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JESSICA'S
TAKE:
ADVICE SISTER JESSICAS TAKE:
There's an old saying
that you should never marry anyone unless you've met his or her
parents and his or her friends. It's a good rule of thumb... most
of the time. Given biology and social conditioning, most of us have
"picked up" a lot of how our parents BEHAVE, what they
BELIEVE, and how they THINK. When you are getting to know someone,
especially when you are getting serious, a close look at the personalities
of their parents even more importantly, at the relationship BETWEEN
them can give you a pretty decent idea how your new love may think
and act in YOUR relationship. No, it doesn't mean that if his or
her parents fight like tom cats you two will as well, but it is
a red flag to watch as your own relationship develops.
But you asked specifically
about "friends:
Ah friends! They can
be so supportive or cause us such anxiety! My answer to you both
is take a long, hard look at YOUR friends before you ditch that
new love! You say that you trust your friends, but have they proven
themselves to be good and impartial judges of important matters
in your life before? Do they know you well enough to judge what
is really right for YOU? Think twice about what your friends say
if your crowd mostly gets together just for sports and partying
and aren't the ones you've sought out when you've needed serious
support in your life before. Do your friends have love interests
of their own? If not, is it possible that they are jealous of your
new love because they don't want you to spend more time away from
them? Do your friends really "know" what is good for you
and what you "need," or it is possible that when you all
get together there is an assumption that you are "the in crowd"
or the "sports crowd" or the "only women allowed/only
men allowed" crowd so that bringing in an outsider who might
have different interests and ideas is threatening or a turn-off
to them?
If you are convinced
that your friends really know you well enough to decide whether
Geena or Barry are losers, then you have to still have to decide
even if your friends might be right. Are you ready to let their
opinion make up your mind for you. Ask them WHY they specifically
think Geena or Barry isn't right for you? If they can't answer,
or if they seem unwilling to support your decision to move ahead
with the romance despite what they'd said, maybe THEY aren't right
for you any longer--not your new love!
In the final analysis,
making your mind up about "how you feel" based on other
people's estimation of them ALONE is not a good way to make this
important decision. Weigh what your friends have said; determine
if their assessment is unbiased, fair and in your best interests
(not theirs) and then MAKE UP YOUR OWN MIND!
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ALISON'S
TAKE:
ADVICE SISTER ALISONS TAKE:
Unless you've
been living on Mars (or Venus)for a long time, you've probably watched
the popular TV sitcom "Friends" or re-runs of that old
'yukfest,'"Three's Company." In tv-land you can't be the
new love of a group member unless the entire group loves you, and
you love all of them! I'm sure you've noticed that the boyfriend
or girlfriend that the friends don't "like" always disappear
from the show (pretty quickly, too).
Well, the acceptance
of your new love by your friends is no laughing matter in real life.
Unfortunately, real people face real peer pressure when trying to
introduce a new face into his or her group of loyal, closely-knit
friends. Nothing can sabotage a budding relationship faster than
well-meaning friends (and family) scrutinizing a "new love"
just a bit too closely. How and when you introduce someone to your
friends and family will also affect the outcome. If it's done in
an awkward way, your friend(s) may give your new love the cold shoulder,
the third degree, or even tell him/her intimate information about
your past that you'd rather have kept on hold until a later time.(ie:
Your good buddy, Ed, can't wait to tell your new love about the
time you, he and Brian went camping and you ran into these stewardesses
with a case of beer and....)!
Every new relationship
needs time to grow and solidify. The two of you need to spend enough
time alone to get to know each other before adding the 'not-always-so-friendly'
relations and friends to the mix. My first piece of advice to both
Harriet and Harvey is not to rush the introductions!
If your friends aren't
as wildly enthusiastic about your new love as you are, it could
be for a wide variety of reasons. For example, your friends might
just need some more time to warm up to the idea of a new person
in your life. After all, if you become part of a couple, this "other
half" becomes part of THEIR world, too, and getting comfortable
with it takes time. However, if, like Harriet, your dearest friends
unanimously give you a "thumbs down" about someone you're
dating, it might just be because they see him or her without the
hazy, rose-colored glasses of LOVE we tend to wear when we want
to be in love. Devoted, intuitive friends (who give you substantive
reasons for why they think the new love is "bad news")
can give you valuable information and food for thought.
As Advice Sister Jessica
said, friends are only human (no wonder the saying is that man's
best friend is the dog!), and even the best of friends may feel
a bit threatened, jealous, or over-protective when faced with the
obvious fact that "one of the group" has "defected"
and is spending a lot of time with someone outside of the group.
I disagree with Jessica
on one major point: In my opinion, in the long run it doesn't really
matter that much whether your friends like your new love. Friends
may know a lot about you, but they're not inside your head and your
heart. If your friends really care for you, they'll speak their
minds but then support your choice, even if it's not the one they'd
like you to make. In the final analysis, you are the primary person
who has to live with the consequences of your decisions!
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