Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do adults in middle ages have the kind of friendship you are looking for? It sounds like college/early adult friendship or maybe retiree/widow friendship when people have A LOT of time and mental space.
At some point in your life, you need to be able to make decisions and emotionally process things on your own without having to run it by someone else. Maybe that time is now.
OP. This is a good question. I've had these kinds of friendships continuously up until now. Actually, when I started having babies, it looked like a lot of moms were looking for regular connections and I knew multiple very close mom duos or small groups that hung out and talked all the time. I was part of oneBut ever since moving, I just haven't been able to find it. Maybe as kids get older people aren't interested in the same way we were as new moms?
And I think I'm pretty competent in my life, just lonely. I think some people just enjoy having a close connection - someone to hang out with every week or two and text in between the get-togethers. I don't think it's a sign of weakness or neediness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do adults in middle ages have the kind of friendship you are looking for? It sounds like college/early adult friendship or maybe retiree/widow friendship when people have A LOT of time and mental space.
At some point in your life, you need to be able to make decisions and emotionally process things on your own without having to run it by someone else. Maybe that time is now.
Yes? A lot of people do have close adult friendships.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are being too rigid about what a BFF friendship should be, and if you continue like this you're going to miss out on relationships that you didn't have to discard, but just didn't meet your rigid criteria, plus you'll be disappointed because it is really hard to make friends like the ones we made when we were young. And trust me, not everyone is up for the text-every-day and intimacy that you seem to expect. I would say, most people with husbands and kids are not up for the level of friendship that you are seeking.
So actually I think you have some other issue that you are taking out on this area of your life. I don't think there's anything "wrong" with you, but I think therapy would be good for you.
Anonymous wrote:Do adults in middle ages have the kind of friendship you are looking for? It sounds like college/early adult friendship or maybe retiree/widow friendship when people have A LOT of time and mental space.
At some point in your life, you need to be able to make decisions and emotionally process things on your own without having to run it by someone else. Maybe that time is now.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are being too rigid about what a BFF friendship should be, and if you continue like this you're going to miss out on relationships that you didn't have to discard, but just didn't meet your rigid criteria, plus you'll be disappointed because it is really hard to make friends like the ones we made when we were young. And trust me, not everyone is up for the text-every-day and intimacy that you seem to expect. I would say, most people with husbands and kids are not up for the level of friendship that you are seeking.
So actually I think you have some other issue that you are taking out on this area of your life. I don't think there's anything "wrong" with you, but I think therapy would be good for you.
Anonymous wrote:Do adults in middle ages have the kind of friendship you are looking for? It sounds like college/early adult friendship or maybe retiree/widow friendship when people have A LOT of time and mental space.
At some point in your life, you need to be able to make decisions and emotionally process things on your own without having to run it by someone else. Maybe that time is now.
But ever since moving, I just haven't been able to find it. Maybe as kids get older people aren't interested in the same way we were as new moms?
Anonymous wrote:I wonder how old you are? If I were you, I would not totally trash the friendship. I had one friend with whom I had a breakup in my 20s, but we later reconciled. We text regularly, see each other and phone infrequently, but no one knows me like she does (more than 20 years) and when we do get together, it is always like no time has passed. I have another friend who is literally on the other side of the Earth, and the communication is even more infrequent but the feeling is the same. They are like sisters. I do crave a more here-physically-in-my-life friendship, someone I can actually do things with, and sometimes I have that, but no one can replace my longtime friends and how much they mean to me.