| Some aspects of best friendship. But not all. No one can be your everything |
| Always thought so. But apparently I’m not. |
+2. I would also say of my close friends, everyone has something that drew me to being friends but it’s not all the same thing and it’s not necessarily what I would look for in a romantic partner. One friend, I admire her directness, she is one of the two people I can go to when I need advice and am in a space that I can handle if it isn’t what I want to hear. With another friend, I like that she is structured but laid back - she has given me another perspective on certain situations with the kids. With someone else we have similar family background including a parent that is a hoarder - we can talk about it and not feel judged or shamed in a way that it’s difficult to have with other people. My friends are all smart and have a sense of humor - but not all the same type. For spouse, I would also say his thoughtfulness is something that stood out. We’ve been together over 20 years and I would say we are now good friends, but it took spending time and being together to really get there and my DH wanting to hear about and talk about things. I’m not a believer in soul mates/one person destined to be with, however I can say after all this time, I can’t imagine anyone else that would fit me so well - same on the important things - values and sense of humor, different enough to balance each other without wanting to change the person. |
I have other wonderful friends that have been with me for years if not decades, but my husband is the best of all of them. He checks every box. I didn’t realize that I was in the minority until reading this post. |
NP here, but I strongly disagree. I don't think there's anything wrong with your spouse not being your best friend or that your relationship is off. In fact, many times, where spouses claim best friendship or rather the women it's seldom the men it's codependency. |
It's not just exhausting, it's plainly a juvenile mindset. And honestly seems like something taught in cult religions where the woman is supposed to be secondary to her husband and really any male. Being in awe of another human being just doesn't sound very healthy |
That’s a question that you have to ask yourself. Do you have those qualities yourself, if so, are you looking for someone to be the same so you can enjoy those things with them, looking for someone to be supportive or looking for someone to be a balance in those areas? I’m a curious, practical person that likes stability after a chaotic childhood. I don’t know that an intellectual partner that wants to talk theory with me would be a good match. Nor would a driven, ambitious risk taker be a good match. Now my curiosity is an important part of who I am and it is important for someone to either be similarly curious or at a minimum not damper that aspect of my personality. It’s really the cliche that it doesn’t have to be the perfect person, but the perfect person for you. Who are you, and what fits who you are and what you need. |
| Yes, but I don’t feel that his best friend status is a substitute for female friendships. Solid, healthy bonds between women offer something a romantic relationship can’t provide, and I aspire to both. |
+ 1 The most important thing is that there is the deep trust that we will always support each other. |
| I’m divorced and my new partner is definitely my best friend. He’s the one I laugh with the most, have the most in common with, and want to share everything with. Things are way more fun when he’s there. I never felt that way with my ex. We had interests and history in common but never a friendship at this level. |
| Yes, she’s really my closest friend. That’s not to say we din’t get into arguments. We actually can get into pretty heated arguments over nothing sometimes. We’re still each other’s closest friends. |