The Fifth Basic Food Group … Friendship
It’s part of our DNA. It defines us and our personality. It nourishes us with vital elements unavailable synthetically.
What is ‘it’?! Friendship. Whether we ‘get’ it or not, we have to ‘get’ it. We actually can’t live without it, like this article by girlfriend Cari Shane Parven shared with us:
Why We Need Friends
Friendship is the fifth basic food group. What do I mean? Basically this: Human beings cannot live without attachment, without companionship. It’s an indisputable fact, heavily researched and based on our biological and psychological make-up. We need another person to know that we are a person.
The human need for attachment is so basic that it even found its way to Hollywood. In the movie Cast Away with Tom Hanks, for example, Hanks’s character, Chuck Noland, is stranded on a desert island when only a few days into his isolation he creates a friend out of a volleyball. Naming the ball Wilson, Noland adorns his companion with hair and a face. He brings Wilson everywhere bouncing ideas off him, talking to him, hunting for food with him, until even the audience sees this inanimate object as a key character in the movie.
“We need another to reflect off our ourselves,” says Dr. Paul Dobransky, a psychologist who specializes in relationships. “We need someone else because without that other person we don’t have a mirror into ourselves. Without another we feel a lack of existing, a lack of identity. We need emotional connection in order to live because that emotional connection lets a person know they exist,” says Dobransky who wrote the book, The Power of Female Friendship.
Well, it’s a good thing we have so much connection then, right? With all our new technology, Facebook and LinkedIn and Twitter (follow me @insidebeltway) and more, we’re connecting more than we ever did, so we’re moving in the right direction.
Actually, that’s really not true. Despite technology, or maybe because of it, we’re actually less connected. According to a recent study, 20 years ago the average woman listed two as the number of friends on whom she could rely. In 2005 that number had dropped to one, a 50-percent decline. “You could see that as a public health crisis,” says Dobransky. “There’s a huge health impact.”
“Friendship is as important to our health as exercise and eating right, especially for women,” says Dr. Laura Triplette, Assistant Communications Professor and Head of Entertainment Studies at California State University, Fullerton.
But, “I think people underestimate the significance of friendship,” says Dr. Elaine Zelley Assistant Professor, Department of Communication at LaSalle University in Philadelphia.
Next time, more on the importance of friendship, specifically for women. Why do women make friendship such a low priority in their lives?
DC Friendship Examiner: Why we need friends.
Cari Shane Parven wrote this article and an essay in the book “Knowing Pains: Women on Love, Sex and Work in Our 40s.” Though the books isn’t about girlfriends it is written by women from across the country and include her essay, ”Finding Friendship at 40.” It’s a great gift for a girlfriend and all the proceeds go to breast cancer research and education. Check out http://www.knowingpains.com/ www.shaneparvenmedia.com
So, girlfriends – do you agree? Is friendship vital in your life? How can we develop strong friendships who bring out the best in us?
Girlfriendology, the online community for women based on girlfriend inspiration, appreciation and celebration
Tags: Cast Away, Facebook, LinkedIn, Paul Dobransky, Tom Hanks









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