Saturday, June 2, 2012

Friendships

I was feeling rather melancholy this evening and just did a search on google, "Why are friendships so hard?" 

I'm not sure what I'd thought I'd find.  Maybe someone else out there who feels like she's the only loner that really struggles with making this thing called "friends" work. 

I came across a blog called Grace Covers Me that really spoke to me so I thought I'd share:

Friendship is Hard (and How to Make it Easier)

It seems I am not the only one who struggles with friendship. After my nursing bra post, women shared their own friendship woes with me or simply affirmed my "friendship is hard" statement. We're all in the same boat, it seems. Too, your responses still have me thinking. Aside from the logistical issues of marriage, children, and work responsibilities that make connecting difficult, why are adult friendships so hard?

Thinking on this question, I was reminded of Dietrich Bonhoeffer's thoughts on Christian community in Life Together: 
It is easily forgotten that the fellowship of Christian brethren is a gift of grace, a gift of the Kingdom of God that any day may be taken from us, that the time that still separates us from utter loneliness may be brief indeed. Therefore, let him who until now has had the privilege of living a common Christian life with other Christians praise God on his knees and declare: It is grace, nothing but grace, that we are allowed to live in community with Christian brethren.
In other words, we are not guaranteed or entitled to heart friends. They are gifts of grace, and when we catch glimpses of sisterly love, we must receive it as such with deep gratitude. 
Bonhoeffer doesn't say it, but his words imply it: friendship does not come easily. We tend to believe the myth that friendship should be easy, requires little effort, or, most debilitating, that we're the only one who is having such a hard time with friendship.

Why doesn't God make it easier on us? After all, He calls us to live in community with others, to let our love for one another be a light to those in darkness. I prayed to Him for years for a good friend where I lived, but didn't see His answer. I believe He allowed those seasons of friendship dryness so that I would not put anyone else in His place, so that I would rely on Him to meet my deepest needs. Through that season, I also developed an eye and a compassion for the women standing on the fringe longing for connection.

But I also don't think I recognized how He answered my prayers. I wanted that one, catch-all friend, like the best friend I had growing up. I hadn't learned yet that the rules of friendship dramatically change after college. Whereas I once lived with friends and moved through life in one big circle of love, adult friendships require so much more effort, time, and breaking through insecurities (What's up with that? That's fodder for another post). Thinking my adult friendships would look like my high-school or college friendship, I didn't have eyes to see friends right in front of me. I put way too many parameters on friendship: they have to go to my church, they have to have the same-age kids, I have to like their husband, they can't be in a different life stage, they have to be on the same page spiritually.

Too often, I also just waited around, assuming they would come to me if they wanted to be my friend. When we moved from that town, I saw it all so clearly, all the opportunities I missed to know and be known. By God's grace, I got to start over and approach friendship differently.

Do you need to change your approach? Do you need to release your ideal picture of friendship and ask God to show you the potential friends right in front of you? Initiate, be curious, practice openness to people different from you or different from the idea you have for what a friend should be.

Soon you will see relationships developing with women of all different life stages and personalities and ages, all gifts of grace from God.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Love this. So many of us have been here, and it is difficult to put into words. I feel blessed to have a heart friend in you, dear Shannon! - Cindy

Twisted said...

I was about to leave this Page filler of a post, deleted it, and just want to say - I think you are a wonderful friend. I can't imagine you ever feeling like friendship is hard, it seems so easy for you, looking from this side of the fence.