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But You Can Choose Your Friends

  • Mar 12th 2007
  • Est. 3 minutes read
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I was reminded of the old saying that “you cannot choose your family but you can choose your friends.” What reminded me of the old saying was the fact that we spent a week in Florida with old friends. All of us were impressed and pleased by how comfortable and relaxed we felt. There was no need to pretend, compete, or even be careful about our behavior with one another. We discussed personal, family and health problems in addition to reminiscing about “old times.” The warmth and closeness we experienced is what one expects to have when family members re-unite. There are people who are fortunate enough to have this type of closeness with family. However, for the rest of us, family experiences are far from pleasant.

What am I referring to?

Family relationships are often fraught with long and bitter histories made up of resentments, jealousies, rivalries, secrecies and unresolved issues, none of which ever is discussed. With this background of experience, many people visit family as part of a sense of obligation rather than pleasure. Whether the length of the visit is a day, week or month, people come away with a renewed sense of anger and resentment.

Sibling rivalries are often the most intense in family relationships as documented in writings as varied as the Bible to works of fiction and poetry. After all, in the Old Testament, Cain killed Abel and, when God asked Cain where Abel was, Cain answered, “Am I my brother’s keeper.” Borrowing from this Old Testament account of family dynamics, the great author, John Steinbeck, wrote a brilliant novel called East of Eden. This towering piece of literature focuses on the hateful and tragic relationships among members of one family. Eugene O’Neil wrote a brilliant play called “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.” This is another work that focuses on the bitter relationships among siblings, their father and the spouses of one southern family.

After all, it is the family that is the hotbed of sexual tensions, sexual molestation, marital infidelity and violent abuse of children and spouses. One may not agree with Sigmund Freud’s psychoanalytic explanation of human behavior as being couched in terms of the sexual instinct but it is hard to deny the fact oedipal rivalries and sexual traumas occur in the family. Perhaps Freud was the first great family therapist because of the way he examined those familial ties.

But, Old Friends?

It should be needless to remind everyone that the same types of dynamics that afflict family members can afflict friendships.

However, friendships that have endured for a long time have also weathered the “slings and arrows of misguided fortune.” Old friendships are “tried and true” and that is what makes them special. Because friendships are not bound by kinship ties they last because people choose to maintain those relationships. In other words, there are no obligations between friends of the type and variety that cause relatives to deal with each other whether they want to or not. Therefore, friendship relationships are relaxed, joking, and wonderfully informal rather than being driven by guilt and moral commitment.

Therefore, I want to thank my old friends for spending a week with me at their house while we were vacationing. What a delicious experience; to be on vacation and with old friends at the very same time.

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Author Dr. Allan Schwartz, Ph.D. Writer

Dr. Allan Schwartz is a medical writer on the MentalHealth.com Editorial Team with over 30 years of clinical experience as a Licensed Clinical Social Worker. He writes about various mental health disorders, eating disorders, and issues related to relationships, stress, trauma, and abuse.

Published: Mar 12th 2007, Last edited: Mar 12th 2007