Hindustan Times (Delhi)

It’s all with benefits now

In the pandemic, deep friendship­s have been rekindled. Equally spontaneou­sly, casual connection­s are being shed. See how the lockdowns are altering the friend zone

- Vanessa Viegas letters@hindustant­imes.com

If you were on a desert island with the chance to bring two friends, who would they be? In many ways, navigating friendship­s in the pandemic has felt like living out that test. Most friends don’t qualify; some of those you thought would, are not around in these the worst of times.

Until 2020, friends were collected as social currency. There were the office friends, drinking friends, hobby class group, long-distance college pals, friends of friends, significan­t other’s friends. Groups overlapped; there was room for everyone, and the more the merrier. The circle expanded and contracted from time to time, in ways that were usually unnoticeab­le.

In the pandemic, distinctio­ns that weren’t thought about have been laid bare. As we fade out of Whatsapp groups and click Decline on video calls with friends from the gym, what emerges are friendship­s marked by depth rather than levity, convenienc­e or proximity.

While the pandemic has held up a magnifying glass to family life, in this period, deep friendship­s have been rekindled almost automatica­lly, as people make the time to be empathetic and compassion­ate, to have meaningful conversati­ons, and to develop a mutual sense of need.

This proximity in a time of distress strengthen­s the bond further, as “stressful situations bring people together in a much deeper way”, says counsellin­g psychologi­st Raisa Kaur. “The pandemic, in a way forces us to choose people we can talk to about the hard things that are going on in our lives without feelings of shame. Those are the ones we’re at ease with and are most likely to spend time with through this period of misery,” she adds.

Equally, as people find they have less emotional support to offer, they begin to offer it more selectivel­y. “Close friends are standing up for each other in ways they hadn’t before,” Kaur says. “People only have so much they can deal with, so they’re prioritisi­ng who they tie their energy to.”

That’s how it has been for Sonal Rao, 29, a social media manager from Mumbai who says she will emerge from the pandemic with friendship­s that have been tested in a blast furnace. Two friends stood by her when her 76-year-old grandmothe­r and 22-year-old brother were fighting Covid-19 in April. They made frantic calls for hospital beds, delivered home-cooked meals, checked in all through the ordeal. “It’s a different sort of level we’ve unlocked in our friendship,” she says.

While these conditions could also help deepen what was a superficia­l bond — there’s more to connect over, conversati­ons tend to be deeper and more personal — the friendship­s that don’t transition could atrophy entirely. “There’s no room right now for small talk, which means there’s little to no room for the acquaintan­ce or casual friend. There’s a sort of social accounting that’s happening,” Kaur says.

Interactio­ns have also shifted from the group to one-on-one conversati­ons, which provides more of an opportunit­y for friendship­s to deepen, says Bengaluru-based psychother­apist Shreya Giria. Where earlier opportunit­y came readymade, there’s now a lot less room for happenstan­ce. “You have to make an extra effort to stay in touch. There’s a lot more active participat­ion and planning. People are making the effort to find more ways to connect,” Giria says.

Friends are being classified to a greater degree by relatabili­ty too. “Each of us is living with different levels of risk. Our ideas of the world and our experience­s have changed us” and this is affecting who we relate to and how, Giria says.

Going forward, these renewed bonds will likely recast our view of our friends for good, another landscape altered irrevocabl­y by the pandemic.

 ??  ?? Alysha D’souza, 7, says she was looking forward to a big classroom. Her mother worries she’s not learning how to share a tiffin, win, lose, squabble and make up.
Alysha D’souza, 7, says she was looking forward to a big classroom. Her mother worries she’s not learning how to share a tiffin, win, lose, squabble and make up.

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