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Maz's avatar

Timely, as I am vacationing this week and last night one of the friends I am visiting and I calculated that this is our eighteenth anniversary (ish) since it was Fat Tuesday and we met at Mardi Gras.

But generally, the thing that keeps me from feeling like friendship can be at the center of my life is reciprocity. As a long term single person with no children, I get that it is comparatively easy for me to center friendship, but at times it feels like people are happy to have me around when they need something but then retreat to their nuclear family or partner-centered walled-gardens. I have friends I hear from when tragedy strikes, or when their husbands are out of town, or when they’re feeling pent up in their day to day life and need some sort of “girls night” but who can’t or won’t make time otherwise. It all feels very transactional, and leaves me feeling like I need to make finding a partner a priority, even if it’s not my natural inclination.

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Cate Denial's avatar

I can't wait to read this book! In a total coincidence, I'm also teaching today about late nineteenth-century relationships between women, walking that tightrope of "what did they mean?" What a joy to see this today of all days.

I emigrated to the United States when I was 22 years old. I knew absolutely no one in this country. New friendships were vital to me; without them I had no one to talk to, no one to debrief my new experiences with, and no one to help me navigate the perplexing culture shift in my life (which was all the more perplexing because I emigrated from England, and so didn't anticipate any culture shock at all. Um, duh.) Friendships were everything; they were my support, my sustenance, and opened up new possibilities for me.

I love my friends deeply. Last year my friend Megan and I went on a trip together to celebrate our twentieth friend-versary, because why wouldn't you celebrate this as anniversary as much as any other? (Shout out to Whidbey Island!) This year I'll celebrate thirty years of being friends with my friend Laura, whom I met a week after getting off the plane in the US. Next year it'll be thirty years since I met my friend Ann Marie, whom I literally found through a mailing list about the TV show Friends in 1995. None of us live in the same town, but we make a point of having time together, online and off. And my friends and I absolutely plan to retire together in community.

I don't have family in this country to fall back on . . . except I do. I have a network of friends all over the place, and they have supported me through grad school, moves between cities, in my career, in my heartbreak, in some unspeakably tough times. They truly are the light of my life.

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