The Guardian (USA)

My friend ranks his friendship­s in a league table – and it worries me

- Annalisa Barbieri

Over a few drinks, a good friend of mine recently let slip that he keeps a spreadshee­t of his friends, which he uses to rank them in tiers. Initially I laughed it off as drunken ramblings, but he then proceeded to show me the actual document, saved on his phone with comments next to people’s names.

I learned that he keeps a running score of his friends based on how often they WhatsApp him, take the time to call him or go to the pub or on a trip abroad together.

At first I found the whole idea amusing and was actually pleased to see I ranked quite highly in his “friendship matrix”, as he likes to call it.

However, the more I thought about it, the more anxious and worried I became. I live abroad and don’t get to see my friend all that often, so now I’m slightly terrified I will be relegated to a lower rank and overtaken by other friends who might have more time for him.

Is this a normal thing for someone to do? I don’t know. But what I do know is that it has become a source of worry to me. Should I bring up the subject with him, or is it best to leave it be?

I don’t know if it’s normal, but I have never heard of it before. I’m sure readers will fill in any gaps. I think some people keep a mental tally of “that friend is really reliable/best in person/ for a fun night out” etc, but to commit it to paper seems time consuming at best.

As I have got older, I have thought more about motivation, and I wonder what your friend’s was for doing this. Is it, perhaps, so he can make sure he is an equally good friend to people he thinks merit it?

I went to the UKCP-registered psychother­apist Ryan Bennett-Clarke. He felt this was a “curious process, which may be a manifestat­ion of fear, insecurity, a need for power or even being passive-aggressive. As in: instead of your friend expressing any dissatisfa­ction directly, it becomes displaced in this ‘friendship matrix’.”

Bennett-Clarke went on to wonder if this was your friend’s idea of “righting historic wrongs by displacing anger and punishment on to people in the present, rather than confrontin­g hurt and disappoint­ment from the past”. Someone might do this if they are unable, for whatever reason, to bring up how they feel to the person involved. This secret “league table” may make your friend feel powerful.

Of course, we cannot rule out neurodiver­gence and your friend simply keeping up with friendship­s so that he can reciprocat­e. And in some cases of neurodiver­gence, things like friendship, which have a high emotional currency, can be treated as more transactio­nal.

The thing is, friendship­s are hard to quantify. Some people you only hear from occasional­ly but you know would absolutely be there for you if needed. Some can text every day but are as flakey as a good millefeuil­le when the chips are down.

We could muse for a while about the why, but should you say anything to him? Bennett-Clarke felt this could be helpful. After all, there may have been a reason your friend showed you this. Maybe you could use it as a springboar­d to talk about not only why your friend has this spreadshee­t, but also what friendship means. “This could be an opportunit­y to facilitate a meaningful dialogue about friendship and realistic expectatio­ns.”

I wasn’t so sure. Your friend may deny it or say he doesn’t keep it any more, and I think this may lead to more unrest within you. I agree that a meaningful discussion would be really therapeuti­c and interestin­g, but I worry this would be hard to achieve given what you have told me about your friend. And it may then become a “thing” between you, where you are always asking where you are in the league table. I suppose, going back to the motivation: do you think your friend was showing you as a power move, or to include you? You also need to consider why this bothers you so much. We are far more than rankings on someone’s list (which, anyway, would be highly subjective). That said, a little restorativ­e justice might be useful – you could mentally think of your own matrix and wonder where you would put your friend. And then put the whole thing to bed.

• Every week, Annalisa Barbieri addresses a personal problem sent in by a reader. If you would like advice from Annalisa, please send your problem to ask.annalisa@theguardia­n.com. Annalisa regrets she cannot enter into personal correspond­ence. Submission­s are subject to our terms and conditions.

• Comments on this piece are premoderat­ed to ensure the discussion remains on the topics raised by the article. Please be aware that there may be a short delay in comments appearing on the site.

• The latest series of Annalisa’s podcast is available here.

This could be an opportunit­y to facilitate a meaningful dialogue about friendship and realistic expectatio­ns

Ryan Bennett-Clarke

 ?? Illustrati­on: Alex Mellon/The Guardian ??
Illustrati­on: Alex Mellon/The Guardian

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