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New friends after 50? Yes, please!
The Straits Times
|December 15, 2024
The people in our lives are a dynamic constellation.
 
 For many years I followed a no-new-friends ethos, one that became cemented in popular culture with the 2013 release of the track No New Friends by DJ Khaled, featuring Drake, Rick Ross and Lil Wayne.
The logic holds that only established friendships are true and trusted, because they have endured, and since they have endured, there is no space or utility for new friends.
But under even the mildest scrutiny, this reasoning crumbles. All friends were new at some point. What a no-new-friends policy truly points to is a rising risk aversion as we age that can, in the end, be socially crippling.
I've come to better appreciate that there are stages and levels of friendships, that they exist as a dynamic constellation—some people spinning into it and others out, some closer to you and others farther away—all holding their own value in your life and you in theirs.
This idea of an ever-evolving web of connections I once thought of as chaotic, but now I'm exhilarated by the churn and renewal.
 I don't believe this requires the suspension of discernment or an embrace of recklessness. Instead, it requires that we regard our emotional boundaries as more picket fence than stone wall.
I don't believe this requires the suspension of discernment or an embrace of recklessness. Instead, it requires that we regard our emotional boundaries as more picket fence than stone wall.We must continuously allow people into our lives—with caution and care, of course, but nonetheless.
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