I’m a 32-year old woman and I have no female friends. Am I missing something? | Leading questions

It is worth asking yourself why this is the case, writes advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith. It may tell you something about your own relationship to gender

I’m a 32-year-old woman and I have no female friends. I feel like everyone around me, and in the media, is obsessed with the power of female friendships at the moment. I’m getting married and I won’t have any bridesmaids, even though my partner will have a fleet of groomsmen. I don’t know how to feel about this – I used to feel shame, like there was something wrong with me, and like I was missing out on something. I don’t know why life has led me to a place where I have no female friends. I resent the articles and books about how they’re the most important thing in life – more important than family, romantic partners, pets, hobbies, work – but I don’t know if I’m resenting them because it’s what I want or if I’m actually OK with it and I’m just feeling inferior or self-conscious because of a current trend.

When I think of my time and my life, I can’t see space for female friendships, and I don’t know if I just want them as an insurance policy in case something else goes wrong. How can I resolve these issues? Is there an answer? Am I missing something?

Eleanor says: Sometimes when we feel like the rest of the world is “obsessed” with something, it’s a sign that we are also a little preoccupied with it. You’re right that lots of pop culture is about close female bonds, but lots of pop culture is also about cars, or sport, and those don’t seem to insult or sting in the same way as the girl power stuff. In my experience, we feel most resentful about things like this when they twang some criticism we already have of ourselves.

But the reason to want more female friends doesn’t need to be an “insurance policy” nor an acquiescence to your sense that others think they’re the highest form of connection. It would just be fairly peculiar if the qualities that make for good friendships – good humour, intelligence, spark, reliability – did not accrue to women. That would be very odd.

A gendered pattern in your friendships may or may not be bad unto itself, but at minimum it likely means you’re missing out on connections that you might really enjoy. It’s a very big world, and the chances that the furrows of demographics are a good guide to character are very slim. We miss out on all kinds of compatibilities and conversations when our friends are only of a certain gender, or race, or age; it’s just vanishingly unlikely that the people worth knowing would all happen to look a certain way.

Given that, I wonder whether it might be worth thinking through the reasons you don’t have many female connections. There may not be a uniform explanation; it may just be that friendships of all stripes are declining.

But if you do have friends and close relationships – if you are able to make spontaneous and easy connections but they’ve historically happened to leave out women – that could be something worth asking about. This is especially true if it makes you uncomfortable to think about. A (female) friend of mine once totally matter of factly said: “I don’t get on with women because I’m the biggest misogynist I know.” Another said she just replicates dynamics she didn’t like with her sister. Whatever the answer, you might find thinking about this in an investigative way, rather than a critical one, to be instructive about your own relationship to gender.

Trying to set yourself up for more female friendships won’t mean a pre-commitment to any Divine Secrets of the YaYa Sisterhood or Travelling Pants style magic. It doesn’t need to be a mythic good. In fact, the more you see female friendships like that – or fear that everyone else does – the more frustrating it will be when they don’t immediately deliver. Some female friendships are blood covens that go back to childhood. But some are just regular old friendships.

From the way you describe your life, it sounds as though you have a rich array of relationships and ways to spend your time. You don’t need to pursue female friendships just because TV said so. Equally, you might find expanding this area of your life just enriches things. There’s no reason an arbitrary demographic feature should cost you relationships you might really love.

***

Ask us a question

Do you have a conflict, crossroads or dilemma you need help with? Eleanor Gordon-Smith will help you think through life’s questions and puzzles, big and small. Questions can be anonymous.

  • If you’re having trouble using the form, click here. Read terms of service here

Contributor

Eleanor Gordon-Smith

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
I really don’t want to get Covid, but the loneliness gets greater every day. How do I keep going? | Leading questions
Think of the precautions you take as marks of consideration, writes advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith. It’s easier to stand out for something you stand by

Eleanor Gordon-Smith

06, Oct, 2022 @9:08 PM

Article image
I miscarried, while my best friend had a healthy baby. Is it time to move on from the friendship?
It’s hard to connect if you’re not really seeing each other, writes advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith, and there are only two ways of resolving it

Eleanor Gordon-Smith

16, Feb, 2023 @2:00 PM

Article image
'My friend group's catchups are draining and stressful. How do I balance their problems with my wellbeing?'
The tragedy of the coronavirus pandemic is now drudgery, writes advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith, but what you see as negativity might be respite for your friends

Eleanor Gordon-Smith

16, Sep, 2020 @5:30 PM

Article image
I'm 53 and want to be able to say I love my life. How do I begin, starting from here? | Leading questions
In midlife and mid-pandemic, our connective ties can feel loose, writes advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith. Rebinding them requires commitment

Eleanor Gordon-Smith

27, Jan, 2022 @4:30 PM

Article image
I’m struggling to maintain friendships with people who have kids. How do I connect?
Staying connected through diverging experiences is difficult, writes advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith, but doing so may future-proof your friendships

Eleanor Gordon-Smith

10, Nov, 2022 @11:55 PM

Article image
I have been unhappy about a friendship of over 55 years. Why do I still put up with her? | Leading questions
The thing to do is make a deliberate choice, writes advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith. Decide to keep them as a friend – or don’t

Eleanor Gordon-Smith

24, Mar, 2022 @11:46 PM

Article image
I can't stand my best friend's alpha male boyfriend. Do I tell her?
When you’ve chosen the wrong person, sometimes other people can help you see it. But honesty rarely works, says Eleanor Gordon-Smith

Eleanor Gordon-Smith

22, Oct, 2019 @11:18 PM

Article image
In a season of weddings and baby showers, what can single people do to celebrate their lives?
Do you want a ritual defined by the absence of settling down, asks advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith, or just one without its trappings?

Eleanor Gordon-Smith

13, Oct, 2022 @4:30 PM

Article image
My colleague wants more attention than I can give. How can I manage this with kindness? | Leading questions
Letting this continue might not be best for either of you, writes advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith. Try using distance as a boundary

Eleanor Gordon-Smith

12, Jan, 2023 @2:00 PM

Article image
How can I celebrate my friend's new success, without envy?
There are uncomfortable thoughts at the root of most envy, writes Eleanor Gordon-Smith, and more often than not those thoughts are about yourself

Eleanor Gordon-Smith

31, Dec, 2019 @11:58 PM