avatarKelli María Korducki

Summary

The article emphasizes the importance of expressing love and affection to friends, suggesting it is as crucial as expressing love to partners or family and can lead to longer, healthier lives.

Abstract

The article discusses the transformative impact of routinely telling friends "I love you." It argues that this practice can strengthen friendships, which are often without formal contracts or societal expectations like those of romantic or family relationships. The author reflects on a text from their best friend, Carmen, which sparked a change in how they value and express love in their friendships. The article cites a 10-year Australian study on aging that found having more friends correlates with living 22% longer, suggesting that friendship is vital for physical and mental well-being. It also references former U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy's stance on the importance of friendships in the global recovery from the pandemic. The author describes saying "I love you" as an incremental investment, a recurring pledge to keep showing up for friends, and a commitment to maintain and nurture these relationships through actions.

Opinions

  • Expressing love to friends is as important as to partners or family and may be even more beneficial.
  • Routine declaration of love can change the perception and strength of friendships.
  • The author's personal experience suggests that saying "I love you" to friends is a powerful way to affirm the relationship.
  • Friendship is crucial for our physical and mental health, potentially extending lifespan and enhancing well-being.
  • "I love you" is seen not just as words but as a commitment to continued action and presence in a friend's life.
  • The article suggests that friendships require effort and active maintenance to survive and thrive.
  • The author believes that the investment in saying "I love you" to friends is minimal compared to the benefits it brings.
  • The piece references the idea that friendships are more flexible and require more conscious effort than relationships with family or partners.

Who We’ll Be After This

Why You Should Tell Your Friends ‘I Love You’

It’s as important to express love to your friends as it is your partner or family. Maybe more.

Photo: Thomas Barwick/Getty Images

It hit my phone like a symphonic gong. “We should tell our friends that we love them as much as we say it to our partners,” my best friend, Carmen, texted me one day a couple years ago. The message was at once revelatory and, I thought, fundamentally correct. That it came from a friend who, unlike me, is married and a parent, made it all the more resonant.

That text was a turning point. I haven’t always been the most demonstrative friend, but making a point of routine love declaration changed not just how I see my friendship with her, but all the close relationships in my life. After two years of saying “I love you” to Carmen and other friends, I now see it as a daily or weekly contract for a relationship type not governed by a contract. It’s one of the only ways we have to commit to our closest friends — especially now, when we can’t see them in person the way we used to.

Call it wisdom if you want. As Father Time loosens my grip from the cliffside of Young Adulthood, and I plunge, screaming, toward the valley of How Do You Do, Fellow Kids, my gratitude for friendship has spiked. Or, at least, I’ve accepted that I’ll need some sort of linked-arm network to break the fall.

So I say it. Not with every exchange or interaction; maybe fewer than half. Sometimes it happens after a quick back-and-forth, when one or the other of us has to run off and redirect our attention. Sometimes, but not always, when we’re parting ways in person. I said it more in March and April, those gray months of wailing ambulances and hand-sewn masks that urged a collective taking of stock. But now when I say it, the words feel affirmative — an assurance of a future amid the eternal now.

It’s no surprise that friendship is literally good for us. A 10-year Australian study on aging found that the people with the most friends lived an average of 22% longer than the people with the fewest. Friendship, according to that influential study, may even be more vital to our physical and mental well-being than our relationships with close family and spouses. Former U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy recently argued that healthy relationships with family and friends are as essential as ventilators and vaccines for our global recovery from the pandemic.

Most of our lives are structured, in some way, around the full-time workweek, which can leave only enough time and energy to tend to those of our relationships that are literally closest to home. But we need to see “I love you” as an incremental investment. It takes little effort to eke out the words themselves; it’s less a grand gesture than a recurring pledge to keep showing up. To love is to opt in, again and again.

As writers/podcasters Aminatou Sow and Ann Friedman write in their new book, Big Friendship, “Action is especially important to friendship, which carries no familial expectations or marriage license. If you don’t take action to mark it as important and keep it alive, a friendship will not survive.”

And that’s where the friend-love is key. To say “I love you” is action, yes. But most of all, it’s a way of committing to action.

After This
Friendship
Love
Relationships
Communication
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