There Are Social and Political Benefits to Having Friends
Somebody
recently asked me what I would do if I had $500 million to give away.
My first thought was that I’d become a moderate version of the Koch
brothers. I’d pay for independent candidates to run against Democratic
or Republican members of Congress who veered too far into their party’s
fever swamps.
But
then I realized that if I really had that money, I’d want to affect a
smaller number of people in a more personal and profound way. The big,
established charities are already fighting disease and poverty as best
they can, so in search of new directions I thought, oddly, of
friendship.
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Ancient
writers from Aristotle to Cicero to Montaigne described friendship as
the pre-eminent human institution. You can go without marriage, or
justice, or honor, but friendship is indispensable to life.
Each
friendship, they continued, has positive social effects. Lovers face
each other, but friends stand side-by-side, facing the world — often
working on its behalf. Aristotle suggested that friendship is the
cornerstone of society. Montaigne thought that it spreads universal
warmth.
These
writers probably romanticized friendship. One senses that they didn’t
know how to have real conversations with the women in their lives, so
they poured their whole emotional lives into male friendships. But I do
think they were right in pointing out that friendship is a personal
relationship that has radiating social and political benefits.
In
the first place, friendship helps people make better judgments. So much
of deep friendship is thinking through problems together: what job to
take; whom to marry. Friendship allows you to see your own life but with
a second sympathetic self.
Second,
friends usually bring out better versions of each other. People feel
unguarded and fluid with their close friends. If you’re hanging around
with a friend, smarter and funnier thoughts tend to come burbling out.
Finally,
people behave better if they know their friends are observing.
Friendship is based, in part, on common tastes and interests, but it is
also based on mutual admiration and reciprocity. People tend to want to
live up to their friends’ high regard. People don’t have close
friendships in any hope of selfish gain, but simply for the pleasure
itself of feeling known and respected.
It’s
also true that friendship is not in great shape in America today. In
1985, people tended to have about three really close friends, according
to the General Social Survey. By 2004, according to research done at
Duke University and the University of Arizona, they were reporting they
had only two close confidants. The number of people who say they have no
close confidants at all has tripled over that time.
People
seem to have a harder time building friendships across class lines. As
society becomes more unequal and segmented, invitations come to people
on the basis of their job status. Middle-aged people have particular
problems nurturing friendships and building new ones. They are so busy
with work and kids that friendship gets squeezed out.
So,
in the fantasy world in which I have $500 million, I’d try to set up
places that would cultivate friendships. I know a lot of people who have
been involved in fellowship programs. They made friends who ended up
utterly transforming their lives. I’d try to take those sorts of
networking programs and make them less career oriented and more
profound.
So
I envision a string of adult camps or retreat centers (my oldest
friendships were formed at summer camp, so I think in those terms).
Groups of 20 or 30 would be brought together from all social and
demographic groups, and secluded for two weeks. They’d prepare and clean
up all their meals together, and eating the meals would go on for a
while. In the morning, they would read about and discuss big topics. In
the afternoons, they’d play sports, take hikes and build something
complicated together. At night, there’d be a bar and music.
You
couldn’t build a close friendship in that time, but you could plant the
seeds for one. As with good fellowship programs, alumni networks would
grow spontaneously over time.
People
these days are flocking to conferences, ideas festivals and cruises
that are really about building friendships, even if they don’t admit it
explicitly. The goal of these intensity retreats would be to spark bonds
between disparate individuals who, in the outside world, would be
completely unlikely to know each other. The benefits of that social
bridging, while unplannable, would ripple out in ways long and
far-reaching.
#Source:
Startling Adult Friendships | David Brooks
www.nytimes.com/2014/09/19/opinion/david-brooks-there-are-social-and-political-benefits-to-having-friends.html?smid=fb-nytimes&smtyp=cur&bicmp=AD&bicmlukp=WT.mc_id&bicmst=1409232722000&bicmet=1419773522000&abt=0002&abg=0&_r=0
www.nytimes.com/2014/09/19/opinion/david-brooks-there-are-social-and-political-benefits-to-having-friends.html?smid=fb-nytimes&smtyp=cur&bicmp=AD&bicmlukp=WT.mc_id&bicmst=1409232722000&bicmet=1419773522000&abt=0002&abg=0&_r=0
SEPT. 18, 2014
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