So, it all started on Friday, I think, a conversation with Daniel-of-the-Western-Shores (as opposed to subtle_eye) about friendship and where we stood in each other’s lives. We expanded on that on Saturday morning as I walked from brunch in Surry Hills with hyperpeople to Newtown, hoping to catch agwat…
Then I ended up rehashing it with xammy in the afternoon and have just had various reminders of it tonight…
Friendship is one of those difficult things, a precarious balance of needs and care and love and harshness-for-one’s-own-good. I want the sort of friendships where phone calls in the middle of the night are okay if there’s a need for it and I’ve been the person on both ends of that phone call. I have some incredible friends, some people I value intensely for various reasons. I value daisynerd and sleazemonkey so very highly because they tell me I’m awesome when I need to hear it and they tell me to pull my head in when I’m overdoing things, without insulting me or belittling me.
I have a ton of acquaintances and a fistful of good friends. I’m incredibly lucky for that and I sometimes forget it. I get incredibly busy. I’m heading into one of those times now. But I will drop everything when a friend seriously needs me, as a couple have tonight.
So, this question of welcoming new friends into my life is intense. Sharing a friendship means sharing someone’s pain too. I have, in the past, eased my way out of people’s lives and they out of mine, due to lack of time or – let’s be honest – interest.
I’m finding friendships change as I get older. Not just the friendships themselves, the ones that have lasted, but what I want out of new friendships. And this, to some extent, was what Daniel and Max and I have been talking about. How the idea of the peer group has shifted; how our ideas of moulding ourselves to fit others’ needs have shifted; how we move to build our own communities around us and how we start to glance around and see these new and old connections, strengthened in their ways and start to smile at the resilience of these links we have forged.
Often these friendships are not the ones I expected to last. Or they are new and delicate and I worry whether I can lean on them in particular ways. And I do mourn the losses of friendships I thought would last that didn’t, ones I sabotaged unintentionally or which fell by the wayside through no fault of mine (a photo razorgirl_au showed me tonight of “Fodge” at Ruth and David’s wedding reinforced that one tonight; I am so glad I spoke to him there and reconciled that).
I’m leaving this fairly personal post public so that Daniel N. can see it (hurry up and get an LJ, boy! How can you be my new friend if I can’t add you to my LJ friends list?) but also to say publicly to my new and old friends: thank you. You mean the world to me.
“The greatest thing you’ll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return”