Woody Allen gets the ultimate credit for the idea, but Wendy Atterberry offers great advice on what it takes to be a good friend, how to
know whether your friend is a real friend and what you should to do make and
sustain friendships.
Her advice: Show up!
The injunction is more important in an era where people are accustomed to communicate via text messaging. True friends are the ones who
are there for you. They are not,
Atterberry says, the ones who you had the most fun with, and they are not, she
implies, the ones who share their most intimate feelings. They are the ones who
put in the time to be physically present at important and even not-so-important
moments.
Atterberry writes:
… the best friends aren’t necessarily the ones you have
the most fun partying with but are the ones who SHOW UP. Showing up is THE
single most important thing you can do as a friend.
Show up
for film premieres and plays and races and
weddings. Show up for your designer friend’s fashion show and your artist
friend’s gallery opening and the dinner to celebrate your friend finally
getting her PhD. Go to baby showers even though they’re kind of a drag. Better
yet, offer to throw one because you love your friend and this is a big deal. Go
to your friend’s mother’s memorial even though it’s a two-hour drive away and
it will eat up half your weekend. Go to retirement parties and milestone
birthday parties and parties celebrating the end of a nasty divorce. Offer to
pet-sit or babysit or house-sit. Cook casseroles and coo over new babies. Drive
to airports and weddings and reunions. Drive your friend to her chemo
appointment and sit with her afterward and talk to her about whatever she wants
to talk about.
When choosing friends, take account of why shows up and who
is too busy or is constantly canceling on you.
The show-up test matters because it offers an objective
standard to guide your choice of friends. It does not depend on how you feel or how the other person feels. Get closer to those who consistently
show up and take your distance from those who keep letting you down. Atterberry is
obviously recommending that you choose among people you like.
She explains:
The key
to long-lasting friendships, I think, is to weed out the ones who keep letting
you down — not just once, but over and over — and to hang on to those who keep
showing up, as long as they are people whose company you enjoy.
4 comments:
So, was it Woody who said 90% of life is just showing up? As Wendy says, real friendship certainly is.
Yes, Woody said it first.
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