Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, we had a lot of this outpouring (but not SM posts) when our daughter has brain cancer. Here is what I chalk it up to:
1. We live in a neighborhood that is pretty tight. But we have participated in that by hosting large potlucks, movie nights, etc. While we aren’t best friends with all the neighbors, they “know” us. When we had to call an ambulance, three different families sent someone over to help and I left one kid with them as we went to the hospital.
2. We belong to a church and attend a regular Sunday school. Church people tend to naturally show up for this kind of stuff.
3. My girlfriends from grad school are tight. We do annual trips. They love all over the country but sent stuff to us.
4. We have sometimes asked for help. My husband had surgery one day that there was a freak storm and school was canceled. I sent a message to like 5 empty nest neighbors asking if they could hang with the kids while I took my husband to and from surgery. Two or three of them then coordinated to make it happen.
5. I try to reciprocate. I’m not a natural giver but I do what I can. For example, the neighbor across the street cares at home for his wife with dementia. If I make extra of a meal, we send some over to him. He blows the pine straw off our driveway when he does his own.
Best wishes to your daughter. Do you live in the DMV? I’m here and it was eye opening to visit my cousin in Texas as she was going through a difficult time.
Anonymous wrote:So, we had a lot of this outpouring (but not SM posts) when our daughter has brain cancer. Here is what I chalk it up to:
1. We live in a neighborhood that is pretty tight. But we have participated in that by hosting large potlucks, movie nights, etc. While we aren’t best friends with all the neighbors, they “know” us. When we had to call an ambulance, three different families sent someone over to help and I left one kid with them as we went to the hospital.
2. We belong to a church and attend a regular Sunday school. Church people tend to naturally show up for this kind of stuff.
3. My girlfriends from grad school are tight. We do annual trips. They love all over the country but sent stuff to us.
4. We have sometimes asked for help. My husband had surgery one day that there was a freak storm and school was canceled. I sent a message to like 5 empty nest neighbors asking if they could hang with the kids while I took my husband to and from surgery. Two or three of them then coordinated to make it happen.
5. I try to reciprocate. I’m not a natural giver but I do what I can. For example, the neighbor across the street cares at home for his wife with dementia. If I make extra of a meal, we send some over to him. He blows the pine straw off our driveway when he does his own.
Anonymous wrote:She’s probably a giver. You have to give in order to get.
Do you check up on your friends?
Anonymous wrote:I know people like this. They have incredible bandwidth to maintain more relationships than I could hope to meaningfully sustain. But I don't think of this as a flaw, just different strokes and different strengths.
Anonymous wrote:While the PPs aren't necessarily wrong, I think the idea that people have large support networks because they're kind/givers is a fallacy. I'm there for every friend when they're sick, pregnant, have a wedding, going through a divorce, depression, etc. Do you know who's there for me when I have surgery? One friend. It was awful.
On the other hand, my dad is a genuinely awesome guy, he's a stand up guy, but he's not necessarily a giver in this sense, he doesn't nurture and cultivate relationships, etc. Everyone loves him. When he went to the hospital for a surgery, even his dry-cleaner visited him.
It's sometimes about chemistry, sometimes about the environment, sometimes luck, it's not really something you can design and achieve IMHO.
Anonymous wrote:Many People with large networks tend to be extremely extroverted and need contact and relationships with many people. I have friends who get their energy from constantly interacting with others and they spend most of their free time maintaining their many friendships. I don’t know that most of these friendships are on a deeper level, but all of those people would definitely bring meals.