The Myth of the BFF: Helping Girls Face the Dark Side of Friendship

By | January 5th, 2010 | 10 comments

I often joke that if girls had to rank their life needs in order of importance, the list would go something like this: Friends, Air, Water, Food, Phone, Computer. Truth is, I’m only half kidding. Relationships are at the core of girls’ psychological health. To wit, meet the girls in the new PBS show, “A Girl’s Life,” whose peers both empower and undermine their development.

The ultimate prize of friendship in a girl’s world is the BFF or best friend forever. BFF’s are joined at the hip. They wear broken heart necklaces, fantasize about living next door to each other in twenty years – you know the drill.

But is there really such a thing as a BFF? Beginning around fourth grade, social politics say otherwise. As puberty arrives and girls start developing at wildly different speeds, friendships begin collapsing.

Well into middle and high school, you are as likely to see those BFF’s linking arms as you are to hear girls crying, “She stole her away from me,” “She won’t speak to me when the popular girl is around” and “She doesn’t play with me anymore at recess.” Those freshly besotted with shiny new BFF’s are googly-eyed and generally oblivious to their love-em-and-leave-em maneuvers. “Sometimes you just meet someone else and want to hang out with her,” a fifth grader gushed to me a few weeks ago.

When a supposedly BFF friendship ends, or changes, it can feel like the end of the world. Part of that is a genuine grief response, but I have found that girls often feel an additional layer of self-blame and despair that comes from unrealistic beliefs about friendship.

Part of the problem is our culture: Girls grow up in a world that defines a good chunk of their value in terms of how many friends they have. As a result, they believe their job is to be liked (and befriended) by as many girls as possible. Anything short of that, and you’re failing at being a girl – or what I call a Good Girl.

When it comes to the BFF, girls are sold a bill of goods about friendship that looks a lot like the rubbish we’re told about romance: There’s one person out there who is our match, and we’ll live happily ever after. The relationship with The One is supposed to be blissful, conflict-free and permanent. As a result, girls wind up with wildly unrealistic expectations about themselves and their relationships. And they blame themselves when reality bites, and the relationships shift or end.

As a parent, one way to combat these destructive myths is to turn to the world of dating. If you think about it, we have some very fair expectations in that department. Somehow, we know that the process of finding our mate won’t be easy. We generally expect not to fall in love with the person we’ll end up with on the first date. We realize we are likely to be dumped at some point and just as likely to reject someone ourselves.

Although we may blame ourselves when we’re broken up with, we sense that it’s part of life. How do we know? Every other song on the radio is about it, and there are a slew of books and articles at the ready to nurse us through the heartbreak. Most of us adults have learned, through experience or observation, that relationships come and go, people change, and, well, bad things happen.

Girls lack any such perspective about their friendships. There are no songs on the radio about being ditched by your best friend. To the contrary, almost every film they see about aggression in girls is a comedy.

As a parent, you can provide a much needed dose of reality by keeping your daughter’s expectations about relationship fair. As always, empathy is crucial. After you hug her and tell her how sorry you are, consider some of these more realistic takes on friendship…

Finish reading this post at pbs.org, where it originally appeared.

10 Responses to “The Myth of the BFF: Helping Girls Face the Dark Side of Friendship”

  • judaic says:

    The relationship with The One is supposed to be blissful, conflict-free and permanent. As a result, girls wind up with wildly unrealistic expectations about themselves and their relationships. And they blame themselves when reality bites, and the relationships shift or end.

  • partyzzhere says:

    Hello iam 13 year cutter how last a friennd in a car acceint it was so bad she laned so far aw from the car that she laned in main

  • kayla says:

    Umm last year I made a best friend this year we donyt talk that much we’ll anyway the girl that we both hated is her best friend it seem like she’s not the same person I no and it pains me
    When I read this I was socked I started crying every thing here is what aiam going thoruh thank you soo much who ever wrote this becuase I thout I would never cry about this stuff when I was little but it is heart breakin

  • deb says:

    Hi Corin
    What I teach my little girl who is nine is this, human beings generally mean well and I am sure all want to get along but this is my rule for my daughter learn to love yourself first, sit back and think I am a good person, do I deliberately go about to hurt people or do I try to be a kind and considerate without letting some one be mean to me. It is so important to stand up for what you believe even if sometimes that does not always go down well with your friends.

    I have taught me daughter to say you are hurting my feelings and why and sometimes to get angry (not to angry) about the way her friends are treating her. I also let her know her mum loves her and reassure her inside she is a good person and a good friend and if her friends are not treating her the way she would like and continue to do this over a period of time, then it is time for her to open the friendships doors again and find someone with the same values and likeness to her personality.

    Don’t ever allow someone to make you feel so bad, let it go and move on to other people who make you feel loved, important and needed in all different ways. The more you fill you life with these people the better you will feel down deep and remember no one is perfect and sometimes when girlfriends are acting bad something in their life is not going to plan as much as you think.

    We are on this earth a long time and every time my daughter feels like she has no friends I remind her their is always someone feeling the same way and always some one worse off than she is. I listen to her very carefully and guide her with my own experiences when I was a child and let her know I too felt at times I had no friends and then explain how long it took to find my BFF I was 20 years old when I found mine, and mummy is still looking to find more Bff incase this one moves on to new friends or new things.

    I have explained to her people change, people leave and sometimes people do not like you and that is okay we just have fun. The ones that do not like you move away from, the ones who make you feel good move close to and your family love them even more.

    Putting friendships into perspective with her life overall and what are the good things she has usually it makes her feel better and she focuses on what makes her happy and puts in a place of less importance what makes her sad.

    Hope this helps sincerely a mum who once was a little girl who felt like you at some stage and now knows life is bigger than a BFF with lots to explore and be thankful for.

  • ellie says:

    I think this is so true- I had one (and only one) friend from kinder until year 7. Then, I made new friends. I thought when my friends ditched me it was the worst thing ever until i realised there are worse things and if they ditch you they aren’t really your best friend

  • Shirlane Yannuzzi says:

    I am still digesting so much of what you said today. I have felt that the reason I did not have friends in school was my own fault. Either I could not be or did not know how to be a friend. But somewhere in there is the idea that it was not really my fault and there is little I could have done to change the situation, EXCEPT to have confronted my so-called friends and honestly expressed myself. Why am I so bad at that? Anyway, thanks for the insight.

  • corin says:

    rachel i have been through so much i met this girl named riley and i mean we just became best friends we were inceprable till seventh grade it all started when she had bought one of those life waters and told me to give it to her on the bus well i thught i had thrown it away then when i told her first she got play mad then she got upset, the next day she had a note saying that she wasnt my friend anymore i was heart broken well we got back toghther again but that was only the start of a bigger problem. Just about three weeks ago riley offered to make me and my friend melissa earings well i told her i could help but she kept saying no so i wore them the rest of the day, then at about eight o clock at night she calls me and says we shouldnt be friends. well my mom was a little shocked so she called her and calmly asked her stuff like do u really want to throw away a friendship over earings, etc…so then her mom called and said it was personal because my mom yelled and made her cry(she didnt yell) so we met with a counselor and we worked it out but rileys mom forbid us to be friends so i was happy. then on a saturday i was going to a party wich riley was also invited to. well when i got there i was shocked she was still treating me the same way like wed never talked. so while i was skating she kept cursing me out so i pushed her she didnt fall os anything. so like 30min later she calls her mom then mine gets a text saying if your daughter touches riley again youll be sorry. and now every chance she gets she attacks me telling me im a loser who has no friends calls me a retard because i write about what happened in my . i mean people tell me just get over it but she was the the first person i ever really trusted she got me outta my shell she was like a sister i never had and always wish i had. Now im so angry and its affecting me at home its because i did everything with her we took her camping she practicly lived at my house and i gave so much to her mentaly and for her to just take that is just hurting me i mean i have other friends but im not as close as i was with riley and i want someone to fill the whole i want a bond with another girl but i know all the girls in my school i really want another bffl who will treat me right. Help me please rachel i am so confused. -corin

    • Well, it doesn’t seem like either of the Mums in this account had any perspective.

      They do love their daughters, yes.

      Riley seems to be angry at her Mum and yours as well.

      Riley’s Mum seems to have really escalated it by saying, “It was personal.”

      Corin, I do hope you find a friend who you treat right and who treats you right.

  • Ange Story says:

    I feel like I can relate to this so much. Growing up, I always felt devastated when my friendships with other girls were ruined, or I felt pushed to the side in favor of more popular girls. Reading this article makes me realize how strange and unrealistic my ideals of friendship when I was younger (and even now, really) were.

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