I have a group of women in my life I refer to as my tribe. Most women, like me, have a group numbering from a select few to dozens, who go by a variety of names – girlfriends, sisters, posse – all representing those with whom we share a connection of some type that makes our life richer, more secure and happier.
My tribe consists of women with whom I am engaged in some significant creative, professional, social or familial relationship that bonds us together.
Lately, I’ve been reflecting on the complexion and composition of my tribe, as I’ve noticed it seems to be in flux. Some intimate relationships are drifting away with the passing of time, as friends retire elsewhere or relocate to be closer to adult children and grandchildren, and sadly, some have passed away.
I appreciate those who are lifelong friends, who know my story and have been through the tough stuff with me, but I also recognize a growing need beyond what I share with them.
I discovered over the past few years, there were some long held friendships that no longer seem to fit. Mostly because I have put more energy into being different. My priorities changed, as did my lifestyle and with not much more than memories to hold us together, we drifted apart, and I let it happen. I sincerely miss them, but new interests, goals and perspectives have taken the place of what was once the foundation of our relationship.
The result is a thinning of not only the number but the variety of individuals that make up my tribe and I’m beginning to realize how appropriate and necessary it is to consciously welcome women into my world, my life and my tribe who click with me, intellectually and spiritually, as well as fill my need to be with women who share my professional life, hobbies, leisure activities and satisfy my desire for deep connection. I am looking for women with whom there is a bond of shared experience, desire and motivation.
I am increasingly interested in cultivating a tribe that includes women who are farther along the path of growing into an older woman, who motivate me and support me as I explore new roles for myself. I find I want to add women who stimulate and encourage me as a writer, as a mature woman who prioritizes fitness and health, and in my desire to live an open hearted life that is meaningful, intimate and vulnerable within a select group of women with whom I belong, feel safe and am valued. I’m looking for soulmates with whom I can share it all.
It is also important to me to bring younger women into my life who I can support in their journey and share a little of my own knowledge and experience as a mentor and confidant. But also, who can teach me, coach me and offer me insight into our changing world views.
But where do these women come from, and how do I overcome the feeling of awkwardness in recruiting someone when I come across her? Can casual friendships grow deeper with attention and time and can friendships from long ago be rekindled to become relevant in our current setting? These are the questions I find I ponder more and more recently.
Being the analytical Virgo I am, I actually wrote out a list of the types of women I might wish to engage. Not a bad exercise to get some clarity. This is what it looks like.
If this seems to be shaping up into a help wanted ad, it might be because in a way it is. I have openings in my life for women in all these areas and am actively recruiting, hoping to enrich both our lives through the shared experience.
Living into the future fulfilled and surrounded by women who share my desire to live vibrantly is important to me, but figuring out how to do so isn’t always easy. However, I’m devoted to it and therefore will continue to look for the right path. Perhaps, I will find you along the way.
Do you have a tribe of women whom you can count on? How long did it take you to build it? What kinds of women are in you women’s circle?
Tags Friendships
I have tribes of women whom I can be with whenever we need each other to share precious moments, women who are comfortable sharing inner secrets, thoughts and ideas in a candid and unpretentious way, women who share experiences about ageing and loving it and young women who are in the present generation and yet not intimidated by our age and experience. I belong to wonderful tribes of amazing, powerful and welcoming women. I feel so lucky.
I also am an analytical Virgo originally from New York City having walked 4 miles day but am now retired in Arizona going to the gym for upper body workout and pool aerobics for lower body. My 4 lifelong friends are scattered around the county but we communicate via phone or whatsApp. We have always been honest and civil with each other respecting our individual lifestyles both spiritually and politically- a bond that embraces integrity. I live with my adult son who has a disability but I have made it my business to insure he is an independent individual and thankfully has achieved it fully.
I have friends scattered around, but am really missing a cohesive tribe, which is SO important.
Thanks for this great article! While I worked I was an avid networker. Once my husband passed, our couple-friends stopped including me. Fortunately from my business networking I had lots of single professional women friends. I used those same networking skills to build a new tribe. The surprising thing for me as I’ve reached retirement age and been widowed a long time now is the importance of continually cultivating a tribe. As you mentioned in the article close friends move away, pass away, and get into new romantic relationships making them less available. I find I’m constantly looking for new friends to do things with. Some friendships fade away others are just move from the inner circle to an outer circle. I agree that it’s important to have young friends, too. They have a different perspective and I find that valuable.
I moved back to Canada after 12 years in Europe. It was the pandemic, and I am at risk, so my usual in-person strategies for finding connections didn’t apply.
I made a short list of professional peers in my region, that I’d *love* to meet with regularly. I made another list of people who *might* be a good fit, and double checked both lists with a friend who knows the community. The rule was: either of us could say “no” with no need to justify it. A gut feeling was sufficient.
When I asked, the responses were “YES!”. Apparently I’m not the only one craving trusted peers. We ended up with a 5-person group, with structure of: come when you can, come as you are.
We are often 2, sometimes 3 people. I call it my oasis. Once a week we meet on zoom with no agenda, as if meeting up in a cafe. It’s lovely. And when one or the other of us needs support or advice, the others step up.
Bonus: from this, I have also developed one really valuable female friendship that is precious, and got invited to her larger circle, which meets annually for a weekend of food and chat in cottage country – a real retreat that renews and connects (and in a small, trusted group, with my mask, I’m fine).
She and I also meet weekly for 90 minutes to co-work on zoom (look up Pomodoro method, if interested). I use it to do admin or stuff I’m procrastinating on. And we chat a bit and catch up.
Maybe these ideas inspire someone.
Go for it!
Deb