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Want to turn an acquaintance into a friend

You’ve got someone in your orbit you’d actually like to be friends with. Not a nod-in-the-hallway person, a real one. Making friends as an adult is weirdly harder than it was at seven, when “want to be friends?” was enough.

It can be tempting to wait and see if they make the first move, so you’re not the one who looks like they care more.

The truth is friendships rarely build themselves. Someone has to start it, and there’s no rule saying it can’t be you.

What matters most is trusting that a real friendship can hold a little honesty.

“We should hang out sometime” is where friendships go quiet. It sounds warm, but nobody acts on it, including you. Give them something they can say yes or no to: a day, a time, a specific thing.

“We should hang out sometime” is the thing people say when they want to sound friendly and do nothing about it. Try:

The reason these work is they don’t ask the other person to do any planning. They just have to show up.

If you only ever see someone in one place, you stay one-place friends. Classmates. Coworkers. The people at church. Nice, but a little stuck.

The shift happens when you see them somewhere that isn’t the usual spot.

Grab lunch off campus. Make a Target run together. Go to a movie, hit a thrift store, walk somewhere with no destination.

Anything that has nothing to do with how you met. Two people can sit next to each other for a whole semester and still know nothing about each other, which is honestly kind of a feat.

Surface talk keeps things pleasant and going nowhere. The weather, the homework, how tired everyone is.

 

To get past it, offer something slightly real: what you’re actually worried about, a real opinion instead of a safe one. When you go a little first, they usually go a little back. You don’t have to hand over your whole history. You just have to go a little past the weather.

 

When someone mentions something (a test, a sick pet, an interview they’re nervous about), file it away and bring it up next time.

“How’d the interview go?” tells them you were actually listening, not just waiting for your turn to talk. Small move, big return. 

Sometimes you go first and it fizzles. They’re busy, they’ve already got their people, the timing’s wrong. It stings, but it isn’t a verdict on you.

Try someone else. The people worth having around get found by reaching out more times, not fewer. A no here usually means “this person, this week,” not “you, forever,” even though your gut will argue the point.

Most good things in your life

Will start with you reaching first.
A hand out.
A question asked.
A door you knocked on
Before you knew who would answer.
It feels safer to wait.
To let someone else want it out loud first.
But the people worth knowing
Are usually just as scared as you are,
Waiting on someone braver.
Be the brave one.
Not because you’re sure it will work.
Because reaching
Is how everything good begins.

The small thing you swallow

Doesn’t leave.

It sinks, and waits, and grows teeth.
A hard word said gently today

Weighs almost nothing.

Saved for months, the same word

Gets heavy enough to break

What you were trying to protect.
Silence feels like kindness.

It rarely is.

The people who can love you

Can hear you too.
So say it while it’s still light.

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