Are best girlfriends the new aspirational relationship?

2 min read

Or another stick to beat us with?

Monica Karpinski is a writer and editor focused on women’s health, sex, and relationships. She is the founder of women’s health media platform The Femedic

IN MANY WAYS, my close friendships with women are what you’d expect from TV shows like Sex and the City or The Golden Girls: emotionally intimate and involved, fierce and sassy.

What these shows get right about female friendship is that our bonds run deep and strong. But they also tend to idealise these relationships. We see friends whose lives are so tightly entwined that they materialise at each other’s doors whenever needed; a ride-or-die girl group who are at your side for life.

Here, close girlfriends are filling the role we’d traditionally expect of a spouse. And with marriage in decline, it feels like more of us are turning to female friendship as the new all-sustaining, aspirational relationship.

Ever seen a group of girlfriends giggling over lunch and felt a pang of jealousy? This phenomenon is called friendship envy, and it’s pretty common among women. It can manifest as idealising others’ relationships or thinking that the ones you have aren’t good enough, because they don’t resemble those picture-perfect pals we see on TV.

“We feel friendship envy because so much of our confidence is gained from us knowing who we ‘belong’ to,” psychologist Lilly Sabir told Glamour last year. If we don’t have access to the sisterhood we think we’re supposed to as women, we can feel rejected and lonely.

And just like that, having best female friends becomes another standard to hold ourselves to; another stick to beat ourselves with. These relationships are held out as a status symbol for what a good life looks like, in exactly the same way society has done for marriage.

Just head to social app Instagram, where millions of posts using hashtags like #GirlSquad and #BFFgoals show glamorous groups of women having an enviably good time, to see what I mean.

Turns out, this isn’t great for us or our friends. It puts too much pressure on our friendships, creating unrealistic expectations for how we hope they’ll fulfil us—and when they don’t, we feel less than. Is it really fair to expec

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