Why the Happiest People “Bother” Their Friends

A therapist explains why we worry too much about annoying our friends.

Kathleen Smith
Forge

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Source: Canva

People bring a lot of fears to therapy. One of the most common ones I hear from young adults is a fear of annoying their friends. People worry about seeming too eager when making new friends or too overwhelming when they talk with old ones.

They worry about:

  • Texting too much.
  • Always being the one to propose hanging out.
  • Sharing too much of their personal life.
  • Boring people with their weird interests.
  • “Dumping” their emotions on people.

These are understandable fears. We are social animals, and the danger of being cast out of our social group is imprinted in our DNA. Thousands of years ago, being a little too chatty might have meant life or death. Today we forget that the stakes are much lower.

When a lot of people are worried about being annoying, you have more than a few friend groups where no one is willing to make plans. Or to take the conversation beyond superficial chatter. People will start to wonder why they’re even friends at all.

The past two years have only intensified this dilemma. The less face-to-face…

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Kathleen Smith
Forge
Writer for

Kathleen Smith is a therapist and author of the books Everything Isn’t Terrible and True to You. She writes about anxiety, relationships, and Bowen theory.