I know all about the Craigslist killer, and that’s a lot of information up front, so I decide to start smaller scale. First I’ll reach out to my entire social network asking to be set up with any and all friends they have in Chicago. Then I’ll actually call or email the women I’ve met with whom I’ve exchanged the requisite “we should get together!” I’ll approach the girl at the bookstore or yoga. Who cares if she thinks I’m trying to get in her pants? I’ll wear my wedding ring; that should clear up any confusion.
For the next year, I will go on one new friend-date a week. Why a full year? Because when I first complained about not having any BFFs in Chicago, my cousin Elizabeth (who is from here but, alas, now lives in New York City) said, “It’s like college, you need to give it a year.” I saw her point. In college, people are initially friends with the kids who live on their dorm floor at first. Those are the friends by convenience. By the end of the school year, you unearth your actual friends—the ones you will keep in touch with over the summer or room with as a sophomore.
Twelve months from now, my contact list will hopefully be full of Chicagoans dying to join me at the farmer’s market or movie theater. I’ve already got four girls to ask out: Hannah, a friend of a friend who I’ve been introduced to via email but never met. Kim, a girl in my cooking class foursome when Jaime and I took Seafood 101 eight months ago. She was there with her sorta-boyfriend and we exchanged email addresses. Neither of us ever used them. Becca, a girl I met at a bar when a mutual friend was in town. (She’d heard of me from that friend and said, “You should have called me!” I’m the new kid in town, I thought, you should have called me.) And the manager at the boutique on the corner whose name I don’t know. I go into her store almost every weekend and we’ve struck up a friendly acquaintance. She knows I’m married and the exact style of sweater I like. She seems the most promising.
By the end of December, I figure one of three things could happen: 1) I could have a new best friend. She and I will talk on the phone as we run errands, balancing our cells on our shoulders as we carry in groceries and fumble with our keys. We’ll meet for lunch to discuss Lindsay’s latest meltdown or the new Nick Hornby book. 2) I could have fifty-two new acquaintances, with whom I’ll chat when we run into each other on the street. I’ll realize that I’m 27 (28 by then), not 14, and friendships will never be the same as they were back in the day. Blythe said she’s “spent a lot of time thinking that you don’t replicate your lifelong friends when you move somewhere new, especially with a boy. You can’t presume to even come close.” Maybe she’s right. 3) I could come to the conclusion that I don’t have the time or energy for these new friends after all. I’m married now, I work long hours and I spend a lot of time with my mom, who lives six blocks away. It’s entirely possible that this project will convince me that Matt is my best friend, and the reason I don’t have more close friends in Chicago is that I don’t really want them. My life is plenty full already.
The only way to know is to get out there. Play the field. Dive into the world of serial girl-dating and just hope I emerge in one piece.
WINTER:
“I’LL BE THE ONE
HOLDING A RED ROSE”:
SETUPS AND
LONG-LOST
ACQUAINTANCES
CHAPTER 1
FRIEND-DATE 1. As I approach the restaurant, there’s a girl down the block walking in my direction. I squint to make her out through the January flurries. Average height, brown hair, peacoat. An everygirl. That’s got to be her. When I enter Market, the new bar next door to my office, I do a quick once-over of the area near the hostess. Empty. The peacoat girl was definitely Hannah. She’ll walk in the door in about 20 seconds. 19. 18 … My head starts spinning. When she gets here, do we hug? Or handshake? Hug is a little familiar for someone I’ve only met over email. But a handshake is pretty formal for potential buddies meeting for a drink. We did exchange “I feel like I know you already!” emails. And when you know someone, you hug them, right? 11. 10. 9 … I don’t want to be overzealous in my hugging, though. Definitely don’t want to be that girl. What if I lean in for an embrace as she sticks out her hand for the shake? We’ll end up in one of those one-arm-around-each-other half-hugs. That already happened to me once this week, with a colleague. Yikes.
She’s here. We make eye contact. “Rachel?” “Hannah?” She goes right in for the hug. I reciprocate. Flawlessly, I might add. There’s no sign I spent the last half-minute rehearsing this in my mind.
Let’s back up. My inaugural girl-date and I exchanged our first email two months ago. She came to me via my best friend Sara. Actually, we should back up a bit further. Five years, to be exact.
After I graduated college, I moved home to New York and Matt moved to Philadelphia for law school. About a month into his Villanova stint, he broke up with me. I know now this is the natural course of events for post-grad long-distance relationships. Most of the women I know who married their college sweethearts went through the same thing. But at the time, I was devastated. I was quite sure Matt was out of my life forever and I was furious with myself for wasting years on him. I was lonely and frustrated and decided I needed a new social outlet to distract me. I started a book club.
I invited my other best friend, Callie, and Callie invited her cousin, Lauren. Then each of us invited two more people. The only requirement was that we bring in ladies the others didn’t know. The idea was that if we were strangers, we wouldn’t let gossip distract us from the book discussions. For three years, nine of us met every month. Over time, girls moved away and others were invited to replace them. Soon after I moved to Chicago, Hannah was called in as a relief book-clubber. After two years, and one bad breakup, she decided to leave Manhattan for Chicago, her hometown.
I was elated when Sara, who also belonged to the book club, emailed to tell me Hannah was moving here. “You guys will be great friends,” she wrote. “She has a book club she can invite you into or she can start a new one with you.” Amazing. I’d wanted to be in a book club since I arrived in Chicago but when I mentioned it to my friend from college, she said “How ’bout a dinner club?” I once even tried to finagle an invite to a coworker’s book group when I overheard her mention the titles they’d read. “If you ever need another person, I’d love to join!” She looked at me as if I’d asked to join an orgy.
I sent Sara an email shortly before Hannah was due to arrive. “What’s her email address? I want to grab her as my BFF ASAP.” When I next checked my Gmail, I had two responses from Sara. The first had Hannah’s email address. The second said “Oops. Didn’t mean to cc her. I guess the ice is broken.”
Sara is the smartest girl I know, but her fleeting moments of idiocy are made worse by the fact that she has no idea she’s just been a huge idiot. After she typed Hannah’s name in the TO: field to get her email address, she left it there. She thought nothing of this slight oversight, cc’ing her again on the “oops!”
She’d just forwarded my first potential girl-date an email in which I laid claim to her as my best friend forever! We’d never even met! Sara is as low-key as I am overexcited, so it all seemed peachy keen to her. I was mortified.
Despite our memorable introduction—we’ll laugh about it one day?—Hannah wasn’t scared off by the declaration of my intentions. We decided to meet for drinks.
So here we are. Hannah and I settle into our seats, order two glasses of wine and start chatting. When she starts to ask if I’m hungry, I shout “Yes!” before she finishes the question. I eat when I’m nervous.
The conversation is off to a comfortable start. We each explain how we’re connected to the other book club girls, which leads to a wider-cast name game. Oh, you went to Tripp Lake, you must know Jill! You’re from Glencoe? Do you know the Bernsteins? We come from similar upper-middle-class suburban worlds. We know plenty of people in common.
Hannah grew up forty minutes outside of the city. It becomes clear, as she tells me about her recent move, that she already has
plenty of friends in town. “So, you know a ton of people in Chicago?” I’m not happy with where this is going.
“Yeah, about a million.”
A pause and then I hear myself saying, “I wish you didn’t have so many friends.”
Um, that was weird. Did I just say that? That’s not what I meant. Well, it is what I meant, but I didn’t mean to say it out loud. At least I caught myself before saying, “How many, exactly?” That’s what I really want to know.
It may sound like the question of a crazy jealous stalker, but it’s actually a logical inquiry. A person can only maintain so many social contacts. Facebook may trick us into thinking we have five hundred friends, but research shows there’s a saturation point for actual interpersonal relationships.
It all goes back to the chimps. When British anthropologist Robin Dunbar was studying the behaviors of primates in 1993, he noticed their social groups were generally limited in size. Chimps, for example, could not maintain tribes of more than 50. For any species of nonhuman primates, Dunbar found the “mean group size is directly related to relative neocortical volume.” In English, he’s saying the size of your brain determines how many relationships you can maintain. Chimps can have about 50 friends. Since human brains are bigger, we can keep up a wider social network. The exact number Dunbar proposed was 148.4, but the Dunbar Number, as it has come to be known, is 150.
Social network means something different today than it did back in the nineties. Dunbar didn’t care about the number of people who follow you on Twitter. He was talking about relationships “that depend on extensive personal knowledge based on face-to-face interaction for their stability.” Reading someone’s status update doesn’t count.
When I came upon Dunbar’s Number, I realized it was time to do some math. People don’t have to be close friends to qualify as part of the 150. They just have to fit into your social group, even if you haven’t spoken in a while. If you saw them, you might “have to do a lot of catching up, but they know you fit into their social world and you know they fit into yours,” Dunbar told the Wall Street Journal. “You have a history.” I whipped out my wedding invite list. Once I removed the guests who are exclusively Matt’s friends, and the significant others who have since broken up with my friends or vice versa, I determined that I had sixty-four invitees who fit into my Dunbar web. Then I checked out the Facebook friends who didn’t make the guest list. There were thirty-six people with whom I have communicated in the last year, or who I would actually stop and talk to if I saw them on the street. I’m generally a social person, but I’ve been known to run in the other direction to avoid small talk. Family falls under the Dunbar umbrella, too, if you maintain independent relationships with them, so I added another thirty—I’ve got a lot of cousins. That put me at 130. Twenty spots left for my new BFFs. I considered wearing a sign: 20 VACANCIES, NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS!
You can see why I want to know exactly how many friends Hannah has here. If she has a big family and a large network of buddies in both NYC and Chicago, she may have already hit her 150. If she has reached friendship saturation, what am I doing here?
Three girls about our age sit down at the table next to us. As if trying to prove just how popular she is, I see a spark of recognition flicker across Hannah’s face.
Suddenly, “Hiiii!”
One of the girls who just sat down is squealing at the sight of my date. Hannah looks at me sheepishly (“I wasn’t kidding!”) and gets up to greet this long-lost friend. As they briefly catch up, I stare at my food. I can’t help thinking of an article I just read about a British journalist. She struck up a friendly conversation with a man who then told her he had no vacancies for friends. He maintained a one-in, one-out policy. Six months later, she got a card notifying her that the guy was now open for friendship. But Hannah agreed to this dinner, so she must at least think she can handle a new friend. A new best friend? We’ll see.
Once she settles back into her seat, Hannah tells me about her recent breakup. She’d gone to law school in Boston while her boyfriend was in Manhattan. After graduation she moved to New York City to be with him and took the state bar, only to have him dump her a year later. “Does Matt know any single guys I might want to date?” I rack my brain. Most of the people we know here are coupled off. There is this one guy …
“Who is he?” she asks. “I bet I know him.”
I tell her David’s name.
“Who are you? Who are you and where do you come from?” Those are her words, and I fall a little bit in friend-love. She’s witty! She’s quick! Could this search really be so easy?
My friend David, it turns out, is her close family friend. They’ve known each other since the womb. The setup is not an option, but the coincidence has us laughing. Ever since she moved to Chicago, her friends have been trying to set her up. “I told them I had a girl-date tonight … ’cause this is a girl-date, you know?” Uhh, yeah, I know. “They keep telling me ‘Screw girl dates. You need to go on boy dates.’ ”
I wonder if this will be a common theme. Single women my age are more interested in meeting potential boyfriends than potential best friends, though I would argue the latter’s a lot harder to come by and plenty more emotionally nourishing. A husband is wonderful, and Matt makes me laugh. He makes me feel beautiful, loved, protected, cared for. But when I need to talk my feelings to death, really sit and analyze why I am confused/lonely/ecstatic, he’s just not up to it. It’s not for lack of trying, but men can only go over the same thing so many times. They don’t understand that, as women, we crave having someone validate our feelings. And then do it twice more.
When I first moved to Chicago, I took a job that turned out to be a disaster. I was to be the senior editor at a new luxury magazine. The job, and the magazine launch, kept getting pushed back until the company decided to have me “train” in their Florida office so I wouldn’t up and quit. For six weeks, I spent Monday through Friday in Miami, working as a glorified intern and utterly miserable. I had just relocated to end a long-distance relationship and here I was, in a city I hadn’t signed up for, and farther away from Matt than ever. When I finally decided to quit, I needed to run the idea by anyone and everyone whose opinion I valued. Matt’s response was “I can’t tell you what to do, but I will support your decision regardless.” A textbook answer. Such a good guy. But what I wanted was someone to talk it out with me for hours. To say, “You should quit” or even, “You shouldn’t.” Callie, who herself had quit a job recently, stayed on the phone and walked me through the different scenarios, letting me talk out how I would make a living if I put this Miami disaster behind me. Sara said, “Of course you should quit. You’re miserable! You’re young! Work at a bakery.” I needed someone who would listen as I repeated myself in case a new thought came up. Someone who would tell me what they already knew I wanted to hear so that I would be more confident in my decision. Though Matt said everything right, I got the emotional support I needed from my friends.
I don’t tell Hannah about my search—I haven’t yet worked out the ethics of disclosure—but when we talk about leaving Manhattan I deliver my usual line: “I don’t miss the city, but I miss my friends.” I explain that while I do know some girls in Chicago, I haven’t made close friends like the ones I had in New York. In the three years I was in our common book club, the nine of us became extremely tight. We’d gone from casual acquaintances and reading buddies to real-life let-me-tell-you-my-problems friends. That’s what I miss, I tell her.
The good news, which she told me when we first emailed, is that Hannah was recently invited into a book club and got me an invite, too. In the meantime, she says, I should come to her friend Leah’s house for dinner on Wednesday.
“This Wednesday?”
“Yeah, she’s having some girls over for a get-together.”
It’s Monday. Wednesday seems a little quick. Doesn’t the two-day rule say no post-date communication for forty-eight hours? Seeing each other again that soon must be
a definite no-no. But friend-dating doesn’t have the same rules as romantic-dating. In fact, it doesn’t have any rules at all. I can probably write my own. Still, tomorrow night is yoga and Thursday I have plans with my Mom, so Wednesday is my only weeknight to go home, watch Modern Family, and spend some quality time with Matt. On top of that, being the only stranger at dinner with a group of girls who are already close friends doesn’t sound appealing at all. I’ll have to pretend to laugh at stories I don’t get about people I don’t know. I’ll probably stuff my face just to have something to do while they all gab about their ninth-grade English teacher or some other inside joke that makes me feel like an outsider. It’s hard to know how to behave in those situations. You can jump right in, asking “Who?” and “Where was this?” or you can sit back and let them have their laughs. I almost always opt for the latter, sometimes to my detriment. What I think is letting them have their fun, they might take as she-thinks-she’s-too-cool.
I think back to my stack of research. In the “How-To” pile, I have three different instruction manuals for how to make a best friend. Thank you, Google. EHow.com says I need to join clubs and online social networks (I’ve got the upcoming new book club and am already knee-deep in Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter); go to after-work functions (I always do, but they happen rarely); move to a new neighborhood (not going to happen, we bought our condo six months ago); participate in my child’s school (definitely not going to happen soon); and make the first move (pretty much what I’m doing this entire year). It says nothing about being the new kid in an already established group. WikiHow does say that in order to make a best friend I should get to know her friends, and PsychCentral.com suggests stealing other people’s friends. Wednesday’s dinner could be a great site for friendship burglary.
MWF Seeking BFF Page 2