Sunday, January 11, 2026

FRIENDSHIP

 Friendship (Or, Why I No Longer Collect People)

When you’re young, you collect friends the way kids collect stickers.  Or rocks.  You want them all. You trade. You upgrade. You keep duplicates. You don’t think too hard about it.  Friends from work.  Mothers of you kidlet's friends.  

As you get older, you stop collecting and start curating.

My friendship world looks something like this:

• A tiny inner circle of daily or weekly connections.
(Max and my sister are daily — which tells you everything you need to know about my standards.)
• A larger circle of beloved people I connect with quarterly — the “thinking of you” texts, birthday notes, long catch-up emails.
• A wide halo of acquaintances — neighbors, WLLO Village folks, friendly faces in my orbit.

And that… is plenty.

I don’t want more friends.
I want the right friends.

Which brings me to the awkward part.

Over the past year, two women have been trying very hard to move into my inner circle.

I did give it a try.
  • We had lunch.
  • We had coffee.
  • I texted.
  • I was polite.
  • I was open.

But sometimes the chemistry just isn’t there — and at this stage of life, I’m not interested cultivating it.  Or forcing it.

One is a longtime acquaintance who once worked for my husband. She likes to call while she’s driving an hour each week see her daughter and eight grandchildren — which means I get a running monologue, no listening, and a bad connection. It feels less like a conversation and more like being held hostage by Bluetooth.

The other is a WLLO contact who struggles deeply with depression. I’m sympathetic — truly — but she can complain about a sunny day. Everything is hard, heavy, bleak, exhausting. She can't meet there for lunch because there's nothing she can eat. Being with her feels like emotional CrossFit, and I didn’t sign up for that gym.

So I did what emotionally mature, conflict-avoidant people do.

I… faded.

I took longer to respond.
I skipped a reply.
I became “busy.”
I let silence do the talking.

In theory, this is supposed to allow a relationship to die a natural death.

In practice, it turns out some people are incredibly resistant to extinction.

They keep texting.
They keep calling.
They keep trying to re-schedule.

Which leaves me feeling guilty — even though I know something important:

I am allowed to choose who has access to my time, my energy, and my heart.  Friendship is not an entitlement  It’s a mutual exchange.

And at this age?
I am fiercely protective of my emotional real estate.

I don’t need drama.
I don’t need trauma dumping.
I don’t need performative connection.

I need ease.
I need laughter.
I need people who make my nervous system feel like it can put its feet up and have a glass of wine.

This isn’t me being cold.

It’s me finally being honest.

We are not meant to be everything to everyone — and we are not obligated to keep relationships that drain us just because someone else wants them.

Sometimes the kindest thing you can do is quietly step back.

Even if they don’t get the hint.

Especially if they don’t.

4 comments:

  1. This was a very interesting perspective on friendships as we age. My MIL is still a collector as is her daughter. I don't know any two people with as many "close" friends as they both have and I truly think they are friendships.Even my MIL at 85 seems to meet new people she clicks with, or that have re-entered her life as they became widows. I've never been good at making or keeping a close intimate friend group other than my sister's but I have wonderful as you called it Beloved Circle. My older daughter seems much like me as well. No advise other than to keep the fading or the same unresponsiveness to the want to be inner circle person. You're allowed to spend your time and mental assets how they suit you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My sister is a collector of friends. And is a maintainer of friendships. She is the Energizer Bunny. I am the Sloth Introvert. We are opposites in sooooo many ways. Yet always find common ground to chat almost every day with texts in between.

      Delete
  2. You nailed this topic! And it's a topic that most of us deal with as we age and get more discerning and value our fleeting time left on earth. At this time in our lives it's also harder to find two-way friends. I don't want to be friends with someone I suspect just wants to be friends because I still drive and she doesn't, for example. And like you, I don't want the friends that drain me with their negativity. Your way of handling the unwanted friends---after seeing if the chemistry is there---is a good way, the best way in my opinion.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Interestingly, one person has taken the hint, the other hasn't.

      I'm not sure how this will play out. And the driving her WAS the first draw for her. She paid for driving lessons and now has more freedom. I rode with her for two miles ... the scariest time of my life! Stay tuned.

      Delete

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