Hanging out, breaking the rulesthe experiences you had with your childhood friends, will have helped shape the personyou are today.
During a recent playdate, my almost three-year old son seemed to spend more time fighting and arguing with his friend, than playing. After an hour of intervening every time they quarrelled, I asked my son whether he was ready to go home. ‘No,’ came the response, ‘I’m having fun.’ Surprised, I pondered what friendship meant to him, and how my own childhood friendships have affected the ones I enjoy now.
It was only recently that psychologists discovered that our first real friendships begin to develop around the age of three. And although these relationships are often shortlived and quickly forgotten, they represent an emotional extreme. After all, beyond your family, the most important people in your life are likely to be your friends. If you think back to your formative friendships – forged in the neighbourhood or at school – and try to remember how they made you feel and you might recognise some of the sentiments that your adult friends elicit in you.
I distinctly recall my first friendships filling me with a sense of belonging and loyalty, as well as an appreciation of humour. While those particular relationships have long since faded, what has remained constant are the emotions that bind me to my grown-up friends – we feel that we fit in together, we defend one another and we share a love of the ridiculous and enjoy making one another laugh.
TEST YOUR SOCIAL SKILLS ON HOW YOU MAKE FRIENDS
Bu hikaye TRUE LOVE Magazine East Africa dergisinin September 2018 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye TRUE LOVE Magazine East Africa dergisinin September 2018 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
RADIO HEADS
Known for their pleasant voices and eloquent English, Cate Sidede, Terry Muikamba and Anne Mwaura open up about life on air, their personal struggles and why they love radio.
WHY SO INSECURE?
Creating false realities inside your head based on assumptions is highly likely in any relationship. PRISCILLA WAIRIMU says acknowledging this is a problem is the first step in the right direction.
TOGETHER, APART
Are you in a long-distance relationship? Are you tired of hearing all the messages of doom from people who swear your relationship is bound to fail? ALISON SIFUMA shows you how to foster your connection despite the space between.
THE BEAT KILLER
Amos Njenga Chege aka Magix Enga, on producing, forgiving Harmonize for sampling his beats and finally getting into singing.
THE ANTI-SOCIAL STORY TELLER
Muigai Mwangi aka Ndugu Abisai, 30 loves the art of storytelling. He speaks on his love for chai, his biggest fear as a writer and the Soap opera he is currently writing.
The Making Of A Popstar
Her first EP (Extended Play Record) is ruling the airwaves and Tanasha Donna wants you to know that despite her heartbreak and being a new mom she is on her way to superstardom.
IS YOUR RELATIONSHIP FUN?
A relationship can sometimes feel boring. This is a phase that comes and goes. However there are certain circumstances where feelings of relationship boredom are not a phase but are permanent.
MANAGING YOUR ANXIETY
Anxiety is like a toddler, it never stops talking, tells you constantly that it wants its own way, and keeps you up when you are trying to sleep.
INDOOR CAMPING
No indoor plans for the Easter Holiday? MERCY RAPHA shows you how to make indoor camping a forever memory for your kids.
6 FUN HOUSE-BOUND ACTIVITIES
Stuck with the kids at home this lockdown season? MERCY RAPHA gives you fun activities to turn boredom into bonding time.