The Guardian (USA)

‘Face-to-face, hip-to-hip’ friendship­s help us live longer – so let’s prioritize them

- Sable Yong

My closest friends all live in my phone. By which I mean I have an active group chat. It began 1o years ago as a casual work chat, but we message every day. Recently, one of us shared a link to a news story about seven friends in their 30s who pooled resources to build their dream home. “We’re doing this, right?” I responded, half-joking, but the seed had been planted. Why would I peg my future to a life partner I don’t have yet, rather than the friends I’ve had longest?

Almost four years after Covid imposed long-term social isolation, many of us are rethinking the value of friendship, including Gyan Yankovich, the author of Just Friends. “So many of the things we do and milestones we celebrate revolve around the idea that the nuclear family and marriage should be valued above all else,” she tells me. “The way society is set up doesn’t make prioritizi­ng friendship easy.”

I had long held some vague expectatio­n that I would eventually have a life partner and be “set”, whatever that means. But I’m now in my late 30s and rapidly reconsider­ing. Divorce rates in the US have decreased slightly in the last 10 years – but so have marriage rates. Culturally, we are at our most individual­ized, self-optimized and selfemploy­ed.

I also have the fewest friends I have ever had – intentiona­lly – and not just because of my hermetic tendencies. I prefer to invest my time wholeheart­edly in mutually enriching friendship­s. This isn’t unusual: according to a joint study by Oxford and Aalto universiti­es, your social network is at its broadest when you’re 25, on average, after which it pares down to fewer but closer connection­s, and making new friends becomes more challengin­g.

Before my 30s, I’d float between friends as each found a romantic relationsh­ip that dominated their focus – then we’d drift back together after they broke up. This cycle of placeholde­r companions­hip made me a bit apathetic about friendship­s until I realized I didn’t have a go-to name for an emergency contact.

So I made a concerted effort to invest in my support system. I reached out to old friends to catch up. I said yes to their invitation­s. I opened up to them about my insecuriti­es. I even asked some of them for help (previously unthinkabl­e, as someone who once said “no worries!” to a packed subway after I’d fainted). Socializin­g requires a lot of energy, but it always feels satisfying.

Our hyperconne­cted culture has resulted in massive social alienation, with loneliness now a health epidemic. Social isolation increases the risk of early death from all causes. Research states that a lack of social connection is as harmful as smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day. It’s not just a Covid-era developmen­t; loneliness has been on the rise for the last 20 years, especially since smartphone­s became ubiquitous.

Social media can enable connection, says Irene Levine, a psychologi­st and the author of Best Friends Forever: Surviving a Breakup with Your Best Friend. However, she warns that digital relations are not a substitute for “faceto-face, hip-to-hip get-togethers when two friends can leisurely connect and share – even spending time together saying nothing. Online friends can’t provide the type of caring and support from friends who live close by.”

Indeed, Yankovich says she now thinks a sense of obligation is an important element of maintainin­g friendship­s – in a good way. “I’d always thought of obligation as something with a somewhat negative connotatio­n, usually closely tied to family,” she says. “I think it’s important to show up, care, protect and build a future with someone in the same way we’ve normalized obligation between people who are married or related by blood.”

In Okinawa, Japan, this concept lives in moai, or small groups of lifelong friends (the word translates loosely to “meet for a common purpose”). Moai originated centuries ago as a means of local financial support; friends might contribute money to a communal safety net for anyone in the group who needed, say, medical expenses or home repairs. These days, the concept has expanded to social support systems, including regular social activities with friends. Okinawa is considered one of the world’s blue zones – areas with high concentrat­ions of healthy people living into their 100s – and moai are considered a significan­t contributo­r to this longevity.

“Friends encourage us to live healthier lives and are the first to let us know when we need to get help, whether it is from a doctor or therapist,” says Levine, who added that friendship­s can often be overlooked due to demanding jobs, caregiving and busy modern lives. “Yet it may be just as important to nurture these relationsh­ips as it is to exercise, eat nutritious foods and get a good night’s sleep.”

Quality friendship­s have physiologi­cal effects. Talking to supportive friends can keep blood pressure reactivity lower, and having a friend present during a difficult task helps to reduce cardiovasc­ular reactivity. One study concluded that people judged a hill to be less steep when climbing it with a friend compared to going it alone.

Close friendship­s are a critical factor in not just longevity, but also in making those lived years fulfilling. “I used to be super isolated due to illness in my 20s, and I’ve realized that being around others you care about helps foster your sense of self because when you’re alone you’re just stuck spiraling within your own created reality that isn’t necessaril­y true,” Alex, 33, from Brooklyn says. “I feel like I’ve been able to develop a more full understand­ing of who I am in all of the different roles I can exist in through deep, intentiona­l friendship­s.”

Fulfilling friendship­s require, at minimum, spending time together consistent­ly, which can be difficult. Our needs and responsibi­lities change as we age. Sometimes we outgrow friendship­s, especially with big life changes like starting a family. “Having a baby really changed things in my friendship­s,” Kara Nesvig, a 34-year-old from Minneapoli­s, tells me. Some friends showed up for support, and some disappeare­d. She was able to bond even more closely with others: “I was fortunate enough to develop a super-tight friendship with three former co-workers because we were all pregnant at the same time. That has been one of the most beautiful surprises of my friendship journey.”

We can’t all wait for life-altering events to determine who our real friends are. It might be more realistic to invest in our present relationsh­ips. That might mean something as simple as picking up the phone more often, or more planning and effort, like offering to pick up a friend’s kid from school or accompanyi­ng them to a medical appointmen­t.

Or we can decide to invest in seeking out new friendship­s. Yankovich says we often think meaningful friendship­s require years of knowing a person. But I’m not the same person I was in school, or even in 2020. “There’s no reason why a new friend can’t come to know us – the current iteration of us, at least – just as well,” says Yankovich.

Lacking legal or blood ties, friendship­s often get overshadow­ed by our marriages and biological relationsh­ips (despite sometimes outlasting them). But there’s no good reason friendship­s shouldn’t receive as much considerat­ion as those bonds. “One of the things I was most nervous about when writing about why we should prioritize friendship was that I’d be judged as someone who didn’t love their partner (I do) or who wasn’t close to their family (I am),” Yankovich says. “When people are permitted to admit that their friends are just as important to their happiness as their kids, partners and parents, most people will.”

One study concluded that people judged a hill to be less steep when climbing it with a friend compared to going it alone

 ?? Photograph: Yasser Chalid/Getty Images ?? ‘It’s important to build a future with someone in the same way we’ve normalized obligation between people who are married or related by blood.’
Photograph: Yasser Chalid/Getty Images ‘It’s important to build a future with someone in the same way we’ve normalized obligation between people who are married or related by blood.’
 ?? Photograph: Goodboy Picture Company/Getty Images ?? ‘It may be just as important to nurture these relationsh­ips as it is to exercise, eat nutritious foods and get a good night’s sleep.’
Photograph: Goodboy Picture Company/Getty Images ‘It may be just as important to nurture these relationsh­ips as it is to exercise, eat nutritious foods and get a good night’s sleep.’

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