We need Friends... So why are they so tough to develop and maintain?
Join our Conversation with Friendship Expert Shasta Nelson
For this month’s show, I will be away on vacation, and felt it would be a wonderful occasion to re-broadcast a favourite episode of mine from last year with a topic that’s just as relevant and important as ever: building better friendships. With this episode I was joined by special guest Shasta Nelson, where we discussed her important book “Frientimacy” on Realityradio101.com. If you missed this episode last time, I believe it’s a conversation you will really appreciate and find value in! If you did listen last year, I think it’s worth listening to again as a wonderful reminder as we embark on a different phase of the pandemic in which we are re-integrating in different spaces with more opportunities to also connect in person with those around us. I hope you enjoy this amazing conversation, and I look forward to being back next month with another new episode of the Bear Psychology Radio Show!
Shasta Nelson is an award winning speaker and author of books “Frientimacy: How to Deepen Friendships for Lifelong Health and Happiness”, “Friendships Don’t just happen!” and her business book “The Business of Friendship”. She has developed robust strategies for connecting, developing, maintaining friendships and even how to end a friendships as well.
I have to admit that I am not the best friendship maintainer, even though I have a wide friendship circle of connections I have held for many years. I think part of my success is choosing amazing, kind hearted people who tolerate my “busyness”, lack of consistency and obsessions with eclectic interests. In other words, I think I might have already failed at Shasta’s recommendations, but I think we all have something to learn about the work required to develop engaged friendships for a lifetime.
This is a great opportunity for us to consider Shasta’s key teachings and ask questions about our friendship struggles and frustrations as well as our hopes, longing and desire for meaningful connection.
Just yesterday, I had a conversation with a client … who disclosed feelings of loneliness. When we discussed the people that this person was closest to, he admitted that he had not been making the effort to reach out to others but was struggling that they were not reaching out to him. This sounds familiar to so many of us… We can feel lonely but then hold ourselves back for a variety of reasons. I am excited to hear how Shasta can guide us, especially when we may have trauma that is linked specifically to being betrayed or neglected in a traumatic relationship with others.
So please join the conversation as we dig into the question of Friendship.
Let’s consider the following ideas that Shasta Nelson offers on friendship:
Why do so many people feel lonely even though they know so many people?
Why is it that a person can go out to a social event (i.e., family dinner, bar, zoom visit) only to feel lonelier during and after then we did prior to the event?
Why are Consistency, Vulnerability and Positivity considered to be crucial to developing and maintaining friendships? Can you discuss each of these.
What are your key methods for establishing early connection, developing a friendship foundation, maintaining a friendship for the long run?
You wrote a good titled “Friendships don’t just happen” – I see that many people (wonderful, kind people) feel lonely and don’t seem to have the skills for making friendships later in life (after finishing school). Why is this? And what should they do?
What about when relationships go badly? You are in a relationship with someone who is overly demanding, negative, or even mean? How do we free ourselves from troubling relationships so we can move onto something better without feeling guilty or lonely?
I know you focus primarily on female friendships but men also need this guidance. I wonder if you will expand your Friendship work to men.
Obviously there is much more which we will cover during the show.
You have been discovered by a partner as acting out in a sexual way (outside of the relationship) that then leads to shameful feelings and consequences (i.e., divorce). Or you have found evidence of your partner acting out in a sexual manner that once confronted has led to shame or remorse.
Beyond being discovered this will lead to Impairments or interfering with day to day life, as a result of obsession or compulsions towards sexual addiction.
Experiencing a cycle of recovery and repeat. Engaging in the behavior, disengaging from the behavior and then cycling back into the sexual addiction and once again feeling shame, remorse, and distress.
So what can you do? Ten great suggestions … from Psychology Today
Make it a health issue
Embrace Quality and ditch quantity
Ride out transitions
Expect — and even embrace – false starts
Commit to community
Focus on follow-up
Avoid technology traps
Develop momentum
End poisonous friendships
Remember the little things
Friendship is a topic for everyone. I notice that when people start connecting with others in a way that is nourishing , consistent and meaningful it is the number one indicator of recovery in my clinical practice. It is an essential piece of growth that helps us cope with life challenges and a sense of warmth and peace on a very personal level. So let’s all start to grow this skill for a better and deeper life. Yes, even in this COVID19 time. There are many ways to connect safely online or in a way that allows for distance that are safe.
Join us for an in-depth conversation in this month’s “Bear Psychology radio show” on Realityradio101.com program.