| Can Men
and Women Be Friends?
OVERCOMING
SEX
If men are from Mars and women are from Venus,
it may explain at least one of their shared beliefs:
Men and women can't be real friends. Blame
the sexual tension that almost inevitably exists between
any red-blooded, heterosexual man and woman. There's
a point of jealousy that plagues many rational people
when a significant other befriends someone of the opposite
sex. Boil it down to the inherent differences between
the sexes. It just can't be done. Right?
Wrong, say relationship experts. "The belief that
men and women can't be friends comes from another era
in which women were at home and men were in the workplace
and the only way they could get together was for romance."
explains Linda Sapadin [PhD], a psychologist doing private
practice in Valley Stream, New York. 'Now they work
together, have sports interests and socialize together.'
This cultural shift is encouraging psychologists, sociologists
and communications experts to put forth a new message:
Though it may be tricky, men and women can successfully
become close friends. What's more, there are good reasons
for them to do so.
Society has long singled out romance as the prototypical
male-female relationship because it spawns babies and
keeps the life cycle going. Cross-sex friendship, as
researchers call it, has been either ignored or trivialized.
We have rules for how to act in romantic relationships
(flirt, date, get married, have kids) and even same-sex
friendships (boys relate by doing activities together,
girls by talking and sharing). But there are so few
platonic male-female friendships on display in our culture
that we're at a loss to even defining these relationships.
Part of this confusion stems from the media. A certain
1989 film starring Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal convinced
a nation of movie goers that sex always comes between
men and women, making true friendship impossible. When
"Harry Met Sally" set the potential for male-female
friendships about 25 years back says Michael Monsour,
[ PhD], assistant professor of communications at the
University of Colorado at Denver and author of Women
and Men as Friends: Relationships Across the Life Span
in the 21st Century (Lawrence Erlbaum, 2001). Television
hasn't helped either. "Almost every time you see
a male-female friendship, it winds up turning into romance,"
Monsour notes. Think Sam and Diane or Chandler and Monica.
These cultural images are hard to overcome, he says.
It's no wonder we expect that men and women are always
on the road to romance.
But that's only one of the major barriers. In 1989,
Don O'Meara, [PhD], a sociology professor at the University
of Cincinnati-Raymond Walters College, published a landmark
study in the journal 'Sex Roles' on the top impediments
to cross-sex friendship. "I started my research
because one of my best friends is a woman," says
O'Meara. "He said, 'Do you think anyone else has
the incredible friendship we do?' He decided to find
out and after reviewing the scant existing research
dating back to only 1974, O'Meara identified the following
four challenges to male-female friendship: defining
it, dealing with sexual attraction, seeing each other
as equals and facing people's responses to the relationship.
A few years later, he added a fifth: meeting in the
first place.
CHALLENGE #1
Defining the Relationship: Friends or lovers?
Platonic love does exist, O'Meara asserts,
a study of 20 pairs of friends published in the Journal
of Social and Personal Relationships lends credence
to the notion. In it, Heidi Reeder, [PhD], assistant
professor at Boise State University confirms that "friendship
attraction" or a connection devoid of lust is a
bona fide type of bond that people experience. Distinguishing
between romantic, sexual and friendly feelings, however,
can be exceedingly difficult.
"People don't know what feelings are appropriate
toward the opposite sex, unless they're what our culture
defines as appropriate," says O'Meara. "You
know you love someone and enjoy them as a person, but
not enough to date or marry them. What does this mean?"
CHALLENGE #2
Overcoming Attraction: Let's talk about sex
The reality that sexual attraction could suddenly enter
the equation of a cross-sex friendship uninvited is
always lurking in the background. A simple, platonic
hug could instantaneously take on a more amorous meaning.
"You're trying to do a friend-friend thing,"
says O'Meara, "but the male-female parts of you
get in the way. Unwelcome or not, the attraction is
difficult to ignore."
In a major 1988 study published in the Journal of Social
and Personal Relationships, Sapadin asked more than
150 professional men and women what they liked and disliked
about their cross-sex friendships. Topping women's list
of dislikes was sexual tension. Men, on the other hand,
more frequently replied that sexual attraction was a
prime reason for initiating a friendship and that it
could even deepen a friendship. Either way, 62 percent
of all subjects reported that sexual tension was present
in their cross-sex friendships.
CHALLENGE #3
Establishing Equality: The power play
Friendship should be a pairing of equals. But, O'Meara
says, "In a culture where men have always been
more equal than women, male dominance, prestige and
power is baggage that both men and women are likely
to bring to a relationship." Women are at risk
of subconsciously adopting a more submissive role in
cross-sex friendships, he says, although that is slowly
changing as society begins to treat both genders more
equally.
CHALLENGE #4
The Public Eye: Dealing with doubters
Society may not be entirely ready for friendships between
men and women that have no sexual subtext. People with
close friends of the opposite sex are often barraged
with nudging, winking and skepticism: "Are you
really just friends?" This is especially true,
says O'Meara, of older adults, who grew up when men
and women were off-limits to each other until marriage.
CHALLENGE #5
The Meeting Place: Finding friends
As the workplace and other social arenas become increasingly
open to women, the sexes are mingling more and more.
Still, men and women continue to have surprisingly few
opportunities to interact.
Boys and girls form their own gender groups in elementary
school," explains Monsour. "They learn their
own ways of relating to each other. So when they do
get together, inspired by puberty, they see each other
as dating partners because they've never really known
each other as friends." A surprisingly major factor
in this phenomenon is the kids' own innate interest
in children who act like they do. Called 'voluntary
gender segregation', it continues into adulthood. "You
see it at cocktail parties," says Monsour. "Men
go off to one corner, and women go to another."
These obstacles may seem numerous and formidable, but
male-female friendship is becoming not only a possibility
but also a necessity. If men and women are to work,
play and coexist in modern society, researchers believe
men and women must learn to understand and communicate
with each other.
To that end, social scientists like Sapadin, Monsour
and O'Meara have begun studying how to do just that.
The field of research is still in its infancy, but they
are now beginning to understand some basic truths about
male-female friendship:
- TRUTH #1 : Friendship is not
equal opportunity, Not until high school does
puberty really draw boys and girls together, which
then continues into college. But as people develop
serious romantic relationships or get married, making
and maintaining cross-sex friendships becomes harder.
"Even the most secure people in a strong marriage
probably don't want a spouse to be establishing a
new friendship, especially with someone who's very
attractive," says Monsour.
The number of cross-sex friendships continues to decline
with age--not surprising, because most adults grew
up in an age where consorting with the opposite sex
outside of wedlock was taboo. According to Rosemary
Blieszner [PhD], a family studies professor at Virginia
Tech and author of Adult Friendship (Sage, 1993),
elderly people rarely form new friendships with members
of the opposite sex. Her research shows that only
about 2 percent of the friendships elderly women have
are with men.
- TRUTH #2 : Men benefit more
from cross-sex friendship than women, There are
proven and apparent distinct differences between female
friendship and male friendship. Women spend the majority
of their time together discussing their thoughts and
feelings, while men tend to be far more group-oriented.
Males gather to play sports, travel or talk stock
quotes; rarely do they share feelings or personal
reflections. This may explain why they seem to get
far more out of cross-sex friendship than their female
counterparts.
In Sapadin's study, men rated cross-sex friendships
as being much higher in overall quality, enjoyment
and nurturance than their same-sex friendships. What
they liked the most was talking and relating to women,
something they can't do with their buddies. Meanwhile,
women rated their same-sex friendships higher on all
these counts. They expect more emotional rewards from
friendship than men do, explains Sapadin, so they're
easily disappointed when they don't receive them.
'Women confide in women,' notes Blieszner. 'Men confide
in women.'
- TRUTH #3 : But women benefit,
too, All that sharing and discussing in female-female
friendship can become exhausting, as any woman who's
stayed up all night comforting a brokenhearted girlfriend
can attest. With men, women can joke and banter without
any emotional baggage. "Friendships with men
are lighter, more fun," says Sapadin. "Men
aren't so sensitive about things. They also liked
the protective, familial and casual warmth they got
from men, viewing them as surrogate big brothers.
What they liked most of all, however, was getting
some insight into what guys really think.
- TRUTH #4 : Cross-sex friendships
are emotionally rewarding, Although women dig
men's lighthearted attitude, most male-female friendships
resemble women's emotionally involving friendships
more than they do men's activity-oriented relationships,
according to Kathy Werking, [PhD],an assistant professor
of Communications at Eastern Kentucky University and
author of We're Just Good Friends (Guilford, 1997).
Her work has shown that the No.1 thing male and female
friends do together is talk one-on-one. Other activities
they prefer like dining out and going for drives simply
facilitate that communication. In fact, Werking found,
close male-female friends are emotionally very supportive
if they continuously examine their feelings, opinions
and ideas. "Males appreciate this because it
tends not to be a part of their same-sex friendships,"
she says. "Females appreciate garnering the male
perspective on their lives."
- TRUTH #5 : It's not all about
sex, "In reality, sex isn't always on the
agenda," says Werking. "That could be due
to sexual orientation, lack of physical attraction
or involvement in another romantic relationship."
After all, even friends who are attracted to each
other may also recognize that qualities they tolerate
in a friendship wouldn't necessarily work in a serious
romantic relationship. And after years of considering
someone as a friend, it often becomes difficult to
see a cross-sex pal as a romantic possibility.
Of pairs that do face the question of lust, those
that decide early on to bypass an uncertain romantic
relationship are more likely to have an enduring friendship,
says Werking. One study published in the Journal of
Social and Personal Relationships by Walid Afifi,
[PhD], of Penn State University showed that, of more
than 300 college students surveyed, 67 percent reported
having had sex with a friend. Interestingly, 56 percent
of those subjects did not transition the friendship
into a romantic relationship, suggesting that they
preferred friendship over sex.
- TRUTH #6 : Male-female friendships
are political, Men and women have increasingly
similar rights, opportunities and interests, which
can make cross-sex friendship very political, notes
Werking. "It upsets the agreed-upon social order,"
she explains. "Women and men engage in an equal
relationship or they aren't friends. For one thing,
new generations of kids grow up believing that boys
can play with dolls and girls can take kickboxing,
and they're crossing paths more frequently as a result.
Men and women are also becoming more androgynous as
their societal roles become more similar. "Men
are more willing to have feminine characteristics
and women are a lot more willing to admit to traditionally
masculine characteristics, like assertiveness,"
says Monsour. His dissertation showed that women and
men categorized as androgynous had twice the number
of cross-sex friends.
Whatever the challenges of male-female friendship,
researchers agree that to succeed as friends, both
genders have to openly and honestly negotiate exactly
what their relationship will mean whether sexual attraction
is a factor and how they'll deal with it and establish
boundaries. In Afifi's and Reeder's studies, the friendships
that survived and even thrived after sex or attraction
came into play, were those in which the friends extensively
discussed the meaning of the sexual activity and felt
confident and positive about each other's feelings.
Once they got past that, they were home free.
"If sex is part of the dynamic, addressing
it explicitly is the best strategy for making sure
the friendship survives" says Werking. "The
issue will fester if friends try to ignore it."
So in the end, male-female friendship does have something
in common with romantic relationships: For both the
relationships communication is the key factor.
Researchers tell us that men and women can be
friends. But do we really believe them? A survey of
more than 1,450 members of the match.com dating site
revealed that we're an optimistic bunch:
1. Do you believe men and women can be platonic
friends?
- Yes: 83%
- No: 11%
- Unsure: 6%
2. Have you had a platonic friendship that crossed
the line and became romantic or sexual?
- Yes: 62%
- No: 36%
- Unsure: 2%
3. Who is more likely to misinterpret the intimacy
of friendship for sexual desire?
- Men: 64%
- Women: 25%
- Unsure: 11%
4. Is it possible to fall in love with someone
who first enters your life as a friend?
- Yes: 94%
- No: 4%
- Unsure: 2%
5. Do you hope that when you do fall in love, your
partner will have started out as your friend?
- Yes: 71%
- No: 9%
- Unsure: 20%
6. Who is better at keeping sex out of a platonic
relationship?
- Men: 3%
- Women: 67%
- Unsure: 20%
About
the Author
Chris Read, An associated editor to Hateweight.com.
|