The Psychology of your 20s

381. Are friendships REALLY meant to be inconvenient?

46 min
Feb 2, 20263 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Host Gemma Spake explores why modern friendships have become increasingly inconvenient and isolated, examining the psychological research on what sustains friendships while critiquing how therapy speak and individualism have eroded community values. The episode argues that accepting inconvenience is essential to building meaningful villages and provides practical strategies for being a better friend and community member.

Insights
  • Lasting friendships require four psychological pillars: positivity, openness, supportiveness, and consistent interaction—yet modern culture prioritizes convenience over these maintenance requirements
  • The shift from public to private spaces (including digital isolation) has reduced incidental social contact by 14% in 30 years, while people maintain the same free time but allocate more to phones than community
  • Therapy and wellness language, when misapplied without communication or context, enables selfish boundary-setting that isolates rather than protects, creating a false permission structure for ghosting and abandonment
  • Conflict in friendships signals maturity and deepening bonds rather than relationship failure; avoiding difficult conversations perpetuates surface-level connections
  • Being a 'villager' requires accepting that reciprocity operates over years, not transactions; short-term scorekeeping destroys organic relationship development
Trends
Rise of hyper-individualism masquerading as wellness, creating permission structures for social abandonment without accountabilityGenerational shift toward private spaces and digital-first socializing reducing organic community formation and incidental social contactLoneliness epidemic among younger, more digitally-connected generations despite (or because of) increased online connectivityReframing of busyness as status symbol competing with community-building as a cultural priorityGrowing backlash against extreme boundary culture, with emerging influencers promoting offline community and event-based connectionCognitive exhaustion from always-on work culture reducing mental bandwidth for friendship maintenance despite stable free time availabilityMisapplication of therapeutic language enabling guilt-free relationship abandonment without communication or conflict resolutionEmerging recognition that friendship and community are non-negotiable for well-being, not luxury add-ons to productivity
Topics
Friendship maintenance psychology and equity theorySocial isolation and loneliness epidemic in younger generationsImpact of social media and smartphones on in-person connectionTherapy speak and boundary language misapplicationShift from public to private spaces and third-space declineBusyness culture and cognitive exhaustion in modern workConflict resolution and emotional maturity in friendshipsCommunity building and village mentalityHyper-independence and asking for helpReciprocity and scorekeeping in relationshipsMilestone celebration and intentional friendship investmentFriendship circles and relational repositioningToxic friendship patterns and when to end relationshipsVulnerability and openness in friendship formationWork-life balance and friendship prioritization
Companies
Netflix
Host mentions the podcast is now available on Netflix, expanding distribution beyond traditional podcast platforms
iHeartRadio
Primary podcast distribution platform mentioned multiple times for accessing this and other shows
Apple Podcasts
Podcast distribution platform where the show and advertised podcasts are available
Facebook
Referenced as part of social media explosion that promised connection but increased isolation over past 20 years
MySpace
Early social media platform referenced in discussion of how free time allocation shifted despite stable leisure hours
People
Gemma Spake
Host of The Psychology of Your 20s podcast; shares personal experiences moving to London and navigating friendship ex...
Deborah Oswald
Social researcher who published 2016 meta-analysis identifying four pillars of lasting friendships: positivity, openn...
Quotes
"Inconvenience is the cost of community. Or another one that's very similar is everybody wants the village. Nobody wants to be the villager."
Gemma SpakeEarly in episode
"Loneliness has literally been labeled the modern health epidemic in the same class as diseases like COVID or Ebola or the flu."
Gemma SpakeMid-episode
"Friendships are not, at least my friendships are not, some evergreen tree you can plant and leave and they will stay the same forever for your return."
Gemma SpakeMid-episode
"True community is messy because humans are messy. That's why they are wonderful."
Gemma SpakeLater in episode
"Conflict is communication. It becomes the relationship showing you where your boundaries are, where your values are, where your needs haven't been spoken out loud yet."
Gemma SpakeLater in episode
Full Transcript
I'm Amanda Knox, and in the new podcast Doubt, the case of Lucy Letby, we unpack the story of an unimaginable tragedy that gripped the UK in 2023. But what if we didn't get the whole story? I've just been made to fit. The moment you look at the whole picture, the case collapsed. What if the truth was disguised by a story we chose to believe? Oh my God, I think she might be innocent. Listen to Doubt, the case of Lucy Letby on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hi, it's Joe Interstein, host of the Spirit Daughter Podcast, where we talk about astrology, natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life. And today I'm talking with my dear friend, Krista Williams. It can change you in the best way possible. Dance with the change, dance with the breakdowns. The embodiment of Pisces intuition with Capricorn power moves. So I'm like delusionally proud of my chart. Listen to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts. I'm Clayton Eckerd. In 2022, I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor. But here's the thing. Bachelor fans hated him. If I could press a button and rewind it all, I would. That's when his life took a disturbing turn. A one-night stand would end in a courtroom. The media is here. This case has gone viral. The dating contract. Agree to date me, but I'm also suing you. This is unlike anything I've ever seen before. I'm Stephanie Young. Listen to Love Trapped on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Nancy Glass, host of the Burden of Guilt Season 2 podcast. This is a story about a horrendous lie that destroyed two families. Late one night, Bobby Gumpright became the victim of a random crime. The perpetrator was sentenced to 99 years until a confession changed everything. I was a monster. Listen to Burden of Guilt Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hello, everybody. I'm Gemma Spake, and welcome back to The Psychology of Your 20s, the podcast where we talk through the biggest changes, moments and transitions of our 20s and what they mean for our psychology. Hello, everybody. Welcome back to the show. Welcome back to the podcast. It is so great to have you here back for another episode. Guys, I don't know. I feel I don't know how I feel about my outfit. I'm trying to I'm like trying out the leopard print today. is this leopard print i don't even know anymore i don't know if i don't know if this is me so if you see me like picking at my cardigan today no it's because i'm trying out a new identity as somebody bold enough to wear leopard print and i'm i'm adjusting that has literally nothing to do with what we're talking about like literally nothing today we are going to tackle the biggest question on the internet of the era are friendships supposed to be inconvenient how much can we actually expect and demand from our friends? And have we come to expect too little from people in our lives? I am sure that you have seen this phrase out there recently online, specifically on TikTok, maybe on Instagram. Inconvenience is the cost of community. Or another one that's very similar is everybody wants the village. Nobody wants to be the villager. These terms, these phrases have been really hard to miss. And I think they're pointing towards this big realization that we're having as a society that, you know, the past 20 years have made us one of the most isolated generations in history. There has been, you know, the proliferation of social media that was meant to make us less lonely has made us lonelier. And a lot of wellness content has really focused on protecting our peace and boundaries, but has any of that actually made us happier? If we were to look at any loneliness survey, any loneliness study, any life satisfaction survey taken in the last five years, the answer is pretty obviously no, we are not happier. Loneliness has literally been labeled the modern health epidemic in the same class as diseases like COVID or Ebola or the flu. And the younger you are, the more connected you are, ironically, or you should be due to technology, the more likely you are to report feeling increasingly isolated. Now, obviously, there are a lot of factors going on here. You know, the pandemic in particular interrupted a huge developmental stage for a lot of us when we were typically meant to meet a lot of our lifelong friends, you know, again, social media, our smartphones, they are highly addictive. They've made it a lot harder to connect in person. But how much of it is because we have become selfish community members? You know, I've had some moments with people in the last few months, personally, that have really made me start asking this question myself. Am I asking too much of my friends or do I just need better friends? You know, there have been so many moments since moving to London and since Netflix happening where I'm like, you know, do I actually deserve more? Am I putting up with not enough? Am I putting up with less? And how much is that me? How much is that my expectations? How much is that my fault? And how much is it because maybe overnight our expectations for friendships have changed? And that has been a really hard pill to swallow and one I'm still kind of confused by myself. So of course, I thought I would take this conversation and this rumination out of my mind and give it to you guys. And hopefully, you can decide what we should be doing based on our discussion and the psychology we introduce today. So without further ado, let's get into it. so i thought that we'd start this episode by actually going through the psychological research on what makes a good friend but also what is needed for a friendship to survive because i don't think anybody teaches us this but it is such valuable knowledge there have been so many attempts to categorize good friendship over the years, but my favorite one is by the social researcher Deborah Oswald, who in 2016 published an entire meta-analysis on maintaining long-lasting friendships. And she looked at studies from years and years and years of psychology and what she found. Her conclusion was that lasting friendships need four things to survive. positivity openness supportiveness and interaction positivity is essentially we need somebody who's going to make us feel better about ourself or better about our lives openness means we want people who are vulnerable who are responsive who who share supportiveness means just classically like people need to be there for you in good times and in bad times as well not just emotionally but physically, which is very important for the discussion we're having today. And finally, interaction. Interaction doesn't have to be in person. It doesn't have to be every week, but there is some kind of minimal level of contact required before a friendship is deprioritized in our lives or just like fades altogether. Now, this number, this level of interaction changes based on where you are in your friendship. Obviously, when you're first establishing a friendship, that is where the biggest time investment is taking place. A 2018 study found that it takes about 50 hours to shift from acquaintances to casual friends, 90 hours to call someone a good friend, over 200 hours plus to call somebody a really close friend. even that is kind of at the lower end so obviously when you're first making a friend you need to see each other quite frequently to kind of maintain that bond but in terms of maintenance the maintenance of a long-term friendship we actually don't have that much research about how often we should be interacting and maybe that's part of the broader social problem here we're all very interested in making friends, in surrounding ourselves with people. But once we have them, I think it's a lot easier to kind of take them for granted and not be putting in those maintenance hours. My take is the longer the friendship, the more time between interactions online or in person you can kind of get away with, especially if they're a long distance friend. I also think my personal opinion, again, is that in-person hours count for triple online hours in terms of quality time. But it's funny that, you know, as soon as we get to this discussion of like, what does it take to be a good friend? We immediately discuss minimums here. You know, we immediately are like, what's the minimum amount we should be seeing our friends? When in fact, you should want to see your friends as much as possible. You shouldn't just be looking for the minimal number of hours to pour into somebody so that they will be there for you when you really need them. So that was a tangent. Let's return to the original research. Positivity, openness, supportiveness, and interaction. That's what a friendship needs to survive. Something though that these factors all have in common that comes back to this broader question we're asking today is that all of these things are quite time intensive and sacrificial and difficult at times. It's difficult to always be supportive. It's difficult to always be there for your friends. But if you are missing even one of these things for too long, a friendship is going to fade. Friendships are not, at least my friendships are not, some evergreen tree you can plant and leave and they will stay the same forever for your return, especially not friendships that are early on in their lives. This is where our problem emerges. It is so much easier to be that kind of detached friend and to only devote our energy and our time to ourselves. It is so much easier, whether you're an introvert or an extrovert, like we're all tired. It's so much easier to spend time alone and to not be annoyed or inconvenienced by other people's problems. But you are almost guaranteeing loneliness that way. And this really brings us naturally to the big question of the day. Why is our preference for being alone? Why is it that we have come to expect less from our friendships and also inadvertently desire to give less? Like what has changed in recent decades that has made this a trend that we're seeing? I personally think there are three distinct horsemen of like the low expectation, low effort friendship apocalypse. three things that have done the most damage to how we create and maintain good relationships. First is the move from social spaces to private spaces that we're experiencing, the broader social move from social to private spaces. Second is busyness and how overworked we are. And third is, and this might be controversial, but it is the manipulation of self-help language and self-help terms that we throw around and we don't actually understand. So let's start with number one, the move from public spaces to private spaces, including our move online, which could be deemed a public space, but is often accessed privately. I read this fascinating study that said in the last 30 years, our use of public spaces has dropped by more than 14%. The time we spend in third spaces, so coffee shops, libraries, parks, pubs, just sitting and enjoying ourselves, being present outdoors in public spaces has also drastically shifted with people spending more and more time at home. You know, a really fascinating way they studied this, they looked at walking speed and walking pace as a determinant of how much time people are spending in public spaces. Obviously, if you're walking slower, you spend more time in public spaces, you're more likely to run into a neighbor or talk to somebody. If you're walking faster, efficiently, you're going to kind of pass by those minimal social interactions. our walking pace has increased by 15 in the last few years meaning we are more in a rush we are more in a rush to get from place a to place b from work to home home to gym gym back home which has and i kind of just mentioned this reduced our incidental exposure to other people in our community what has replaced these times we'd usually spend out of our homes You know, what has replaced these moments we'd usually spend with our friends? It's our phones. Our phones, our screens, our streaming services, things that are by their very nature very private. Technology, particularly social media, which ironically promised us even more connection, has made us actually very isolated and sanitized lives. on average and this is an average we spend two two and a half hours on social media day a lot of that is just empty time that I think often feels like we're doing something social because we're seeing the faces of other people we're hearing their voices we're learning about their stories we're receiving dopamine but it's not and what's funny is that a big reason we don't see our friends, don't do the 40 minute commute to their side of town, don't have the evening free for them is because we think we have less free time. But in fact, it's because we have devoted more of that free time to phone time. A 2023 study actually found we have about the same amount of free time as we did two decades ago before the explosion of MySpace and Facebook. On average, five hours, five hours of free time a day. But we spend so much more of it online, which feels more like a necessity and therefore means that we are becoming more and more isolated without realizing it. And I know obviously you guys have heard this so many times, social media is making us more lonely, social media is stealing our time, stealing our attention. But I think it's really important to emphasize that in an episode about how friendship has become seemingly more inconvenient when we are very easily and very much allow ourselves to be inconvenienced by our phones equally as much The truth is though we may have as much leisure time as we did 20 to 30 years ago. That doesn't mean we're not cognitively more exhausted and more extended during the time we are working or switched on at work to use that time effectively. And that brings me to reason number two. We may have the same amount of free time, but busyness and overall exhaustion is a big reason we feel like the inconvenience of friendship is sometimes more of a challenge. You know, we may be working the same hours, but what is expected of us during those hours is far different from before, especially as technology has, you know, driven up productivity expectations and therefore driven up cognitive fatigue. That leaves less mental energy for the things we actually want or know we should do, like seeing our friends. The fact that the busyness has become more of a status symbol as well these days, which you will know all too well if you listen to our Why Rest Makes You Feel guilty episode, that hasn't helped. You know, a busy schedule, it's the new designer handbag. It's the new sports car. It makes you seem important. Having a large community simply isn't admired the same way that having a lot of money is or having great accolades or an amazing important job is. I think that's changing these days. I think people are like, huh, money can't buy me happiness. It's almost like people have been saying that for years, but now I'm starting to realize it and you can actually see that in social media trends right the community influencer people who do events people who show people where to meet others who get offline they're becoming so much more popular i think we're realizing that the allure of exhaustion is a lie you can again have all the importance and money in the world but you can't buy deep friendship I always ask myself this question why are we so willing to inconvenience ourselves for a boss or for a job but not for a friend if your boss says hey I need you to work till 9 p.m without pay you're like of course right away but if your friend asks you to come to dinner that starts after eight you're not going to do that you're too busy you're too tired your boss isn't going to be the one visiting you when you're sick your friends are so you've got to make that space let yourself be inconvenienced by your friends the way you inconvenience yourself for work i will say it is really hard to maintain everything we are expected to maintain as adults in a capitalist society i know i'm receiving this message you are receiving this message that you have to prioritize everything, do everything, be successful in everything, that's impossible. So of course, some things get let go of. We fail in some aspects. And typically, because of the way that society and culture has prioritized our lives for us, friendship seems the least important, the least necessary. That's the thing we're going to give up first. And what we're seeing is, hey, maybe the priorities we've been given, friendship at the bottom or closer to the bottom is not right because friendship is life-giving. And not having our friends, not having community, regardless of how inconvenient it is, does come at a cost. I feel like this is a balance or challenge we are really going to have to figure out in the next few years, hopefully. how do we balance you know productivity and a very very competitive job market and making money with well-being and with one of the most inexpensive things for our well-being there is out there which is friendship okay we are going to take a short break here but when we return i want to get into that third and I would say most controversial reason that we've, you know, shied away from the inconvenience of friendship, which is the rise of hyper individualized therapy speak. I don't think everyone's going to be happy with what I have to say, but it's important. Nonetheless, stay with us. Hi, this is Jo Winterstein, host of the Spirit Daughter podcast, where we talk about astrology, natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life. And I just sat down with a mini driver. The Irish traveler said when I was 16, you're going to have a terrible time with men. Actor, storyteller, and unapologetic Aquarian visionary. Aquarius is all about freedom loving and different perspectives. And I find a lot of people with strong placements in Aquarius like are misunderstood. A sun and Venus in Aquarius in her seventh house spark her unconventional approach to partnership. He really has taught me to embrace people sleeping in different rooms, on different houses, in different places, but just an embracing of the isness of it all. If you're navigating your own transformation or just want a chart side view into how a leading artist integrates astrology, creativity, and real life, this episode is a must listen. Listen to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts. What if mind control is real? If you could control the behavior of anybody around you, what kind of life would you have? Can you hypnotically persuade someone to buy a car? When you look at your car, you're going to become overwhelmed with such good feelings. Can you hypnotize someone into sleeping with you? I gave her some suggestions to be sexually aroused. Can you get someone to join your cult? NLP was used on me to access my subconscious. NLP, aka Neuro Linguistic Programming, is a blend of hypnosis, linguistics, and psychology. Fans say it's like finally getting a user manual for your brain. It's about engineering consciousness. Mind Games is the story of NLP. its crazy cast of disciples, and the fake doctor who invented it at a New Age commune and sold it to guys in suits. He stood trial for murder and got acquitted. The biggest mind game of all? NLP might actually work. This is wild. Listen to Mind Games on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. What do you do when the headlines don't explain what's happening inside of you. I'm Ben Higgins, and if you can hear me, it's where culture meets the soul, a place for real conversation. Each episode, I sit down with people from all walks of life, celebrities, thinkers, and everyday folks, and we go deeper than the polished story. We talk about what drives us, what shapes us, and what gives us hope. We get honest about the big stuff, identity when you don't recognize yourself anymore, loss that changes you, purpose when success isn't enough, peace when your mind won't slow down, faith when it's complicated. Some guests have answers. Most are still figuring it out. If you've ever felt like there has to be more to the story, this show is for you. Listen to If You Can Hear Me on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. In 2023, a story gripped the UK, evoking horror and disbelief. The nurse who should have been in charge of caring for tiny babies is now the most prolific child killer in modern British history. Everyone thought they knew how it ended. A verdict, a villain, a nurse named Lucy Letby. Lucy Letby has been found guilty. But what if we didn't get the whole story? The moment you look at the whole picture, the case collapses. I'm Amanda Knox, and in the new podcast, Doubt, the case of Lucy Letby, we follow the evidence and hear from the people that lived it to ask what really happened when the world decided who Lucy Letby was. No voicing of any skepticism or doubt. It'll cause so much harm at every single level if the British establishment of this is wrong. Listen to Doubt, The Case of Lucy Letby on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. For a psychology podcast, again, what I'm going to say next might be a bit controversial. This is just my opinion. but I think the viral nature of so many therapy terms and therapy speak without actual education on what those terms mean and how to apply them has made us think it's okay to be selfish for no reason. This has made us think that it is normal to just do what we want and to call it a boundary and to expect others to respond accordingly and if they don't we can cut them from our lives. Big distinction I need to make here. I'm not talking about setting boundaries for well-being or being selfish as a way to reclaim the times that you were selfless and were taken advantage of. I'm not talking about selfishness for self-protection. Love all those things. I love when people state what they need, know what they need, are open about their wants. Love that. But that's the thing. I love it because it's being communicated. It's not being dictated. I think we can all think of examples of boundaries or therapy speak being co-opted in a way that is just unfair, unreasonable and never explained. Ghosting a friend over a minor disagreement, not showing up for important events because you're tired and refusing to acknowledge someone else's disappointment in that. protecting your peace by disregarding others feelings i've done it before i i wish i wish i could be like the innocent person here but we all have i read this article though the other day from bustle and this is like a great example of this that i just think if there was going to be one example of this this is the one i would use it was this girl her name was anna i think let's call Anna. Sorry, Anna, if it's something else, but her name was Anna. She'd had this friend of five years. That's a long time to have a friend in your 20s. And her friend dumped her over text whilst they were making plans, being like, I'm in a place where I'm trying to honour my needs and act in alignment with what feels right within the scope of my life. And I'm afraid our friendship doesn't seem to fit into that framework. I can no longer hold the emotional space you've wanted me to, that kind of language, which is empowering language, but that's classic therapy speak. And that language, yes, again, it's important. Boundaries are important. But in this example, this person is missing a crucial ingredient. You can't set a boundary and not communicate it with the other person and then only deliver the consequences. You can't expect every relationship to be purely dictated by your needs, which are never expressed before the person is cut from your life, and think or expect to have fulfilling friendships from that. It's just, it's not possible. Self-help and therapy and wellness speak and all this language has made us think that, I guess self-improvement and healing is something that happens in isolation or that improving our lives is all about what we can do for ourselves and what we can do to make our lives more stress free and nervous system regulation and removing toxic energy. But I think we've overcorrected. There was a point where we didn't have any language for this. We didn't have any knowledge about this. And so we really did need some of this language to be like, hey, that's why I feel bad. That's why I feel taken advantage of. Now we've perhaps taken the standard so far that it's isolating. It's a highly individualistic approach that, you know, I think contradicts the collective lives most of us crave. What it also doesn't acknowledge is the mere fact of human nature. People make mistakes. You have made mistakes. You have made mistakes people have forgiven you for. People have disagreements. relationships aren't equal all the time and maybe the most crucial one of all you are not the only person who has needs and you are not the most important person in a relationship or in the world you are just a person operating in a bigger collective system and what you give to that collective to your friends to your family to your neighbors to to strangers is what you receive back and there's still agency in that equation right if you want to maintain those boundaries of like do not cross these do not wrong me i cannot be inconvenienced i want a stress-free life you're totally welcome to do that but don't turn around and be surprised when you don't have any friends anymore or your community is there's nothing there the reason friendship is so beautiful and complex and nourishing and the reason community is so beautiful and complex is nourishing is because people are complex and because they surprise us and because they are imperfect. If you want to appreciate the full beauty of that, you also have to pay the price of being annoyed at people sometimes because they piss you off or inconvenienced because you don't really want to pick them up from the airport, but you know, they did it for you the other day, so you might you may as well or the occasional frustration that comes with people being unique and individual and not exactly catered to your needs like a character in a movie i think i think personally you get much more in return that way true community is messy because humans are messy that's why they are wonderful again you can choose the alternative you can continue to live a life where everything is organized around your convenience you are so welcome to do so that's the beautiful thing about therapy and this wave of of wellness and self-improvement people have learned that they have agency and their emotional choices you have free will but i don't think your human experience is going to be as great as it can be if you alternatively accept a little bit of discomfort it's called the law of friction some of the best things in life create the most friction and discomfort that's with friendship with that in mind let's talk about what it takes to be a villager these days and the ways that you can create the community you want and that you deserve even when it not easy Starting with tip number one This is the thing that dramatically, dramatically changed my friendships more than anything else. Do you know when you were in high school or even primary school and you would like keep track of who messaged you for your birthday? or like who posted about you on their Instagram story or like Snapchat for your birthday and who didn't. Like I know a lot of us still do this in adulthood in a different form. Keeping track of whether you are the last one to reach out. You are the last one to shout dinner, whatever it is, those little things. I need you to stop doing that. I know it feels unnatural, but I need you to stop doing that. Everything becomes a scoreboard and that eliminates the natural reciprocity that a relationship should have. There is a very famous social psychology theory that you've definitely heard on this podcast before. It's known as equity theory, basically says that when we perceive that the input and output ratio in a relationship is not fair or is unequal in friendship, it causes tension and it causes us to be uncomfortable. That's totally understandable, right? Because we want to know that somebody likes us as much as we like them, that they're not taking advantage of us but when it's the only thing you pay attention to that's not an organic relationship and additionally you have to be able to view that over many years if you want long-term friendships sometimes a friend needs more from you needs more of the oxygen needs more of the time and the space to vent needs more support sometimes for months on end if we are constantly weighing up the short-term stats with that you know checklist of who did what last I think you may incorrectly believe that they are being a bad villager and that's not always true sometimes you have to be able to get that bird's eye view of over years and years or even over decades of the flows that a relationship takes secondly the second way you can be a villager is push back against your hyper-independence and ask for help. This is something I've always struggled with and you know I'm a very independent person, classic and her eldest daughter, high achiever, don't need anyone type, moved out of home when I was like 17. I'm sure so many of you relate to this as well. It was a badge of honor to not need help with anything. What I've realized is that not letting people help me is actually doing both of us a disservice. I struggle more. I feel more in over my head. But it's also denying someone else the opportunity they would like to show you that they love you in their way. You are denying sometimes their love language of acts of service, but also they want to do this. This is this weird thing. Letting people help you is more of a gift to other people sometimes. And so not letting them do that because you think it's an annoyance to them means you're limiting them in a way. I think it's very, very hard to not feel like a burden when you ask people for help when you move or when you ask them to pick you up from the airport or to take you to doctor's appointments or, you know, get up early and give you a lift somewhere. But what I found and I want you to reflect on your own experiences here is that any times I have been asked that and I somebody's asked me to do them a favor or to help them or to come early to the party oh my god I'm I feel such like a swelling in my heart I get so excited I'm like I they have trusted me they must really love me our friendship must be like really really they must think I'm a great friend and that's a beautiful feeling being a villager isn't just letting others lean on you it's leaning on them as well and letting yourself be helped rather than isolating yourself further also the more you maintain loyalty to your hyper independence the kind of the more exhausted you're going to be and that is not going to give you the mental energy the cognitive energy to show up for others so you have to be okay with saying yes i do need help and asking for help and understanding that's a gift for both people number three remember the times that you were tired and you went anyways a really important part of accepting that friendship is going to be inconvenient is remembering that that inconvenience still brings with it a reward. Reflecting on your own memories and looking back in the past and distinctly keeping a bank of like times where you were like, I really don't want to go. This is going to be terrible. And it was great anyways, is so important for learning that association between sometimes being a little bit annoyed, sometimes being tired, too tired to go, you think, and actually being rewarded. And I don't want to safe for that sacrifice but rewarded for pushing through fourth tip if you're really struggling with like building community pick two non-negotiable social days a week this is something i've been employing since moving to london consistently showing up despite your mood just being in physical closeness to other people is a fantastic way to build the village right back in the day the village was really united by geographical closeness and people who lived next door to you and people who traveled with you and were maybe nomadic with you or who were in the hot next door like yes we've lost that closeness with the increase in I guess individualism and how spread out we are across the world but every community neighborhood suburb city still has those community hubs still has gyms, pubs, libraries, choirs that you can go to. So having two days a week where you're like, this is my, this is the, this is my, the price I pay to be in community. And these are the days I'm going to devote just to being out there is highly effective. I would also say number five, kind of similar to this. Actually, it's totally not. It's completely different, but I'm like, oh, because it has to do with community. No, it's different. But number five, if you're struggling invite your friends to do chores with you sometimes having those two big social days a week that is a lot for some people right and it's expensive it's expensive especially if you live in a big city to go out and have to be you have to buy drinks have to pay for the movie tickets have to go out for dinner twice a week it's expensive dinner in london is like 40 pounds at the moment like doing that twice a week is sometimes not an option find those kind of more low effort things that you want to do with people chores are fantastic your ability to do chores with somebody I think that that is a marker of whether you are good friends or not it's one of my best memories with my good friend Erin it was when we lived in Canberra and we would just go to what was it the Dixon grocery store for hours I had a terrible roommate at the time like I really didn't want to be in the house and we would just walk up and down and up and down those aisles. Sounds really lame, but you know what? Anything to be in closeness with somebody I think is amazing. Number six, remember to keep track of milestones and consciously budget either time or money to make those milestones feel important for others. I just feel like we don't celebrate each other enough. And especially if you are like friends with a lot of really cool people who are always doing amazing things, sometimes we forget that they still want to be celebrated and that we're all kind of little kids in a way who want somebody to remember our birthday and who want somebody to remember our first day of school, our first day of a new job, and who want people to remember that like hey that was a really hard thing and I'm getting through it and like that in itself deserves a reward I think I don't know to speak from personal experience and to kind of break the fourth wall here especially if you're watching on Netflix like when Netflix when this whole Netflix thing happened it was kind of sad in a way because I felt like this huge thing was happening and I was looking around for people to like celebrate with and some people who I really would have expected to be there for me and to want to celebrate with me for that just weren't and that really that that hurt and that really stung and I think having that experience has made me realize hey but am I doing that for others and if I want to be part of the village like I've got to be sometimes you've got to set the example And I think one of the greatest ways to show people that you care and that you listen is remembering just the smallest things. And every week putting $10, $20, $50 into an account just for social money and just for milestone money and celebratory money so that you can be a presence in somebody's life during their milestones. When they look back at the memory of a milestone, of a birthday, of an engagement, of a new job, of a new house, you are there and you are part of their kind of life story. Okay, we're going to take one more short break here. But when we return, let's talk also about when a friendship is perhaps becoming too one-sided. And when it's no longer inconvenience, it's a burden to be around those people. Stay with us. Hi, this is Jo Winterstein, host of the Spirit Daughter podcast, where we talk about astrology, natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life. And I just sat down with a mini driver. The Irish traveler said when I was 16, you're going to have a terrible time with men. Actor, storyteller, and unapologetic Aquarian visionary. Aquarius is all about freedom loving and different perspectives. and I find a lot of people with strong placements in Aquarius like are misunderstood. A sun and Venus in Aquarius in her seventh house spark her unconventional approach to partnership. He really has taught me to embrace people sleeping in different rooms, on different houses, in different places, but just an embracing of the is-ness of it all. If you're navigating your own transformation or just want a chart-side view into how a leading artist integrates astrology, creativity, and real life, This episode is a must listen. Listen to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts. What if mind control is real? If you could control the behavior of anybody around you, what kind of life would you have? Can you hypnotically persuade someone to buy a car? When you look at your car, you're going to become overwhelmed with such good feelings. Can you hypnotize someone into sleeping with you? I gave her some suggestions to be sexually aroused. Can you get someone to join your cult? NLP was used on me to access my subconscious. NLP, aka Neuro Linguistic Programming, is a blend of hypnosis, linguistics, and psychology. Fans say it's like finally getting a user manual for your brain. It's about engineering consciousness. Mind Games is the story of NLP. its crazy cast of disciples, and the fake doctor who invented it at a New Age commune and sold it to guys in suits. He stood trial for murder and got acquitted. The biggest mind game of all? NLP might actually work. This is wild. Listen to Mind Games on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. What do you do when the headlines don't explain what's happening inside of you. I'm Ben Higgins, and if you can hear me, it's where culture meets the soul, a place for real conversation. Each episode, I sit down with people from all walks of life, celebrities, thinkers, and everyday folks, and we go deeper than the polished story. We talk about what drives us, what shapes us, and what gives us hope. We get honest about the big stuff, identity when you don't recognize yourself anymore, or loss that changes you, purpose when success isn't enough, peace when your mind won't slow down, faith when it's complicated. Some guests have answers. Most are still figuring it out. If you've ever felt like there has to be more to the story, this show is for you. Listen to If You Can Hear Me on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. China's Ministry of State Security is one of the most mysterious and powerful spy agencies in the world. But in 2017, the FBI got inside. This is Special Agent Regal, Special Agent Bradley Hall. This MSS officer has no idea the U.S. government is on to him. But the FBI has his chats, texts, emails, even his personal diary. Hear how they got it on the Sixth Bureau podcast. I now have several terabytes of an MSS officer, no doubt, no question, of his life. And that's a unicorn. No one had ever seen anything like that. It was unbelievable. This is a story of the inner workings of the MSS and how one man's ambition and mistakes opened its vault of secrets. Listen to the Sixth Bureau on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I know I said we'd talk about when it's maybe time to kick somebody out of the village, but before that, one more tip, because it has something to do with this. You got to fight more with your friends. I don't know what tip we're up to. Tip number seven, you have to voice frustrations and you have to learn how to fight with your friends. You deserve to fight with your friends. You deserve friends who will fight with you and for you, because those are the same things when i was younger i know so many people are the same conflict to me was like that was the end the first time somebody mentioned a grievance was the last time because the friendship was over but having these little arguments disagreements sometimes having confrontation i think nowadays shows that you care way more than those times that you just are like you voice something and you're like done this friendship's over because when you get to to that point of being like I'm so frustrated by this that saying it is the last word that I can say because I've already detached myself from this relationship in our mind like that's not real friendship fighting with somebody when it deeply uncomfortable and it really you don know how it gonna go that shows dedication and i think that what we all deserve versus the ghost versus the fizzle i think again i said this on the podcast before it is a real sign of emotional maturity and that is how i knew my frontal lobe had developed and i had emotionally matured to another level was when i realized like again if i have a problem i I find that the solution of saying it is the one that I will most likely pursue. It's just also, I think, the opportunity for a new beginning. And it's a way of kind of, I don't know, of relating to somebody else. And it's kind of like a bonding experience. The shift is so powerful, right? One of the best things is having a fight with your friend. And then three weeks later, being able to be like, oh, my God, remember that fight we had? And we move through it. And you stop treating every small thing, the things that come up naturally in friendships, like an emergency. You stop panicking and performing and people pleasing your way out of the discomfort. And instead you get curious. You start seeing it as information. Like, okay, something is happening here. Something needs to be said. Something needs to change. Conflict is communication. it becomes the relationship showing you where your boundaries are where your values are where your needs haven't been spoken out loud yet it's not a sign the relationship is broken it's often a sign that it's becoming real and it's developing to a new level i always say this as well and i'm going to stop lingering on this after this point i promise but once you have had your first fight with a friend and you've survived that that's when you can call them a real friend i remember having my first big like falling out fight with my one of my best friends in the world meg and afterwards i was like cool so you're not ever going anywhere because if we got through this we can get through anything let's return to what i was originally saying when do you kick somebody out of the village when is a friendship too inconvenient to keep up because there is a line and there's always going to be freeloaders in society and in the village who want the rewards without paying their social dues. I know I said not to keep score. I know I'm going to sound like a hypocrite. I know I said not to treat friendship like a point system, but there is a feeling you will get when you realize, oh, wait, wait, wait, I'm the only one invested here. A few busy months, I'd let that slide. You know, I know I've had those really busy moments where I'm like, sorry, gals, I've got to cancel more plans than I can attend because I have to work and like, life is busy and when you're the boss like that's kind of just the way it is and i'm really glad my friends gave me grace for that life gets busy we're adults we know that also people have different energy levels people have caring responsibilities people have health problems also important to know that about your friends but it's when and this is the distinction when you find yourself doing things for them they would never do for you or specifically they have had the chance to do that for you and they haven't it's not about cutting them off at that point but having that conversation setting expectations everyone can be unaware everyone can have a rough season but if you have expressed that you feel taken for granted or that you need more effort they need to make plans and they either dismiss you, guilt you, promise they change to change and then they never do, repeat the same behavior. That's not a misunderstanding. You have been understood. That is a pattern and patterns are what decide outcomes, not potential. Like I said, you want a village? Learn how to approach these hard conversations and also learn that this maybe not isn't necessarily the end. It might just be the beginning of a new way your friendship operates, but if they do something that you would never imagine doing to someone to them to a stranger even to an enemy it's not that this person doesn't deserve a village they just don't deserve to be in yours your village has standards and we're again not talking about mild inconveniences we're not talking about things they're apologetic for but things that show a value mismatch you're allowed to say this is not what our village does i can't have you here cheating on a partner hurting somebody else betraying somebody else lying a village runs on values what ones do you personally want to see in others that you are committing to displaying yourself finally the final criteria i think that a friendship has has gone too far as too too inconvenient is when it creates more stress than safety and that's a feeling that you will if you've ever been in this situation before you understand not every friendship needs to be deep but it at least needs to be stable if spending time with a friend feels like bracing for a terrible mood managing their reactions anticipating passive aggression walking on eggshells if it feels exhausting in like an emotional soulful way it stops being about companionship i think it becomes a form of like you're regulating them and that is exhausting and if you find yourself avoiding situations being really excited when they cancel plans that is the biggest one the moment you feel excited that somebody has cancelled a plan, I think you need to place them elsewhere in your friend universe. And I wrote about this in my book. Your friendship universe has three circles, the inner circle, the second circle, and the third circle. Where someone sits in that circle determines essentially the nature of your relationship. The center of the circle, you should never be excited if somebody at the center of the circle cancels plans. center of a circle you should never be excited if they can't make it third circle your expectations are a little bit different they're still in they're still in the galaxy they just don't have to be a huge priority you don't have to drop a friend shift your expectations shift their place in the friendship galaxy. Some final reminders before we go. Remember as well, I don't think I've spoken about this enough, but a village takes time if you don't have it yet, if it feels like you'll never have it. I have to remind you, everyone who has a village now at some point didn't have one and at some stage felt like they would never have it. Sometimes you have to destroy the old for the new as well. You know, I thought I had a village at university. I didn't and I was clinging to those people and trying to drag them into activities and into ways of engaging that I knew I enjoyed but they weren't ever going to and it just made me feel terrible about myself when I got out of that environment when I gave myself space and time to just think about what I wanted in friendship you know the way I thought about what I wanted in dating in Korea it was very easy to separate myself and to understand that you know again maybe the village I wanted didn't share the same values similarly like make sure you still have time for yourself I know I place this big emphasis on like recognizing selfishness in boundaries clothing and not overusing the too tired excuse but social burnout is still real especially if you're adapting to a new way of showing up. My guideline for myself is always a day and a half or a day of alone time per week, nourishing alone time, just to make sure I'm not, I'm, you know, I'm pouring into my own cup as well. I want to be a good villager. A good villager has the patience and, and the time and the energy to do that. But we're all still learning, you know, we're all still learning our balances. And I think getting corrections from friends is something you have to be open to. You also have to be open to to doing that as well and just having patience and forgiveness for people i really think that's what we need more of thank you so much for listening if you have made it this far if you are listening on spotify leave a comment down below what are your tips for being a good villager that maybe i haven't included i would love to hear from you make sure you are following us on Instagram, TikTok. Remember, if you are listening to the podcast, we are now on Netflix. If you want to go and watch over there to get an even more intimate feeling. But I appreciate your interest in this topic. I appreciate you being as fascinated by this as I am. Until next time, be safe, be kind, be gentle to yourself. Good luck with the village. Good luck being a villager. We will talk very, very soon. Hi, this is Jo Winterstein, host of the Spirit Daughter podcast, where we talk about astrology, natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life. And I just sat down with a mini driver. The Irish traveler said when I was 16, you're going to have a terrible time with men. Actor, storyteller, and unapologetic Aquarian visionary. Aquarius is all about freedom loving and different perspectives. and I find a lot of people with strong placements in Aquarius like are misunderstood. A sun and Venus in Aquarius in her seventh house spark her unconventional approach to partnership. He really has taught me to embrace people sleeping in different rooms, on different houses, in different places, but just an embracing of the is-ness of it all. If you're navigating your own transformation or just want a chart-side view into how a leading artist integrates astrology, creativity, and real life, This episode is a must listen. Listen to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts. What if mind control is real? If you could control the behavior of anybody around you, what kind of life would you have? Can you hypnotically persuade someone to buy a car? When you look at your car, you're going to become overwhelmed with such good feelings. Can you hypnotize someone into sleeping with you? I gave her some suggestions to be sexually aroused. Can you get someone to join your cult? NLP was used on me to access my subconscious. NLP, aka Neuro Linguistic Programming, is a blend of hypnosis, linguistics, and psychology. Fans say it's like finally getting a user manual for your brain. It's about engineering consciousness. Mind Games is the story of NLP. its crazy cast of disciples and the fake doctor who invented it at a new age commune and sold it to guys in suits he stood trial for murder and got acquitted the biggest mind game of all nlp might actually work this is wild listen to mind games on the iheart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts what do you do when the headlines don't explain what's happening inside of you. I'm Ben Higgins, and if you can hear me, it's where culture meets the soul, a place for real conversation. Each episode, I sit down with people from all walks of life, celebrities, thinkers, and everyday folks, and we go deeper than the polished story. We talk about what drives us, what shapes us, and what gives us hope. We get honest about the big stuff, identity when you don't recognize yourself anymore, loss that changes you, purpose when success is an enough, peace when your mind won't slow down, faith when it's complicated. Some guests have answers. Most are still figuring it out. If you've ever felt like there has to be more to the story, this show is for you. Listen to If You Can Hear Me on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. In 2023, a story gripped the UK, evoking horror and disbelief. The nurse who should have been in charge of caring for tiny babies is now the most prolific child killer in modern British history. Everyone thought they knew how it ended. A verdict? A villain. A nurse named Lucy Letby. Lucy Letby has been found guilty. But what if we didn't get the whole story? The moment you look at the whole picture, the case collapses. I'm Amanda Knox and in the new podcast Doubt the case of Lucy Letby we follow the evidence and hear from the people that lived it to ask what really happened when the world decided who Lucy Letby was no voicing of any skepticism or doubt it'll cause so much harm at every single level of the British establishment of this is wrong listen to Doubt the case of Lucy Letby on the iHeartRadio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. starting on February 24th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts. I'm Amanda Knox, and in the new podcast, Doubt, The Case of Lucy Letby, we unpack the story of an unimaginable tragedy that gripped the UK in 2023. But what if we didn't get the whole story? I've just been made to fit. The moment you look at the whole picture, the case collapsed. What if the truth was disguised by a story we chose to believe? Oh my God, I think she might be innocent. Listen to Doubt, The Case of Lucy Letby on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Clayton Eckerd. In 2022, I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor. But here's the thing. Bachelor fans hated him. If I could press a button and rewind it all, I would. That's when his life took a disturbing turn. A one-night stand would end in a courtroom. The media is here. This case has gone viral. The dating contract. Agree to date me, but I'm also suing you. This is unlike anything I've ever seen before. I'm Stephanie Young. Listen to Love Trapped on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Nancy Glass, host of the Burden of Guilt Season 2 podcast. This is a story about a horrendous lie that destroyed two families. Late one night, Bobby Gumpright became the victim of a random crime. The perpetrator was sentenced to 99 years until a confession changed everything. I was a monster. Listen to Burden of Guilt Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is an iHeart Podcast. Guaranteed human.