About a year ago I wrote an article about toxic
friendships - and judging by the many comments we received,
that article resonated with many of you. As you'd expect, there was
some backlash too, and some people who really didn't like it. To
them it felt too close to the bone and as a consequence it
generated some heated discussions and exchanges, which made me
realise that I was certainly on to something.
After much reflection, the whole experience led me
to realise just how important friendships are and how they really
affect our wellbeing and touch our lives in very profound ways. It
also made me realise how important it is to be mindful about our
friendships, and pay as much attention to them as we do to other
aspects of our lives. The quality of our friendships has a direct
impact on our happiness, wellbeing and perhaps even physical and
mental health.
I recently completed an online Positive Psychology course
through a wonderful US based website called Mentor Coach.
The course was taken by one of the leaders in the field, Professor
Chris Peterson, who is the chair of the Values In Action (VIA)
Institute. When asked during the course for the single best piece
of advice the field has for us, Professor Peterson replied 'having
great relationships in your life'. He went on to say that although
the field is focused on building on our strengths, if an individual
has problems building meaningful relationships with others, then as
responsible coaching practitioners we have a duty to work on that
area of development, because meaningful relationships and the
ability to build them is a necessary condition to wellbeing.
Relationship Matter
We are social animals. This is how we survived the harsh
savannas of our ancestors. We grouped together, allocated roles and
we hunted and we gathered and we looked after our young, together.
On our own we could have never made it and survived to pass our
genes on. In every story, movie andplay on people who ended up in
isolation, the common theme is always how the lack of human contact
was the most difficult aspect. Think of Tom Hanks in Castaway,
talking to his "friend", Wilson, who was in fact a basketball. We
miss people, and it is our relationships with others that we
remember the most and that define us the most.
There is a wonderful Hebrew saying, 'show me who your friends
are and I'll tell you who you are'. This saying is echoed in many
other languages; in essence, I think we all acknowledge that we can
tell a lot about a person by the company they keep. Elsewhere I
wrote about values, and our friendship choices certainly reflect
the values we hold. In this article I decided to examine
friendships and their influence? on our lives through different
lenses and of course give some practical suggestions along the way.
I hope you'll find my musings thought provoking and I hope you'll
reflect on yourself as a friend and your friendship choices and
find ways to enhance this extremely important aspect of your
lives.
Cross Cultural Friendships
Having been a migrant to this country, I still remember vividly
how hard it was to leave my Israeli girlfriends behind and how
sorely I missed them on a daily basis. I was married and have a
great relationship with my husband, but there was something
substantially different about that female camaraderie and being
with people who understood my cultural background. I am still
friends with my childhood girlfriends. We write, talk on the phone
and Skype and when we go back for a visit, it's like we've never
parted even if four years go by and we've had children
inbetween!
Moving to a new country with such different social expectations
was far harder than I anticipated and it took me a long while to
find true friendships. For someone used to having close female
friends that experience was really hard. And I am sure many of you
who may have moved here from another country or even from another
part of New Zealand would agree.
Nowadays I can honestly now say that I have the most amazing
girlfriends here in New Zealand for which I am really grateful. But
my initial experiences led me to think about how so many of the
norms of friendship can be culturally different and are so subtle
that we are completely unaware of them more often than not. I think
of other migrants and how hard it must be for them, too, because so
much of friendship is subtle and often unconscious, and
misunderstandings can happen so easily.
For example, I now know that in New Zealand it is normal for
friendships to take a long while to form, and even longer to become
truly close. Not only are Kiwis naturally reserved, they also have
a slower sense of time. As an Israeli visitor once told me, in New
Zealand there is no news, "just current affairs". What she meant
was that in Israel, the news stories are forever updating, whereas
here we take our time, processing a story for an entire day and
sometimes weeks.
Once I began to understand just how different friendships are
here and to adapt, I made wonderful friendships that feel so
natural and so balanced. So much so, that when we visit Israel my
Israeli friends tell me how Kiwi I have become, being reserved and
stand offish, taking my time with friendships!
On women and friendships
Women's friendships are very different to men's and you don't
need a PhD to figure that out. I watch my daughter and my son and
see how stereotypically different their friendships are. The girls
use so many more words - they build complex hierarchies of best
friends, former best friends and future best friends, whereas for
the boys it's really about who's got the coolest toys.
Women's friendships can have a devastating affect on our
wellbeing because they are so emotionally meaningful to us. From an
evolutionary psychology point of view, I read somewhere that
because women were left behind to care for the young while
gathering and preparing meals etc, they learnt how to build complex
social networks - more so than men because of the natures of the
tasks they did. What I really liked was how our great great great
grandmothers in those savannas had to have long memories to know
who can be trusted to look after the young and who couldn't.
Something many of us (myself included) have perfected since!
I think a big part of why I received so much feedback on the
Toxic Friendship article was because many of you recognised the
devastating affect unhealthy friendships can have on us. I think
more often than not we don't consciously and mindfully reflect on
our friendships and only realise things in hindsight. Perhaps that
is why it struck such a chord.
Through my personal experience, and that of those around me, as
well as my professional experience with many women whom I coach, I
realise how central good women friends are to our wellbeing. In
Professionelle, we often hear of professional women who either
immigrated here or moved from another part of New Zealand and who
really feel isolated because they haven't yet been able to find
like minded women to make friends with. Often they tell this to us
with slight embarrassment - which they absolutely shouldn't feel,
as women friends ARE that important.
Being the best friend you can be
There are many books about being the best mum, the best dressed
executive, the best lover and what not, but I have yet to see a
book dedicated to being the best friend you can be. And I think
someone should write it! How often do we think about how to be a
good friend? How often do you reflect on what makes you a good
friend? And on what others do to you that makes you appreciate
them?
Now, back to Positive Psychology and its monumental contribution
in the form of Signature Strengths. If you haven't yet, make sure
you take the Signature Strengths 40 minutes online survey which is
available for free here. I use Signature
Strengths extensively in all my work and especially when I coach
and facilitate, but one of the biggest messages that comes from the
field of Positive Psychology is that, first and foremost, you have
to practise what you preach to be any good. Because I truly believe
that, I try to bring Signature Strengths into my own life - and
into my friendships. My friends will probably not be surprised to
find out that my top signature strengths include Wisdom, Judgment,
Curiosity and Social Intelligence.
There are so many ways you can apply your signature strengths to
enhance your friendships and be the best friend you can be. For
example, if one of your strengths is Curiosity, you could make a
point to find out something you didn't know about your friend next
time you see them. (This one is one of my favourites and I have to
try and not be 'the Spanish Inquisitor' with my questions ;)). If
one of your strengths is the Capacity to Love and be Loved, you
could always think of new and different ways to exercise your
strength, be it through offering to do a shop for a girlfriend
whose child is sick or through organising a 40th surprise party.
The thing about using your signature strengths is that everyone
wins. You win because it is so rewarding using your signature
strength and your friends win because through using them, you ARE a
better friend. And the important bit is to have friends who love
and value you for the strengths you have.
When you are mindful about your friendships, all of a sudden
they become much more than a nice thing to have. It took me many
years but I am now so conscious of how important my friendships are
to my ability to do all I can do, that I treat my friendships and
spending time with the girls with exactly the same level of respect
as I do my paid work. Gone are the days where I viewed being with a
friend as a luxury to be afforded only after my 'real' work was
done. I now view it as one of the most important fuels that keep me
going!
I hope I have got you thinking about your friendships, what they
mean to you and how you can practically be the best friend that you
can be. I especially hope you'll go out to dinner with your best
girls and make a toast to friendships!
© Professionelle Ltd 2009