I was already in love with all my friends. But in my newfound singleness, I was falling in love with them more deeply.
The thing about chaotic breakup energy is that it cannot last forever. Eventually, you get tired. I’m dismayed to learn that what I was feeling the summer Rose and I became close wasn’t special, wasn’t something that set me apart from anyone else. It was just a regular reaction to a major life change.
Rose and I are both less chaotic now. We each have other people we might text good morning, or good night. We still talk every day, but I’m starting to accept that what we have been to each other over the past two years was not just a simple kind of friend, the kind you have when you’re a kid, where the point of the friendship is just fun. Rose and I have relied on each other for certain acts of care society tells us we can only expect from a romantic partner. We were able to provide that to each other, in some ways, because we both did not have romantic partners. What happens when that’s not true anymore?
I tell people that friendship is my north star—and it is. But just because friendship is my fixed point, it does not actually mean that any friendship itself is a fixed point. If our friendships and non-sexual and non-romantic relationships are just as important as our sexual romantic relationships, we have to accept that they are also just as complicated. Building a life with someone naturally accounts that there will be movement, that things will ebb and flow. I often encourage folks in my life who have more recognizable romantic relationships to accept that inevitable uncertainty when they think about marriage, or civil partnerships, or moving in together, or even just theoretically planning for a long future of sharing a life.
When you build a life with your friends, you need to remember that, too.
Rose is a genius, and so it’s unsurprising that she was unsurprised when I brought some of these thoughts up on our vacation. Of course she’d already thought about it, the way building a life with friends is a beautiful notion and a more complicated reality. She lives with her other best friend, and they make up a small family. I sometimes wonder what will happen if one or both of them decide they would like to move in with a romantic partner down the line.
As we get older and add more threads to our ever expanding web of community, of love, of friendship, we must navigate how a friend family can shift if (when?) new individuals are introduced. We have to all agree to want to weave something new.
I know that we won’t always be able to be as close as we’ve been these past two years, I say to Rose, the night she takes Polaroids of me in the bathtub, the night we talk about if we’ll ever sleep together. Like, one day you won’t have space to text me as much as we do now, and we’ll still be close friends. I’ve accepted that.
She smiles, bemused. What can I do to make you feel secure in our friendship even if things change?
Oh, you don’t have to do anything, I say. Things just change. I’ll handle it.
She rolls her eyes at me. Okay, she says. You don’t have to tell me right now, but will you think about some things that might make you feel secure in our friendship, even when things in our lives change, and let me know when you’ve thought about it?
I nod, suddenly shy. I have always worried about being disposable, about the people I love realizing they don’t need me after all if I am not good enough, if I am not perfect, if I mess up, if they find someone new.
I don’t yet know the answer to Rose’s question, but I’ve been thinking about it a lot. It feels nice to think about. It feels like the opposite of chaos.
Vanessa Friedman is a queer fat femme writer, editor, and teacher currently based in Portland, OR. She’s the community editor at Autostraddle and a teaching artist with 826NYC. Vanessa writes about queer friendship, sex, home, loneliness, and the body; her work has been published in Nylon, Autostraddle, Catapult, Shape, Alma, and elsewhere.