Should you dump friends who don’t seem to care as much about you as you care about them?
A reader we’re calling Amity indicates that she has many close friends, some of whom she’s had for years. Even when friends move away, Amity makes a point to stay in touch with about a half dozen of her friends once a week with at least a text and often with a longer phone conversation. Amity writes that she regularly asks about her friends’ lives.
Recently, however, Amity has noticed that few of her friends ask about her, or even when they do, the conversation almost always turns back to talk of whatever the friend happens to be going through at that moment. Amity admits that she isn’t typically as forthcoming about her personal life as her friends are, but she does like to feel as if her friends care as much about her as she does about them.
The perception that the balance of concern might be off hit Amity particular after she confided in a few friends about a health scare she had experienced. While she is fine now, she was taken aback that whenever she brought up her illness with friends, the focus of the conversation generally shifted from her to whatever her friends happened to be going through at the moment. Some friends did and continue to ask her how she is at the beginning of a conversation, but here too she feels like they don’t focus as much on her as she would have on them.
Amity is concerned that her friends don’t care about her or that perhaps she has the wrong friends. Isn’t it wrong, she wonders, for them not to spend as much time talking about me as I do talking about them?
Since I don’t know Amity’s friends, I can’t speak to their appropriateness as friends. But I suspect that many of them are just as good a friend to Amity as they ever were. What’s likely changed, however, are Amity’s needs and her desire to break from the pattern of behavior she established with her friends long ago.
While true friends should indeed care about one another, there is no spreadsheet on which to tally who spends the most time caring about the other. Talking about someone in a conversation is just one way to indicate concern.
By Amity’s own admission, she hasn’t been as forthcoming about her personal life as her friends have been. While she may want to be more forthcoming now, her friends may not know this and instead default to the pattern they’ve established over the years.
It may feel a bit uncomfortable and out of character, but if Amity needs more listening time from her friends, the right thing is for her to tell them that. Granted, some friends are so in sync with one another that they know when a friend needs something, but many are not gifted at reading minds, particularly if the conversation is via spare and relatively emotionless text messages.
If some of her friends don’t respond to her request, then Amity may indeed want to address whether it’s time to let a friendship wane. But perhaps giving them a chance to step up and listen is something a true friend might do.
Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Simple Art of Business Etiquette: How to Rise to the Top by Playing Nice, is a senior lecturer in public policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School. He is also the administrator of www.jeffreyseglin.com, a blog focused on ethical issues.
Do you have ethical questions that you need to have answered? Send them to jeffreyseglin@gmail.com.
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