson
and Mateus Salas, who cut everyone out of their lives
who exaggerates statistics.
Who exaggerates statistics, and sadly that includes me.
On the PRX side, they are the gold standard of friendship.
Morgan Flannery, Norgil, Pedro Rafael Rosado,
Patrick Grant, and Jocelyn Gonzalez.
Thanks again to you for listening.
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