We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - FRIENDSHIP: What is it and why do we need it now more than ever?
Episode Date: January 25, 20221. Why the connection of friendship is emerging as the single best thing for your wellness—and three things that define a healthy friendship. 2. How friendship has changed for Abby since retiring fr...om soccer—and why Glennon fears commitment in friendships more than other relationships. 3. How to recognize ambivalent relationships—and why they can be just as bad for us as toxic ones. CW // eating disorders To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi everybody! Hi! Why are you laughing at me already? All of us, it's hi everybody.
I know, it's just, it's amazing to me
that it can sound the exact same every single week.
Okay.
It's amazing.
It's a talent.
Hi everybody.
Is that different enough?
Much.
Okay.
And worse, go back to the beginning.
Go back to the beginning.
Greetings friends.
Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things. We are shocked and stunned and delighted that you
continue to return. And since you return, so do we. And today, we are talking about something that
our pod squad has requested of us for months. And that topic is friendship. Oh, help me.
How it matters, why it matters, how to get it, how to keep it, how to deepen it, how to
end it.
We have successfully avoided this topic until now.
Yep.
For two reasons.
Reason number one, nobody recording this podcast right now,
you, me, sister, we don't understand it.
None of us understand friendship.
Would you agree?
Uh-huh, yep.
I feel like I understand it a little bit more at this point,
having researched it for the past couple of weeks.
I'm like, I see what you're talking about.
Oh, good, Oh, good.
OK, good.
So you can help us because I still feel as confused as I did when we sat down to talk about
it.
I mean, we literally just ended up staring at each other, blankly, during our, let's prepare
for friendship meetings.
OK.
And then confirmed in some ways too.
Like, yeah, this is what, this is probably why we don't have as many friends as we have.
Yeah.
So we are three people who in fact do not understand friendship.
And we worry that if we tried to talk about friendship for an hour, you, the listener
might find out that we in fact do not understand what we are talking about.
It would be a worst case scenario.
Right.
And that might extend to other things. Like, they might be like, wait, what if they never know what they're talking about? And then second
that, let me listen to all their podcasts. They never know what they're talking about.
And then save you the time and just confirm that for you right now. Yes. The jig is up. Friendship
ruined us. Okay. But then we thought, okay, what if we're not,
the three of us are not an anomaly, maybe we are actually representative of how the world feels
about friendship. Maybe we are all a little confused about friendship because there are so
freaking few agreed upon definitions for what a friend is.
Yes, yes.
And also it's both like over inclusive
and under inclusive, I feel,
because I feel like part of the reason
that we're so confused is this tomfoolery
of the fact that we have one word
to describe the phenomenon of friendship.
So that like the word that I use to describe the person
whose photos I scroll through on the internet,
and the person, the lovely person at school drop off
that I see once a week who I'm like, they're lovely.
Is the same word for the people
that are most important in my life, like doing life with.
And I feel like it's that phenomenon
where if something has come to mean everything,
it actually means nothing. There's no cultural expectation because there is no definition
about the significance and kind of the expectations of that kind of relationship in our culture.
That's right. Also, I just have to say, sister has this most unique ability
to just throw in some fucking amazing Tom Fulery. She's always said Tom Fulery.
Tom Fulery was just like in the sentence, it just came off very easily. I just need to say that
you are my friend because of that reason. She's always going around words like Tom Fillery. So actually, yeah.
Poor Tom. Yeah. So that's so true. It's like some cultures have a hundred words for snow.
And we have one word for friend. So when I say it, it means something completely different
than what you're thinking, which causes all kinds of confusion and unmet expectations
and frustration.
Okay, so reason number two
that we thought we should avoid this topic at all cost
is because each of us on this podcast
is either currently convinced
or has historically been convinced
that we are a bad front.
I have heard all of us say it a million different times.
We've said it our whole lives.
We've said, oh, I'm a bad friend.
Like it's a diagnosis, like it's a condition.
Like, hi, I'm going in 45,
recovering addict, Pisces,
any gram for bad friend.
Like that's part of our identity.
I say it as kind of like
a warning, get out of jail free card.
You're studying an expectation for sure.
Yeah, yours is like a preemptive apologetic stance.
Yeah, just so you know, this is how whatever you think
is gonna, I'm gonna give you, I'm gonna screw up
is what I'm trying to say when I say I'm a bad friend.
But why have you sister thought of yourself
as a bad friend over time?
I have been thinking about this constantly the last two weeks and I feel so excited because
I feel like I have a little bit of a self-revolution right now and I I'm so excited because I feel like
I'm so excited because I feel like looking back at my life, what I am seeing is that I valued my friends. I believed that I valued my friends very much, but I think at a level, I truly believed
that I didn't need to be in connection with my friends to value them.
So it sounds really odd to say it,
but for me, the most important things in a friendship
have always been mutual respect and trust,
like real trust, like I trust who you are as a person.
I trust the way you live, your integrity, your wisdom.
I know who you are and I'll be in your foxhole with you and you'll be in mine and
that's all I need to know.
Like it was kind of like done deal, that's it.
And I believed that our houses were sound and that was good.
And I kind of resented what I saw as kind of this keeping element of like staying, staying in touch knowing what's
going on in your life, being there for non-emergencies.
Like it felt like knowing your life wasn't as important as knowing who you are and that
I'll show up for you.
And I kind of, in a way, saw it as like a scorekeeping thing.
I'm a better person because I don't keep score
and other people who need you to call them back
once every 10 times, we're kind of just less evolved.
And I realized that actually that,
I am not exceptional.
Like I need connection.
And I need connection. And I need friendship.
And in fact, that kind of connection,
what I had been seeing as housekeeping,
is actually the engine that builds connection.
It reminds me of what you,
you had an own relationship where you said,
why don't you ever tell me that you love me?
And he said, I told you a long time ago
and I will tell you if it changes.
Oh, Jesus.
Yeah.
Yeah, there's that.
So it is helpful because I think it was last year,
I think I have this dear, amazing human friend,
Lauren, who we call
Bonzo and we've been friends for 25 years and she is historically a friend
that kind of calls me in like I remember when we were living in lived in a
group of 12 women in college in this house together, and it was a wonderful time.
And I was going through a lot of my eating disorder stuff
at the time, and I had this, like, I was stealing people's food.
Oh yeah, I see.
In my binge, I was like taking people's food
and everybody knew it was me.
But it was like living in and they were like posting notes,
hey y'all, we actually can, you know,
steal each other's cereal and leave it empty box.
As an every, do you get cringey about it?
Everyone's not, I remember back to those times,
I used to steal everyone's food.
My friends wouldn't even live with me when you're in.
Because I would steal all of their shit,
just to throw it up.
Okay, sorry, go ahead.
No, I feel cringy and shame,
but mostly I just feel so sad for that disassociated person
who was living in that house who knew that everybody knew
that that was happening and everybody.
And what is that about?
And then I also use it on myself now.
I'm like, I'm the same person that was that.
So what in my life is that thing
that I'm doing right now?
Ooh, that in 10 years, I'm gonna look back
and be like, oh baby girl, you were doing that.
Oh, that's good.
You know, anyway, but Banzo's the only one who sat me down
and was like, I need to talk to you.
Wow. Here's what's going on. Here's what I know it's you., I need to talk to you.
Wow.
Here's what's going on.
Here's what I know it's you.
Like we need to talk about this.
How can we, it's not okay.
But like in the most loving, beautiful way.
Anyway, she's historically...
Hold on.
What was the outcome of that conversation?
Like I never had that conversation.
Yeah, did you stop stealing food?
What happened?
Were you so embarrassed? Were Yeah, did you stop stealing food? What happened? Were you so embarrassed?
Were you, did you feel loved?
Did you feel scared?
I've always felt so loved by her that I think had it been delivered differently or by
a different human it might have been bad for me.
I think I was thankful.
I think I was relieved.
It's kind of like the jig is up.
Yes.
Gag is up.
What is up?
I think it's jig.
It's expired.
And I think that it was kind of what I had been like
holding together very ineffectively
but pretending to wasn't held together anymore.
Yeah, and it's part of it.
It's like somebody helped me, somebody see me, somebody helped me.
Yeah.
So that was a long tangent just to say that she's been that for me a lot of times.
And she, so last year, she just called, and she's a very, very strong human.
She called and she was like, Doyle, what the fuck?
Like, I'm over, like this trope of you being like,
I can't keep in touch because I'm so busy and woe is me
and I'm so busy, she's like, it's tired.
I've been going through a really hard thing
for the past six months that you don't even know about.
Like you don't know about it because you're not in community with me.
You're not checking with me.
And again, it was like from a place of such love, a way of being like, you're
missing out on what is the meat of friendship because you're telling yourself
this story about you being busy
and it's tired, but also at some point you're going to have to choose. There's no situational
exceptionalism out of relationship. Like you either have to choose whether to be in relationship.
to be in relationship. So anyway, that's, I think for me, what I am realizing is that,
and there's a whole host of reasons we should go into as to why, you know, connection through friendship is actually the best thing you can do for your life and your health. Because what you said in
the beginning is true. You said, you know, friendship is who you need with you in the foxhole, but life is a foxhole.
Correct.
Yeah.
The foxhole is now, like we're here,
in the daily day to day of life and loss and stress
and trying to be human is a freaking foxhole.
And that's why we need connection consistently.
Is that what you're saying?
Did you change?
I think it is that it's not like,
we pay this annoying price of being connection
with our friends.
So that when we need them, they'll show up.
It's that the connection we're making with our friends
is the showing up in each other's lives
that makes life more bearable.
The bearable is interesting.
I have this feeling when I have had my small pockets
of time where I make connections with friends
and it is a feeling of being tethered to the earth.
Oh, yes. It's like, I don't know how else to describe it, except that I
constantly feel like a hot air balloon just like floating out into the wilderness. I am completely
freaking untethered from the earth. And when I try and when I talk and when I am seen by other human
beings who are not in my family, by the way, it doesn't work as well for family members with me. This tethered feeling.
I feel like I'm one of those hot air balloons that had like a you know those stakes put down.
Like there's a stake in this corner of my basket and that and I feel like grounded.
Yeah. Well, don't you think that friendship is also a vulnerability?
It's like, I think that some of us, especially recovered from alcohol, I have very confused
relationship with friends primarily because so much of my friendships were revolving around
alcohol for so many years.
There's like a vulnerability in
letting your guard down not just like with somebody, but
there's a vulnerability and and trying to maintain the friendship in the consistency of staying in somebody's lives and
saying and having them stay in your life like to me like
you will choose friends
to me, like, you will choose friends that you want to be in your life or not.
But I think that sister, like, what I'm hearing,
and you, I think that some of the issues is like,
you can't control friends.
You can't control if Bonzo's gonna call you
and be like, yo, you're fucking sucking right now.
Like, what is going on?
What happened after that? Yeah. yo, you're fucking sucking right now. Like what is going on?
Well, what happened after that? Yeah. I realized that I didn't have what I thought I had.
I had this beautiful friend, but I wasn't being a friend to her.
You know, but did you have even the beautiful friend? Because you thought you had the friend, because you thought a friend was like an ace in your pocket.
But what she's saying is you don't even have, you're not even having the have.
Like, you're not getting the benefit of what a friend is supposed to be on a daily, weekly,
monthly basis.
You're not even using me.
You're not even playing your ace card.
Exactly.
That's what it is.
I realized that in my kind of story, I was telling myself was that friendship was this
kind of like thing that people who were lucky enough to have enough time got to do, but
I was depriving myself of this gift that's the people in my life.
Like I really truly think when you talk about vulnerability, Abby, it's like, I really
believed that I didn't require connection in my life.
I really believed that like I didn't need that, but the truth is that we all very, very
much needed. It's the best predictor
of happiness and health in life. And so I'm just kind of trying to evolve out of that kind of
self-absorbed exceptionalism of I don't need it and I can't get by without. I think it could be
self-absorbed exceptionalism, but I also truly believe that it's an addiction to productivity.
Also, it's like the capitalistic idea because you just said the best predictor of health and happiness.
Okay? So you would think that we would all think, well, then obviously we want to do that because health and happiness is our goal.
But in our culture,
health and happiness isn't even the most immediate goal.
The most immediate goal is production. What am I making? What am I? How am I? So friendship.
And after that, happiness comes. Right. So friendship to me is such a wild resistance to
capitalistic productivity addiction. Because you're sitting with your friend
and you're like, what freaking good is this hour?
What is, what good is this hour?
What it's like, it's such, it's like art,
it's like such a wild thing to commit yourself to
because it feels like there's nothing to show for it afterwards.
Except for, of course, your health and your happiness and your joy and you're
being tethered to this earth and this life.
It's just also confusing because all of us have different definitions for it.
I can tell you the definition of what actually that kind of magic of that is the most healthful.
So like when they say it actually like changes that the rate at which your cells age and your
immune system responds and your heart health and all of that, that is all this,
the kind of like magical friend template.
There's three things that go in to that.
So first, it's a stable or long term relationship.
Second, it's positive.
And third, it's reciprocal, meaning helpful,
cooperative. Like, we help each other get through life. So those are the three, like when the
science says there is, you know, satisfaction with relationships is the best protector of health
at 80 years old. These are the three things that contribute to your health.
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I was like, Girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing, and strangely intimate things
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When you say relationships,
because are we sure are they talking about friendships?
Because relationships can also be-
I'm your friend.
You're right.
But like your partner, your children,
your, like, is this, does this mean friendships for sure?
And how many are we supposed to have?
That's the other thing.
So I think that's a big question that people have.
Like, how do I find friends?
How is, do I have enough friends?
There's a woman named Lydia Dentworth,
and she's a science journalist.
She wrote a book called Friendship,
and she studies all of this, and it's fascinating.
It's an average of four people that are kind of your,
the people who you can't imagine your life without,
the average person has four of them between two and eight people.
It does not matter whether they are friend,
so like non-blood or family, but that
friend template has to exist in the other relationship.
So if it is your partner, it has to still, it's not like just because it's your partner,
you can call it a friend, just because the person that you're closest to, quote unquote,
closest to you counts as giving you that magic,
it still has to be stable, positive, and reciprocal.
Do you know why I think it might be?
Because I've always been so concentrated on family that I haven't put energy into other baskets often. And also, to be honest, I've
always told myself that it takes me so much freaking energy to just get through the day because
of mental health stuff that I don't have like the leftover to foster other relationships.
But I just thought of this, and I don't know if it's
going to sound weird.
But the reason why the tethering, I think, happens when I
do check in with people outside of my family
is that when you have your own little family
that you put all of your eggs into that basket,
you can never be sure if anything that you're doing
or saying or what you're living is really all that healthy.
Because you have, you're all coming from the same
freaking little tiny F'd up culture.
All of our little families are F'd up cultures.
Like I'm sorry, even if your family listener
is like close to perfect, it's still F-dub.
We all have accepted the same storylines
and we all have the same values
and we all are raised by the same people
and we all are living in these little
twisted ecosystems.
You could be batshit crazy and losing it
and y'all, you're a little people are still gonna be like,
ah, you're doing great, you're crushing it. That's right. That's why no one
ever finds out that their families are crazy until they grow up, get partnered
up with other people and then you both find out both of your families.
Exactly. Because you're creating the new ecosystem.
That's one of the reasons I'm so nervous, Chase is at college.
People are gonna tell them.
Yes.
We listen to all of his stories.
Like we're listening if he like tells.
Has he figured it out yet?
Is he telling other people about our crazy or?
Right, but do you know what I mean?
And it's like when people outside your little twisted little world,
they can offer you wisdom that you didn't have.
They can say, hey, I see what you're doing
and I think that's healthy.
Whatever it is.
It's a different mirror.
Yeah.
It's like, yeah, somebody gets to bring in
some kind of difference.
And it allows maybe a little bit of balance.
And wisdom.
Yeah.
For sure.
More wisdom from like a different, you know,
different planets.
Different planets are coming in and saying,
giving you their weird ideas
from their weird planet.
I think what that speaks to is that our actual needs
as human beings have not changed the way
that our culture and society and economics have changed.
And I think that is why I give grace to people like me and others who are a
super confused about friendship, be super confused about
either living in a world where they're desperate for friendship and are surrounded by people
who don't understand it and are not reciprocating. Or people who think,
that's a little change-general to my major need, which is just to survive this day and the things I have to get done.
Like, really truly in our, and just bear with me for a second, because I think this is important to understand is that it's only been in the relatively recent human history of like agricultural and industrial societies that we have any kind of like surplus of anything,
right? So for the longest time in the world, and this goes to you kind of like looking outside
of your family for needs, we are in these forage or societies that were in bands of people. And
they we had to survive for thousands of thousands of thousands of years. We had to work cooperatively
with each other for food and resources and protection. On any given day, everyone had to work cooperatively with each other for food and resources and protection. On any given day,
everyone had to work together to share, and to reciprocate, and to say, you do this, I'll do this
together, we'll survive. We think that family is the basis of cooperation, but blood relationships
only kind of for 40% of those banned societies. So in other words,
kinship wasn't the reason for human cooperation.
It was the outcome of human cooperation.
Oh, okay.
Wow.
People didn't need each other because they were bonded.
They were bonded because they needed each other.
Okay, so you're saying, me saying,
I don't have enough time for friendship
because I can barely make it through the day as it is. It should be, I need friendship
because I can barely make it through the day as it is. It's like, that's not the thing
I do with my extra energy. That's the thing that will give me the energy that I need to live a little bit happier.
Exactly.
I think it's the, we think, oh, I don't feel connected.
I don't feel like I feel the need for that thing.
It's because you don't need that thing
because you haven't invested in connecting in that thing.
Right.
You don't even know what you're missing.
It's the same reason why, you know, the like together rising board, like I would take a bullet
for those people. It's because like we have so relied on each other. And I, I love them
because I need them and because we are mutually engaged in this thing that
is vital to life.
Well, it's not about that because there's a vehicle there.
Like you're talking about not friendship, just like, oh, I met somebody at the coffee shop.
You're talking about friendship around a shared mission, like together rising.
And that reminds me of you because of soccer.
Mm-hmm, yeah.
What, how has friendship and soccer worked together?
Yeah, I mean, it's just been kind of confusing.
I've had, for a lot of my life,
especially as a gay kid growing up in the 90s,
my friends in many ways had to be my chosen family because of
you know fear of being kicked out for all of these things right and so friends were
and have always had this really important place in my heart. But from the time that I can remember
being a child on teams, I had these
friends. It's like, wow, you know, this is such a beautiful bonus of being soccer
players. I have all these like built-in friends.
Force friends.
Force friends.
Force friends.
Yeah.
And the irony with that is that it was such a comfort during certain parts of my
life. And then now as an adult and in my retirement from soccer,
it gives me time to think about a lot of these friendships, whether they were soccer-based,
we talk about the May poll a lot. The thing in my life for so many years was soccer,
and everything else kind of revolved around that.
You're talking about the pole that has the strings and everyone dances around the maple,
like the pole for you as soccer.
Yes.
And I have had so many beautiful.
And by the way, like for those of my soccer friends
who are listening to this, like I actually still feel
like such amazing, like I have such best friends
from my playing days.
But the truth is, I haven't seen some of them in five, six years since I stopped playing.
And I haven't even been in contact with some players, some of my friends that I considered
some of my best friends. And that's okay. Like because of the way that our friendships were kind
of set up, it was around one thing, going many months
and sometimes years, some players would get injured
and you wouldn't see them for a couple of years.
And so I have always thought of myself
because of this system that was set up for me in friendship
that I wasn't really that good
because it was like out of sight, out of mind.
And then throughout the whole of my life, you throw in drinking as like this
other...
Maple.
Maple.
Yeah.
You know, when I was in soccer camp and training with the team, I had, you know, a certain
amount of friends.
And then when I was not in camp, I had different friends.
And for a long time, I had some really, really close,
best friends.
And then I stopped drinking.
And I-
You lost two maples right at once.
Yeah, I stopped drinking and I stopped sockering
and I moved to Naples and so that obviously changes things
so I didn't have like set up friends there.
But the irony is I didn't really like, set up friends there. But the irony is I didn't, I didn't
really go out and create friends there because there was like, there wasn't this maple. I
think maybe my maple changed to family. And I created friendship with you and the kids
and that has been my world ever since. And I do think that there is a real truth to like all the things that that sister's talking about.
Of us knowing deep down that the three things that that define what friendship is is important for
our life long-jebety. Yeah, I think so. And as the kids get older, I think that we start to get a
little bit like, oh shit, like, no offense because I think that this isn't true in every marriage.
like, and no offense, because I think that this is true in every marriage. Like, you don't want your kids all to go off to school or leave the house and you become
an empty nester.
And all you have is your partner.
No, we don't want to be in our freaking hot air balloon.
But now there's two in the basket.
Yeah.
And we're totally untethered.
And we're just like, floating away to nowhere.
Yeah, we need, we need friends in our lives and I'm committed
However, this is something that I think is really important and difference between you and me
My threshold for what a friend is is very different than yours in what way I
Can literally walk into a a two times. Same person is behind
the counter. They're my friend. It's true. It's so freaking. They're my friend. It's like the mayor
of everywhere we go. I go out surfing. I've got surfing friends. I don't talk to them other than when
we are in. So like this, this, the part of me that connection revolves around these like
maples, right? That everywhere in my life, I can see or create a maple if I want to. And
I think Glennon's threshold or barometer of the kind of friends she wants is much more there's there's there's how am I trying to
Well, it's you don't overthink it. I overthink it to death. I I'm so scared of these friends are making out there because
Okay, I'm just gonna say this I have a few
Reasons okay, feel my hands
Seriously, I'm sweating right now. I know. It's so weird.
Okay. First of all, I don't understand what we're getting into. Okay. I am more afraid to
get into a friendship than I am to get into a marriage. Because with a marriage, I know
how to get myself the hell out. There is an actual effing path.
If things start to go wrong, there are people I can call.
There are lawyers set up for this.
No, there are support groups.
I'm just saying there is a path out.
Both friendship, we have not as a culture decided.
What is what?
How we get into the slippery slope?
Like if you start to notice red flags,
what do you do? There's no like, oh, first date, second date, DTR, there's no defining the
relationship. There's like, you know what I mean? There's no like progression. So then there's
no getting yourself out. It's just this abyss, a slippery slope of commitment. And there's no shared expectation
of what it means to be a friend.
That's good.
So when I like clear expectations,
I like to know what people need for me.
So I can decide whether I can give that to them
and vice versa.
So when someone says to me,
not that we even say this,
we don't even say do you wanna be my friend.
We just trick each other into it, I guess, over time.
But even if they did say, even if they did say,
do you want to be my friend, I don't know what they mean.
They could mean that they want to text every couple
of weeks and check in.
I could mean.
Oh, by the way, if you want to get into a text relationship
with my wife, I'm just like disclaimer here.
Like she's not texting you back right away.
Right.
It's just happening.
But that's the thing, then where does it end?
You know, I've told you this before.
If I text you back, I check it off my list.
Oh, no, no, no, what happens?
You text me right back.
It's a never-ending cycle of hell. Well, you are an intentionality junkie.
Yes, what's the intention of this?
So Abby is like a, she's a joy seeker.
So she's out there and she's like,
hey, did you meet the guy at the market?
He's my boy, you know?
Like that's the, and Glennon is like,
what is the intention behind this arrangement
and what is specifically my objectives
and what is, how is this going to work itself out?
And where is it going?
And then there's the other thing that is real truth
of why I'm scared of friendship.
What is it?
I think which I'm going to blame this on my sensitivity,
which has been an issue for me my whole life, good and bad,
is that at the end of the day, I feel like most people are scary assholes.
Like, they are so, so your little friends you made surfing, that's great.
Okay, that's great. You're out there surfing, that's fine.
But if that escalates in the way that friendships often do.
So the next thing I know, you're gonna come home
and be like, Sam the surfer is coming over for dinner.
And I'm gonna be like, okay,
because you know what's gonna happen?
Sam the surfer is gonna come over
and we're gonna sit down.
He's gonna say some shit.
He's gonna reveal some scary ass holishness.
And then now what do we do? Now I'm stuck at dinner,
I'm sweating more. I don't know how there's no exit ramp for Sam the surfer. We're stuck with Sam
the surfer down the road for the rest of our freaking lives and Sam the surfer, like most others,
turns out to be a scary asshole. Yeah, but honey, I don't,'s we forget like I have some pretty strong boundaries around you. I
Know my wife and I know that I get to decide
On who I bring into this house. I'm just saying so and the surfer might not have revealed his full self to you
Yeah, it's just nice to like have a conversation when you're surfing like it's nice to have people
Well, you just keep it in the water
I just think okay what we're drilling down on here
is the difference, like there are two very healthful things
in our lives.
One are, you know, that inner,
concentric circle of the people we can't imagine our lives
without.
We need to be able to say to them,
what isn't working in our life?
We need to be honest.
We need to be reciprocal and positive with them. Okay. Then there's this whole other universe of connection.
Connection in the world. We are so socially isolated right now that we are lacking even. This is when
Abby walks into the, you know, store and makes a connection with the person behind the countertop.
They're not necessarily going to be in your lives forever,
but the value of that connection in her day
is important to her health.
And that's for all of us, right?
And we don't crave it.
So like they did a study where people on their commutes
were, they planted people to make initiate conversation
with people on their commutes and none of the people wanted to be engaged in conversation and they
were all like initially super annoyed the people started talking to them and
then when they got off the train the people who were annoyed to have their
scrolling interrupted by conversation had better days than the people who weren't interrupted.
Okay, this I can get behind,
because this sounds very quantifiable.
Okay, so what you're saying is connection,
we don't crave it, but when we get it,
we're happier and better like sex.
Like sex is just gonna be sex.
Like exercise.
Like exercise, like water, drinking water.
Like, yeah, never not once will you be like,
oh, I wish that I didn't connect that with that person.
I feel like I feel that a lot, but okay, I do see what you're saying.
But I think we mess it up, right?
Like we are both under investing in connection.
And some of us are over investing in the friendships that are not positive.
Yes.
So it's like find the place on the circles.
And I mean, this is a lady of Downworth's research.
This is Stephanie Coons, friendship research.
We need to place people appropriately
on the the concentric circles around us.
But we also need to acknowledge that
all of those connections are healthful for us.
I have a question.
We are appropriately placed.
I have a question.
What about online friendships?
Do those count?
They better.
So I've got.
So the initial research came out about, you know, oh, online and internet is ruining our
lives and our relationships.
It actually very much depends on what you're doing online.
So the initial research that said that it was ruining our lives didn't
demarcate whether you're like watching porn all day online or whether you're
interacting with people online.
So on balance, it's actually better for our relationship. It doesn't replace the need for that innermost
circle of people that you can rely on. But on balance, it does create those kind of connections
that are overall good for our health.
So we are saying that this connection is helpful and good for us. But we have to remember what you said,
that the ones that are good for us
are the ones that are stable and that are positive
and that are reciprocal.
So all of these, especially women,
I feel like, you know, these relationships
that we feel duty bound to, friendships
that we feel duty bound to, friendships that we feel duty bound to,
because we don't culturally have a path of getting ourselves out
when a friendship is not healthy.
If a friendship constantly makes us feel bad,
or is creating trauma or drama over and over again,
and we're only there because of some feeling of owing
or loyalty, or if,
because that's negative, that's not positive.
Or if the relationship is one-sided,
if we're not, like, love you always says,
my friendships are charging stations.
Like, if we are not leaving friendships feeling
like, or of time together, feeling like in one way or another,
we were expanded during that time.
We were comforted.
We were tethered.
We were given more wisdom.
We were helped, right?
Not in a transaction away, but in a real human way.
If we're the ones who were just always giving or always owing, then that is not the kind
of relationship.
It's not any friendship that's life giving
and helpful and helpful.
It's relationships that are stable,
that are positive and that are reciprocal.
Mm-hmm.
And the interesting thing about that is that,
I think we, you know, people are complicated.
So we all have a lot of relationships
where there may be the value of the relationship is that
does score really high on the very long-term factor, right? You know, I've known this person
for 20 years. And so there's a lot there that keeps us. But the interesting thing is that we all
know toxic relationships bad for our health, like actually physically bad for us.
That's why that high conflict marriage
is more dangerous for you health wise than a divorce.
You know, there's, so toxic relationships bad.
But then there's this whole other set
of this kind of mixed bag, which many friendships are
where it's both like super satisfying on this level,
but makes me feel like shit on this level.
The most interesting research
and it's just starting to be done right now,
but is suggesting that what they call
those ambivalent relationships.
So you rate it like five on one factor,
but like two on the other,
that those ambivalent relationships are bad for
us too.
Oh, it's like what did Brunei say, the near enemy?
That's right.
It's not that opposite.
So, it's not the people who are enemies that are most dangerous to us.
It's our friendships that we're wasting time with because they are ambivalent, right?
Because we say to ourselves, okay, the good outweighs the bad. Like, oh, yes, they are, they
always make me feel like shit with this thing. But look at all these other good things. So,
we net out at a plus. So it's okay. The new research is showing that that ambivalence is rated closely to toxic.
Because life is short and life is hard
and good enough is rarely good enough.
That's good.
I love it.
And it's really interesting because I've had
a couple of friends in my getting sober situation
that I realized in my sobriety
that it was just a one-sided relationship.
She's a cold, hot, it's Nick.
I remember one person that you just talked to on the phone
and the person would not ask you a single question about your life ever.
That's right.
It would start and other person would start talking about their life
and you would ask them questions and then the conversation would end
every single time that person would never ask you about your life.
That's right.
That's right.
That's what we call not reciprocal.
Yes.
That's what we call hostage-scientific.
I just think that it's really important that like, you're instinct on any kind of like
offness in a friendship to not want to participate in.
The research shows that that's actually good. Like my lower barometer of, you know,
the quality of a friendship is lower,
probably because I've had to be around people
that have been like pseudo friends for a lot of my life.
I do think now that we're being very intentional
about the friends we're making.
And we've made more friends or actually been in friendship.
We're dating.
We're dating, we're starting, we're starting relationships.
We're in the very beginning.
Okay, I'm not ready to commit, but we are starting.
And I just, you think they're into you?
I think there's a friend couple that are into us
and we're into them and excited.
And interestingly enough, I can think of two couples that we, they're both queer couples
that we are dating and that we feel are positive and reciprocal. I just want to go back to what you said.
I actually like the way that you are more than I like the way that I am.
So when you said it's good that you're like so judgmental about everyone.
I didn't say that.
It's what you were saying.
You were saying.
But your constant critique of the world turns out to be accurate much of the time.
Well, and by the way, what a constant critique of the world is and people and what I was talking
about is its fear.
It's all fear.
It's like, what is, if I let that person close to us, what is going to happen?
And what if I can't get out of it?
And so it's not, it's fear.
And I actually love the way that you are with your more
openness.
And I think that it would be wonderful for us to like,
have a balance.
I think we should meet in the middle somewhere because guess what?
One of my deep fears
is people not loving me for who I am, but loving loving me for all this peripheral bullshit,
soccer or whatever. Right. And what I love about you and like your structure and your standard
for friendship is that it weeds out the riffraff. Oh yeah, the people who would only love you for
that. Yes, it does. Like that. I got my eye yeah, the people who would only love you for that.
Yes, it does.
Like that.
I got my eye on Sam, the surfer.
I'll tell you that.
I mean, I think the whole thing is so interesting
because it comes back to that idea of tethered, right?
Like the opposite of tethered is untethered.
And there's a lot of freedom,
and there's a lot of control in that you are, you are unaccountable to
anyone. You are living your life. People can see you from afar. You're floating around
but no one can see you that much up close. Oh, Jesus. When you are tethered to someone,
there is accountability there. There's a responsibility to that. They can see you, right?
And that's the good news and the bad news.
That is so beautiful and so true. And I think when you're saying that, it's like I figured that out in my relationship, my family.
It's the hell didn't free. Yes. When it comes to friendship, I am free as a burden and not held in any way.
And it's like wanting those wanting to be seen up close also. That is so beautiful.
Okay. So I'm actually extremely excited about this topic now. I was dreading it, but I think
that you know, I'm 45 years old. 46. Am I not 46?
Are you being serious?
I think so.
No, no, no, no.
Can you Google it?
You're born 76.
Oh my god.
You're born 76.
4.
45.
45.
45.
Sorry.
It changes every year.
Anyway, I'm 45 years old and I think this is like an important next frontier.
I really want to explore the idea of friendship and how to have it
and how to keep it and how to make my life better with it
and how to be tethered by it.
That's why I moved to LA.
So the good news is we are actually doing very well.
We're doing well.
I think so too.
I've sweaty about it still.
But so here's what I want to hear.
I want to know if you both think this is a good next
right thing because I know that some of the people that
we're listening to this related, and I think that there's
probably a hell of a lot of people who
did not relate to what we were saying
and who because they have really life giving long lasting or stable, positive, and reciprocal friendships and that they have
learned how to make that work in their lives.
And I want to hear from them.
Okay.
So pod squadders, if you are a human being who is nailing this friendship there.
Okay. If you have friendships that are life giving to you, can you tell us about them?
Would you write to us or email us and tell us how you make it work. Okay, give us your
stories, but also can you give us your friendship hacks? And can you tell us do you ever have DTRs? And do you ever define the relationship?
DTRs also I do. I also think a next right thing would be interesting because we've just
gone through the holiday months. Yeah. Where we're telling our family how much we love them
and how much they mean to us. Are we doing that with our friends as much? These friendships that you say we have
that will bring us joy.
When is the last time you had a friend tell you
how much you mean to them?
Oh, that's sweet.
When's the last time you've told a friend
how much they mean to you?
To me, I just, I sent a friend how much they mean to you. To me, I just, I sent a friend a little care package
for her kid and a friend of hers. She got on the phone and she teared up on the phone with me
and she's just like, that meant so much to me and like, you mean so much to me. And like, Katie,
if you're out there, like that meant a lot. Like, it made me feel not that I was a good friend, but that I had
a good friend. And that was like really important. So I don't know, go out there and tell somebody that
that you consider a friend, like make yourself vulnerable and tell them that like
you love them. That's awesome. Call us and tell us 747-200-5307. 747-205-307.
And to all of you, thank you for being our friends.
Thank you for being a friend.
We love you and we will see you back here.
Thursday.
Thursday.
When life gets hard, don't forget we can do hard things.
Just not friends.
Hi, Sickle. Hi. When life gets hard, don't forget we can do hard things. Just not friends.
Hi, Sickle.
Hi.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle.
I walk through a fire I came out the other side.
I came out the other side
I chased desire, I made sure I got once money
And I continued to believe
That I'm the one for me And because I'm mine, I want the line
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak
So man, a final destination
That we stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do a heartache
I hit rock bottom it felt like a brand new star I'm not the problem sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak so mad A final destination will act
We stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
To be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache
This world finished her rose and heart breaks on land. We might get lost but we're only in that.
Stop that skiing directions.
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be long
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard things, yeah we can do hard things.
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