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As most women approach middle age, we come to two startling revelations:
I don’t know when it happened but somewhere between the wedding, the positive pregnancy test, the 9-to-5 clock punching, the explosive diaper changing, and the glorified-Uber driving, I woke up one day and realized I don’t have many friends.
I used to beat myself up about this. My OCD-self bought a planner and created a systematic way to equally invest in my friendships. But it felt forced and my busy life kept stealing the hours away I intended to devote to this cause.
My favorite example of friendship in the Bible is David and Jonathan. They possessed a bond that could not be broken, yet they were polar opposites.
Jonathan was royalty.
David was a neglected shepherd boy that even his own dad forgot about.
But God in his divine grace, caused their paths to cross. They had nothing in common but the Bible states the minute they met: “The soul of Jonathan was knit to the soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul.” (I Samuel 18:1-3)
Sound’s like love friendship at first sight.
Someone once told me, “It takes time to BUILD a solid friendship.”
Yet when I think about it, my closest friendships aren’t something I CONSTRUCTED. I never deposited coins into a piggy bank and when it was full my best friend popped out.
I didn’t need to reread “How to Win Friends and Influence People” ten times to earn them.
True friendship is organic. Spontaneous. Mysterious. Divine. A Gift.
No one knows why you click—you just do.
BUILDING on the other hand, is logical, calculated—a step-by-step process.
Yet true friendship is like a ball of yarn, I unravel and roll across the floor when my true friends are around.
I’m not meticulously building something—I’m actually deconstructing the false walls I had up all day.
What if we don’t need to juggle dozens of superficial relationships? What if we only need one or two Jonathan’s who can look past our mask and right into our heart?
True friendship is walking in to someone’s home, ripping out your hair tie, putting on their comfy pjs, and helping yourself to the food in their fridge.
True friendship is eating an entire gallon of ice-cream while sitting on the floor of their kitchen laughing hysterically about the craziness of your day.
True friendship is being fully known by someone, bearing your soul, and in that vulnerable place—they love you more than they did the day before.