Interesting. I'd like to ask the list a question from here: "Who was the
last person you made friends with (leave out names if you like), and how
did they transition from acquaintance to friend?"

Udhay

http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2015/10/how-friendships-change-over-time-in-adulthood/411466/

How Friendships Change in Adulthood

JULIE BECK  OCT 22, 2015

In the hierarchy of relationships, friendships are at the bottom. Romantic
partners, parents, children—all these come first.

This is true in life, and in science, where relationship research tends to
focus on couples and families. When Emily Langan, an associate professor of
communication at Wheaton College goes to conferences for the International
Association of Relationship Researchers, she says, “friendship is the
smallest cluster there. Sometimes it’s a panel, if that.”

Friendships are unique relationships because unlike family relationships,
we choose to enter into them. And unlike other voluntary bonds, like
marriages and romantic relationships, they lack a formal structure. You
wouldn’t go months without speaking to or seeing your significant other
(hopefully), but you might go that long without contacting a friend.

Still, survey upon survey upon survey shows how important people’s friends
are to their happiness. And though friendships tend to change as people
age, there is some consistency in what people want from them.

“I’ve listened to someone as young as 14 and someone as old as 100 talk
about their close friends, and [there are] three expectations of a close
friend that I hear people describing and valuing across the entire life
course,” says William Rawlins, the Stocker Professor of Interpersonal
Communication at Ohio University. “Somebody to talk to, someone to depend
on, and someone to enjoy. These expectations remain the same, but the
circumstances under which they’re accomplished change.”

The voluntary nature of friendship makes it subject to life’s whims in a
way more formal relationships aren’t. In adulthood, as people grow up and
go away, friendships are the relationships most likely to take a hit.
You’re stuck with your family, and you’ll prioritize your spouse. But where
once you could run over to Jonny’s house at a moment’s notice and see if he
could come out to play, now you have to ask Jonny if he has a couple hours
to get a drink in two weeks.

The voluntary nature of friendship makes it subject to life's whims in a
way other relationships aren't.
The beautiful, special thing about friendship, that friends are friends
because they want to be, that they choose each other, is “a double agent,”
Langan says, “because I can choose to get in, and I can choose to get out.”

Throughout life, from grade school to the retirement home, friendship
continues to confer health benefits, both mental and physical. But as life
accelerates, people’s priorities and responsibilities shift, and
friendships are affected, for better, or often, sadly, for worse.

* * *

The saga of adult friendship starts off well enough. “I think young
adulthood is the golden age for forming friendships,” Rawlins says.
“Especially for people who have the privilege and the blessing of being
able to go to college.”

During young adulthood, friendships become more complex and meaningful. In
childhood, friends are mostly other kids who are fun to play with; in
adolescence, there’s a lot more self-disclosure and support between
friends, but adolescents are still discovering their identity, and learning
what it means to be intimate. Their friendships help them do that.

But, “in adolescence, people have a really tractable self,” Rawlins says.
“They’ll change.” How many band t-shirts from Hot Topic end up sadly
crumpled at the bottom of dresser drawers because the owners’ friends said
the band was lame? The world may never know. By young adulthood, people are
usually a little more secure in themselves, more likely to seek out friends
who share their values on the important things, and let the little things
be.

To go along with their newly sophisticated approach to friendship, young
adults also have time to devote to their friends. According to the
Encyclopedia of Human Relationships, young adults often spend between 10
and 25 hours a week with friends, and the 2014 American Time Use Survey
found that people between 20 and 24 years old spent the most time per day
socializing on average of any age group.

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College is an environment that facilitates this, with keggers and close
quarters, but even young adults who don’t go to college are less likely to
have some of the responsibilities that can take away from time with
friends, like marriage, or caring for children or older parents.

Friendship networks are naturally denser, too, in youth, when most of the
people you meet go to your school or live in your town. As people move for
school, work, and family, networks spread out. Moving out of town for
college gives some people their first taste of this distancing. In a
longitudinal study that followed pairs of best friends over 19 years, a
team led by Andrew Ledbetter, an associate professor of communication
studies at Texas Christian University, found that participants had moved an
average of 5.8 times during that period.

“I think that’s just kind of a part of life in the very mobile and
high-level transportation- and communication-technology society that we
have,” Ledbetter says. “We don’t think about how that’s damaging the social
fabric of our lives.”

We aren’t obligated to our friends the way we are to our romantic partners,
our jobs, and our families. We’ll be sad to go, but go we will. This is one
of the inherent tensions of friendships, which Rawlins calls “the freedom
to be independent and the freedom to be dependent.”

“Where are you situated?” Rawlins asks me, in the course of explaining this
tension. Washington, D.C., I tell him.

“Where’d you go to college?”

“Chicago.”

“Okay, so you’re in Chicago, and you have close friends there. You say ‘Ah,
I’ve got this great opportunity in Washington…’ and [your friend] goes
‘Julie, you gotta take that!’ [She’s] essentially saying ‘You’re free to
go. Go there, do that, but if you need me I’ll be here for you.’”

I wish he wouldn’t use me as an example. It makes me sad.

* * *

As people enter middle age, they tend to have more demands on their time,
many of them more pressing than friendship. After all, it’s easier to put
off catching up with a friend than it is to skip your kid’s play or an
important business trip. The ideal of people’s expectations for friendship
is always in tension with the reality of their lives, Rawlins says.

“The real bittersweet aspect is young adulthood begins with all this time
for friendship, and friendship just having this exuberant, profound
importance for figuring out who you are and what’s next,” Rawlins says.
“And you find at the end of young adulthood, now you don’t have time for
the very people who helped you make all these decisions.”

The time is poured, largely, into jobs and families. Not everyone gets
married or has kids, of course, but even those who stay single are likely
to see their friendships affected by others’ couplings. “The largest
drop-off in friends in the life course occurs when people get married,”
Rawlins says. “And that’s kind of ironic, because at the [wedding], people
invite both of their sets of friends, so it’s kind of this last wonderful
and dramatic gathering of both people’s friends, but then it drops off.”

“You find at the end of young adulthood, now you don’t have time for the
very people who helped you make all these life decisions.”
In a set of interviews he did in 1994 with middle-aged Americans about
their friendships, Rawlins wrote that, “an almost tangible irony permeated
these adults discussions of close or ‘real’ friendship.” They defined
friendship as “being there” for each other, but reported that they rarely
had time to spend with their most valued friends, whether because of
circumstances, or through the age-old problem of good intentions and bad
follow-through: “Friends who lived within striking distance of each other
found that… scheduling opportunities to spend or share some time together
was essential,” Rawlins writes. “Several mentioned, however, that these
occasions often were talked about more than they were accomplished.”

As they move through life, people make and keep friends in different ways.
Some are independent, they make friends wherever they go, and may have more
friendly acquaintances than deep friendships. Others are discerning,
meaning they have a few best friends they stay close with over the years,
but the deep investment means that the loss of one of those friends would
be devastating. The most flexible are the acquisitive—people who stay in
touch with old friends, but continue to make new ones as they move through
the world.

Rawlins says that any new friends people might make in middle age are
likely to be grafted onto other kinds of relationships—as with co-workers,
or parents of their children’s friends—because it’s easier for
time-strapped adults to make friends when they already have an excuse to
spend time together. As a result, the “making friends” skill can atrophy.
“[In a study we did,] we asked people to tell us the story of the last
person they became friends with, how they transitioned from acquaintance to
friend,” Langan says. “It was interesting that people kind of struggled.”

* * *

But if you plot busyness across the life course, it makes a parabola.  The
tasks that take up our time taper down in old age. Once people retire and
their kids have grown up, there seems to be more time for the shared living
kind of friendship again. People tend to reconnect with old friends they’ve
lost touch with. And it seems more urgent to spend time with them—according
to socioemotional selectivity theory, toward the end of life, people begin
prioritizing experiences that will make them happiest in the moment,
including spending time with close friends and family.

And some people do manage to stay friends for life, or at least for a
sizable chunk of life. But what predicts who will last through the
maelstrom of middle age and be there for the silver age of friendship?

Whether people hold onto their old friends or grow apart seems to come down
to dedication and communication. In Ledbetter’s longitudinal study of best
friends, the number of months that friends reported being close in 1983
predicted whether they were still close in 2002, suggesting that the more
you’ve invested in a friendship already, the more likely you are to keep it
going. Other research has found that people need to feel like they are
getting as much out of the friendship as they are putting in, and that that
equity can predict a friendship’s continued success.

Hanging out with a set of lifelong best friends can be annoying, because
the years of inside jokes and references often make their communication
unintelligible to outsiders. But this sort of shared language is part of
what makes friendships last. In the longitudinal study, the researchers
were also able to predict friends’ future closeness by how well they
performed on a word-guessing game in 1983. (The game was similar to Taboo,
in that one partner gave clues about a word without actually saying it,
while the other guessed.)

“Such communication skill and mutual understanding may help friends
successfully transition through life changes that threaten friendship
stability,” the study reads. Friends don’t necessarily need to communicate
often, or intricately, just similarly.

Of course, there are more ways than ever that people can communicate with
friends, and media multiplexity theory suggests that the more platforms on
which friends communicate—texting and emailing, sending each other funny
Snapchats and links on Facebook, and seeing each other in person—the
stronger their friendship is. “If we only have the Facebook tie, that’s
probably a friendship that’s in greater jeopardy of not surviving into the
future,” Ledbetter says.

Saying “Happy Birthday” on Facebook, faving a friend’s tweet—these are the
life support machines of friendship. They keep it breathing, but
mechanically.
Though you would think we would all know better by now than to draw a hard
line between online relationships and “real” relationships, Langan says her
students still use “real” to mean “in-person.”

There are four main levels of maintaining a relationship, and digital
communication works better for some than for others. The first is just
keeping a relationship alive at all, just to keep it in existence. Saying
“Happy Birthday” on Facebook, faving a friend’s tweet—these are the life
support machines of friendship. They keep it breathing, but mechanically.

Next is to keep a relationship at a stable level of closeness. “I think you
can do that online too,” Langan says. “Because the platforms are broad
enough in terms of being able to write a message, being able to send some
support comments if necessary.” It’s sometimes possible to repair a
relationship online, too, (another maintenance level) depending on how
badly it was broken—getting back in touch with someone, or sending a
heartfelt apology email.

“But then when you get to the next level, which is: Can I make it a
satisfying relationship? That’s I think where the line starts to break
down,” Langan says. “Because what happens often is people think of
satisfying relationships as being more than an online presence.”

Social media makes it possible to maintain more friendships, but more
shallowly. And it can also keep relationships on life support that would
(and maybe should) otherwise have died out.

“The fact that Tommy, who I knew when I was five, is still on my Facebook
feed is bizarre to me,” Langan says. “I don’t have any connection to
Tommy’s current life, and going back 25 years ago, I wouldn’t. Tommy would
be a memory to me. Like, I seriously have not seen Tommy in 35 years. Why
would I care that Tommy’s son just got accepted to Notre Dame? Yay for him!
He’s relatively a stranger to me. But in the current era of mediated
relationships, those relationships never have to time out.”

By middle-age, people have likely accumulated many friends from different
jobs, different cities, and different activities, who don’t know each other
at all. These friendships fall into three categories: active, dormant, and
commemorative. Friendships are active if you are in touch regularly, you
could call on them for emotional support and it wouldn’t be weird, if you
pretty much know what’s going on with their lives at this moment. A dormant
friendship has history, maybe you haven’t talked in a while, but you still
think of that person as a friend. You’d be happy to hear from them and if
you were in their city, you’d definitely meet up.

A commemorative friend is not someone you expect to hear from, or see,
maybe ever again. But they were important to you at an earlier time in your
life, and you think of them fondly for that reason, and still consider them
a friend.

Facebook makes things weird by keeping these friends continually in your
peripheral vision. It violates what I’ll call the camp-friend rule of
commemorative friendships: No matter how close you were with your best
friend from summer camp, it is always awkward to try to stay in touch when
school starts again. Because your camp self is not your school self, and it
dilutes the magic of the memory a little to try to attempt a pale imitation
at what you had.

The same goes for friends you only see online. If you never see your
friends in person, you’re not really sharing experiences so much as just
keeping each other updated on your separate lives. It becomes a
relationship based on storytelling rather than shared living—not bad, just
not the same.

* * *

“This is one thing I really want to tell you,” Rawlins says. “Friendships
are always susceptible to circumstances. If you think of all the things we
have to do—we have to work, we have to take care of our kids, or our
parents—friends choose to do things for each other, so we can put them off.
They fall through the cracks.”

“Adults feel the need to be more polite in their friendships. So we stop
expecting as much, which is kind of a sad thing.”
After young adulthood, he says, the reasons that friends stop being friends
are usually circumstantial—due to things outside the relationship itself.
One of the findings from Langan’s “friendship rules” study was that “adults
feel the need to be more polite in their friendships,” she says. “We don't
feel like, in adulthood, we can demand very much of our friends. It's
unfair, they've got other stuff going on. So we stop expecting as much,
which to me is kind of a sad thing, that we walk away from that.” For the
sake of being polite.

But the things that make friendship fragile also make it flexible. Rawlins’
interviewees tended to think of their friendships as continuous, even if
they went through long periods where they were out of touch. This is a
fairly sunny view—you wouldn’t assume you were still on good terms with
your parents if you hadn’t heard from them in months. But the default
assumption with friends is that you’re still friends.

“That is how friendships continue, because people are living up to each
other’s expectations. And if we have relaxed expectations for each other,
or we’ve even suspended expectations, there’s a sense in which we realize
that,” Rawlins says. “A summer when you’re 10, three months is
one-thirtieth of your life. When you’re 30, what is it? It feels like the
blink of an eye.”

Perhaps friends are more willing to forgive long lapses in communication
because they’re feeling life’s velocity acutely too. It’s sad, sure, that
we stop relying on our friends as much when we grow up, but it allows for a
different kind of relationship, based on a mutual understanding of each
other’s human limitations. It’s not ideal, but it’s real, as Rawlins might
say. Friendship is a relationship with no strings attached except the ones
you choose to tie, one that’s just about being there, as best as you can.

Copyright © 2015 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All Rights Reserved. CDN
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((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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