One of the things we discuss in my life coaching sessions is friendships. Because our ability to connect with people affects every aspect of our life. My older clients often talk about the difficulty of making new friends and keeping old ones. Let’s explore!
Have you become exasperated with some of your friends as you’ve aged? Friends you once enjoyed… now you find difficult to be with? Lately, I’ve noticed that it is a little too easy to “cancel” people as we age. You can say the slightest thing to a person, and it sets them off.
And vice versa. You insult them unknowingly or hurt their feelings at best. Or they say something and you get annoyed and write them off as too difficult. The misunderstandings and tensions go in both directions.
As we age, we become more sensitive and more delicate. Things get simpler and yet more complex. Yet, at the same time, we are tougher and more resilient! So our feelings get hurt more easily at the same time that we are tougher from a lifetime of experience. We both have all the patience in the world… and we can have no patience whatsoever!
One thing is for sure: we become set in our ways.
We become more ourselves as we age… we are the essence of ourselves, distilled. Well, so are our friends.
You will either keep up with the changes and make mental, emotional, and social adjustments or you will lose your friends. You will start to cancel people, or they will cancel you. And suddenly, you are alone.
It’s a fine line: we want to be likable, but we want to have boundaries.
1. We need connection. We need friends. We need to be social. Loneliness kills.
2. The way to have friends and to be friends in our aging years is to be positive and accepting. We all have lived hard lives. We all have had ups and downs.
3. Don’t feel you have to give your opinion on every little thing. Let things slide.
4. Diane von Furstenberg said, “An older woman should be interestED, not interestING. What other people say is much more interesting than expressing your opinion. You already know what you think! Gone are the days when we need to impose our opinion or show that ‘we’re right’. Besides, listening to yourself talk is boring. You learn so much more by listening to someone else. If you try being interested in someone you’ll get much more out of the encounter.”
7. Being interestED is such an attractive quality. You shine a light on people when you are interested in them. You energize them and empower them. People like you when you are interestED in them.
8. Engage in discourse, speak your opinion, but don’t care about changing someone’s mind.
9. Give advice only when asked. Unasked-for advice is never listened to and is tedious to hear.
10. Don’t be judgmental. That gets you nowhere.
11. The hardest commandment of The Ten is covetousness. Don’t compare yourself or your life situation, to others. Don’t be jealous or envious of their lives, for instance, if they have more money than you, or if they have a partner and you don’t. The saying goes: “Compare? Despair.” Comparing gets you nowhere except MiseryVille.
12. Cultivate people who are younger than you are. Be a mentor. Young people need your positivity, your support, and your wisdom (if they ask for it!). They are creating the future.
13. Be proactive with people and with your friends. Don’t wait for others to make their moves or call you. Call them! Or send a message saying, “I’m thinking of you.” Show interest in someone, pursue a coffee date, and don’t wait to be asked. Don’t assume that they’re not interested in you because they never called. If you want them as a friend, you make the effort. And if they don’t respond or show interest, fine. You made an overture, and you’ll never wonder, what if I had called…? Besides, we can take rejection so much more easily when we’re older. Because we’re tougher, remember?
14. Be aware that you never know what’s going on in someone’s life. The pain they are in. The problems they face. Be compassionate to the max.
The message is: lighten up. We don’t need to prove ourselves. We want to be interestED companions, and by being interestED we become interestING, someone that people want to be around. We all want to be wanted.
I hope my list makes you think about the friends you have in your life, the friends you’ve lost, the friends you’ve discarded, and those who’ve left you behind. If you’re interested in exploring these and other topics that we discuss in life coaching, sign up for a free exploratory call. I support women over 40 in career and life changes! You don’t need to do it alone. As a guide, I walk you through the process of self-discovery and increased self-confidence toward your dreams.
Have you lost any friendships recently? Why do you think that was? Are there any ways that you have changed and how you handle your friendships? Have you canceled or been canceled? Now’s your turn to share with us, we all want to learn from you!
Tags Friendships
Get out there and join new groups and volunteer – You’ll find new friends with like interests. Yes, I think we have all been “cancelled” at one point or another over the course of our lives. I like the phrase about friendship and waves, they come and go like waves. Yes, deep friendships last but sometimes you just have to accept that friendships were there when you needed them and it’s okay that they are gone or moved on.
I find that at my age ( 66) most women have established their friendship groups and aren’t willing to expand their circle and let new women in. It is especially difficult when moving to a new area. I have been toying with the idea of moving to Europe hoping that expats might be more open to new friendships. I had to learn to enjoy my own company.
I have experienced the same thing but don’t think I would move I like living in the US, besides it maybe the same situation out of the states. Even though I am not part of a girl cliche I still remain positive about life and it’s all about doing while you can not if there are others with me. I have met some very interesting people by reaching out with kindness.
I have thought the same thing and wish there was a service that would “shepherd” a person through an international move including tax implications, visa information, best areas for expats/your interests. I don’t want a magazine subscription!
and sometimes i just have to update my circle. i met a gal in Alabama when i was 18 and she was 21. she saved my ass outa one heck of a predicament, and set me on my feet, letting me stay in her house for a few months to get resources to return home here to California.
well, FF 44 years, and i -after years of chats and x-country trips on an airplane (not how i was travelling back in th’ day –), her overzealous turn to Christianity with all its ready answers written – apparently in stone and her version (that doesn’t understand that, having been raised Catholic, i understand Xtianity pretty well – she’s very condescending in her ignorance). i believe in God, and i’ll spare you my beliefs.
then she posted the Confederate flag as her Pride Flag. she is from ‘Bama. i get that. she now lives in Florida, ok. but i couldn’t. i have her number in my hardcopy phone book, but i just can’t.
fortunately, i’ll always treasure her. i’ve done a little better financially, so i’ve paid her back that back rent in spades in our times together. and she’s been a good friend. but my friends where i am now? that’s gonna be Real Bad Real Kwik.
so sometimes developing a social circle is just keeping it fleshed out to keep it current. think my old friends stay in my heart and i wish them well forever. i’m just too old for no-win arguments
so these tips work for a refreshing of your social circle as well as starting new
Beth, I think as we mature we often make different selections. I’ve had friends in the past with whom I have nothing in common anymore. I wish them well as they wish me well.
I like changing it up. If your bestie continues the journey with you, you are both very lucky. I’m all for refreshing my social circle!
Your article validated things I’ve noticed since being in my 60’s. Accepting, letting things slide and not trying to change someone’s mind I think are key. I will try to find that balance of being heard as well as being more of a listener. Friends are fewer now but I try to make the most of my alone time. 💖
yes! i like that ‘making the most of my time alone’
this, for me includes taking random community college classes. i’m taking my first online class (which is great, cuz car wreck, blah, blah, blah) it’s filled up my time with something i love but most don’t (philosophy) – you know that’s got me choppin it up w/my classmates – lol
online has less distance as an older person, it seems. like – all they see of me is my face out by one of the local outdoors beautiful areas (when my daughter visited, so i’m happy – ha). i seem more approachable. and since i’m older, the instructor has started a side conversation in the school’s email – which is great; she’s very interesting
… since you’re trying to make the most of your alone time. and i gotta tell you, students are way more polite than reddit or FB – lol
I was cancelled.by a co-worker because she was upset I came to work at the tail.end of a cold. She stopped eating lunch with me. There’s nothing I can do about it but enjoyed this topic. Be interested, not interesting.
sometimes (my post above) we do have to let someone go; they’ve moved in a different direction, as we all do sometimes. i hope it’s not too hard on you; it can be, i know. i also hope you find someone to fill that slot who’s more in tune with who you are