Self Awareness, Really Seeing Me
August 6, 2020What is LivesAlign?
September 4, 2020Are you a combination of those you surround yourself by?
Dieticians have often remarked that people are what they eat. With that same thought, are we some derivative of those who we surround ourselves by? Parents fret that their kids hang out with the wrong crowd, teens go into anxiety fits if they don’t fit in with the right clique, and in the office whom is networked to whom can dictate a career path before it starts taking off. The fact is, friendships speak volumes about a person, as much about the kind of person he or she is as well as whether that person should be eligible for more friendships.
Lots of behavioral research has been collected on how people socialize, yet every time it explodes with new surprised. When Nicholas Christakis and James Fowler put their compendium together on social networks, they never fully expected what their book, Connected, would turn out to be. Who would have thought, for example, that friendships and acquaintances could rock conservative towns in the deep south about their morality when it came to teen sex and preventing public health outbreaks? Or how about how friendship dictate wealth and income potential as well as one’s emotional state, even though the underlying cause may be three connections distant and not a direct influence? The fact is that friends say a lot and influence a lot about a person.
Interestingly, the older one gets, the less friends one has, but volume doesn’t equate to a better life status. We often have our greatest number of friendships in youth, no surprise. But our longest-lasting and most influential can often be in prime adulthood. Here’s how some of the characteristics play out in defining your appearance to others:
- Not Very Social – Folks with a lesser number of friendships are often on the higher end of the intelligence spectrum. It turns out in a number of research findings that folks who focus on expanding their brains find socialization to be less enjoyable. They find more joy in the solitude of learning and working. That might work for the lone wolfs but if one’s date is an uber-networker, a new relationship with the same probably has a hard climb to success.
- Lots of Long-Distance Friendships – This habit can signal a tendency to travel a lot and geographically seek out lots of experience. The late Anthony Bourdain was famous for peppering his cooking/travel show with all his different friends and contacts all over the world. It was indicative of how travel and experience were essential in his life.
- Super Popular / Super Connected – Uber networkers thrive on their social support net and come alive refreshing their connections. The more the merrier. Likability is a top priority, but it can also signal a lack of depth in relationships. Friendships are viewed as alliances and connections. Any people purposefully gravitate to popular people networks, as Christakis and Fowler found out in their book. But many will also regularly ask, where’s the meat and potatoes?
- Discerning– Described by other names such as elitism or discriminating, people who tend to be very discerning about their friendships before starting them don’t have a problem having friends, but they are viewed as meticulous and extremely cautious. It shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone that this description is often applied to the very successful who want to keep a protected circle around then and avoid scammers.
- The Great Teacher – People who take an active role in mentoring others are often seen to play a professorial or guidance resource for those friends they are connected to. The relationships can often last for years, developing into very strong bonds that are relied on again and again during times of great challenge. Such folks are often seen as to-to people for their knowledge, but they don’t give it freely.
Building relationships is as much about finding others to connect with as it is about learning about others. Understanding how our behaviors communicate to others’ perceptions of who we are is just as important too. Our friendships and way of connecting with people can speak volumes, opening and closing doors with new people before other aspects about us become known. Understanding these friendship dynamics and how they are interpreted by others can help in explaining ourselves in new relationships as well as in avoiding misinterpretations as well.
Sources
http://www.connectedthebook.com/index.html
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/bjop.12181
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/basics/friends
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3170563/
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