Just read your essay on Friend-ships. Very good. Your point about the “tribe” versus all your acquaintances is particularly apposite. A key challenge in living a cosmopolitan lifestyle is maintaining meaningful relationships with past friends. With time, former friends lapse into acquaintances. How to maintain the relationship over distance and time? How does one determine whether a person remains an acquaintance or becomes a member of your tribe – random chance, gut feeling, or is this something one should actually think about strategically? And how should we try to “be” so that others decide to include us in their “tribes” rather than leaving us in the generally less-enriching acquaintance zone?
signed,
Friendly Challenges
Dear Friendly,
Thank you for the compliment and your question. It’s so good it’s the first one ever that I will answer twice (once today once tomorrow). I too have been a big traveller and I know the verklempt feeling that accompanies moving toward some new and exciting part of life, all while leaving behind strong and meaningful friendships with people who felt as though their philosophical trajectories were moving in similar directions to our own. These people can be fantastic sources of advice, of assistance and they’re great for creating all kinds of joy with. And yet there is the competing pull of the road not travelled….
When we’re little and in school we have new friends delivered to us through each phase of schooling. If our parents move neighbourhoods we’re forced to make new friends. But after high school everyone explodes outward. The school system pretends to keep us aligned for a dozen or so years, but in reality many of our school friends will be like work friends—people we may not have become friends with were it not for circumstance. And as soon as the school process ends, the friendship comfortably goes on hold. But those aren’t the profound relationships I was referring to in Friend-Ships. What you’re talking about are those friends that feel like people you’ve already known on some level—and in a lot of ways that’s actually true. That’s our Tribe and those are the people that make this journey fascinating and worthwhile.
I recently heard a documentary on cetaceans (dolphins and whales) and it noted that these animals have brains that are much larger than our own. And early testing seems to indicate that the extra brain p0wer may very well be used to process a form of information that we do not yet formally recognize—which is shared experience through a connection in consciousness. In short this means that it may be that when a pod of whales swims together, that what one hears they all hear; what one sees they all see; what one feels they all feel.
This is an exciting idea and it hints at our own expanding understanding of consciousness. So when looking for the differences between friends/acquaintances and Tribal Members, the latter is a group which sees the world so much like us that when they share their life experience we can easily amalgamate it into our own. These are the people who we feel know us well enough that we can actually learn lessons from them. We ignore most of the advice we get in life even though almost all of it is helpful in some way. The people we do listen to are the ones who we feel “get”
Try not think of the Tribe as a collection of people—instead think of it as a location in consciousness. It is a gathering place where the separations between one and another seem to largely dissolve. That’s why you cannot see a member of your Tribe for some time and yet you can pick up right where you left off as though almost no time has passed. You were together in consciousness even though you weren’t physically near each other. But to think longingly about someone who isn’t present is to engage in want and want is a state of ego that removes us from that shared place in consciousness. So you don’t move away from your Tribe by being in another country, you move away from your Tribe by wanting to be nearer to your close friends.
If this all seems a bit nebulous, let’s see if I can’t cinch it up for you at the end. Yes, social media and telephony etc will enable you to maintain connections over distance that would have been impossible previously. And distance does not matter to a tribe so feel free to use modern technologies to stay in touch with those relationships you find the most enriching in whatever ways. But to lament separation from loved ones is to create a barrier to finding our tribe wherever we currently are. So if you’re so busy on facebook writing to old friends you’ll never be out on the streets meeting new tribal members in Istanbul, or Buenos Aires, or Seattle, or Beijing.
Simply put: in a way, every time you encounter a new member of your tribe you are in actuality meeting an old friend with a new face. So stay in touch with whoever is convenient. Just don’t sacrifice your days wishing you were somewhere else with someone else, because that’s to misunderstand the value of the present moment because, as the Zen poet Dogen says, “If you cannot find the truth right where you are, where else do you expect to find it?”
peace. s
I help people achieve better mental health by teaching them about reality.
