Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Friends Are Family

 

A famous quote about friendship, attributed to Edna Buchanan, is “Friends are the family we choose for ourselves.” In my case, my family is my closest and constant friends.

Throughout life, each of us get to know a lot of people. If there’s one thing I’ve learned in my lifetime, it is that no one is an “average” person. The estimates of how many people this mythical average person meets in a lifetime can range from 10,000 to 40,000, which is quite a span. The question is not how many people you meet, but the quality of the people you meet.

Although we may meet thousands of people, most people have three to five close friends at any given time. We all know that people move in and out of our lives, including close friends. In a lifetime, most of us will have twenty to thirty significant friendships.

When we think about what makes us like our friends, it is often because we share common interests which change as we age. One of my best friends in school was the one girl that liked the Beatles as much as I did. Sharon and I listened to their music, learned everything we could about them, and went to see their movies.

As a young married woman, Jim became my closest and best friend. Of course, the fact that I was crazy in love had a little to do with it.

His family became my family and my sister-in-law Dinah became my friend. We both had young kids, liked to go to garage sales, and spent a lot of time together. Dinah pointed out two elderly ladies walking arm-in-arm down the sidewalk. “That will be us someday,” she said.

When Jim developed dementia, I became involved with the Alzheimer’s Association. In 2000, I went to my first Alzheimer’s forum in DC where I met a lot of like-minded people with common goals. I made additional friends, but I forged a special friendship with Jane, Sarah, and Kathy. Our friendships were not defined by space or distance. We considered ourselves sisters of the heart.

My twentieth Alzheimer’s Advocacy Forum would have been in 2020, but the meeting was cancelled due to Covid. I have not been able to attend since then, but my three friends still hold a special place in my heart and always will.

 I made many other friends during my volunteer work with Alzheimer’s, at work, church, in writers guild, Sedalia Business Women, reconnecting with high school friends for monthly lunches, through playing music, through extended family, and random encounters. I believe the “average” number of friends isn’t even close.

Friends are the people that we care about whether or not they are present, and we mourn their loss when they are no longer a part of our lives. They are the ones we think about at random moments and remember the good times, or the sad times.  Friends are the people we worry about when they are going through difficult times.    

The best thing about my good friends is they like me for who I am. I don’t have to pretend to be anything other than myself, and they don’t have to pretend either. We may not agree on everything, but with mutual respect and kindness, it doesn’t really matter.

My friends are my family, and family is my friends. 

 

Copyright © May 2026 by L. S. Fisher

http://earlyonset.blogspot.com

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