A Good Friend, in adulthood

When you’re young, what constitutes a good friend is someone who’s down for a good time, lets you borrow their best, will belt out the same song out of your car windows with you 100 times, covers for you, tells you have something in your teeth, lets you cry about the same boy for years on end, loud belly laughs – they always showed up.

Eventually, friendship that once looked and felt like that approaches a fork in the road. Two signs: Enabling <- this way, Accountability -> that way.

I’ve participated in, been personally victimized by, and been leveled up by both.

Enabling. Enabling friendships are the bumper stickers that sound like:
“Live life!”
“Do you!”
“YOLO”
“Do it for the plot!”
It’s you texting your best friend for the 3rd time this month saying “I’m done with him,” and you are suddenly the opposite of done when she’s dropping you off at his place hours later when he rings. It’s watching them cope with another drink or another night out or another spend and telling them, “It’s, fineeee.”

There’s truth in wanting to support our friends’ antics and plot-worthy behavior. There’s truth in them supporting ours. Doing so implies seeing one another for just being human. Doing so also implies that our lives are movies without the element of being human, without true character development – the character we take with us into adulthood.

Accountability. It isn’t guilt. It isn’t shame. It’s a gentle nudge, “Help me understand because two weeks ago you said,”
“I don’t want to do this anymore,”
“I feel so guilty,”
“they don’t deserve this,”
“I’m never going back there,”
“I don’t want to be this person,”
“I feel so empty,”
“I’m going backward,”
“this is a waste of my time.”

When we are young, to be a good friend is as easy as providing comfort. Some friends, that’s all they want from you – comfort and validation, regardless of the cost. You can see the discomfort in them; why add more confrontation to it? But the way you address their choices doesn’t have to be polar opposite; it’s not a hug or a fist to the stomach.

It’s uncomfortable to be reminded that you failed against your desires and promises you made for yourself. But a good friend does it with compassion and grace.

Accountability is a reminder of the goal or boundary your friend set for themselves.

Being a good friend in adulthood is more than calling out bad love & bad habits; it’s calling one another up.

XX,
Kenny


Leave a reply to Jainiz Sanchez Cancel reply

Responses

  1. Martha Avatar

    felt this so much Kenny. You hit it right on the target. Love you. martha

  2. vanessacristanchob Avatar

    wow! What a powerful blog and recognizing these two distinctions. Helps me reflect on the friendships I’ve had for years and what we’ve evolved to. Are we still enabling? Or are we now holding each other accountable? Love this so much

  3. Jainiz Sanchez Avatar

    saw this in your TikTok and it brought me here. I loved hearing it spoken and written. And I hope to hear you read your words more.

    that is all for now.

    forever a fan,

    jainiz 🩷

    1. Kenny’s Digest Avatar

      This filled my soul. Thank you, J! More to come ❤️

  4. tracyemiko Avatar

    I had to come to your blog to read everything you said in your video, and I’m so glad I did. You delivered it vocally BEAUTIFULLY, but seeing it typed in the way you did with the format and font changes really did it for me. Thank you for these thoughts. I’m on my last year of my 20’s and struggling to put into words just how much my friendships have changed for the better or worse over this decade. You inspired me to really reflect on how I want to approach the next decade of friendships, and how I want to do it intentionally. Heck, you even inspired me (who also had a dream of becoming a writer when I was a just a child) to just maybe start writing again too.

    thank you, Kenny 🙂 I needed this badly. Please keep writing! -Tracy

  5. Alejandra perez Avatar

    I love this 🤍

  6. Assa Avatar

    not me crying while reading this I’m just in my twenties about to graduate from college! I really needed to read this my separation anxiety has been real. thank you for this!!!

  7. Jamie Kirkland Avatar

    I love this sm

  8. Mackenzie Avatar

    loved & NEEDED this!!

  9. Riana Short Avatar

    came across you on TikTok and the amount of times I have shared this is insane. so true, so relatable and so needed at this point in time

  10. Bella Pitts Avatar

    Crying sobbing throwing up

Leave a reply to Jainiz Sanchez Cancel reply