
Positive friendships can help you overcome depression, and avoid violence and poor health habits. © iStockphoto.com/Sean LockeBy Howard Seidman, Contributing Writer, myOptumHealth
Ever notice how some kids can meet on a playground and become instant friends? They might have nothing in common except for the fact that they both enjoy basketball. Yet, they play as if they've known each other for years.
You may have been one of those boys for whom making friends was easy. As an adult male, though, that knack may not come as easily. But whether you're married, single, in a relationship or have children, having friends is an important part of your social support system. And not having friends can actually have a negative impact on your physical health.
The people men consider friends often change due to time, distance and family circumstances. Grown men tend to be surrounded by a changing group of people. The pool of available friends may seem to dwindle.
The friend influence
Positive friendships can help you overcome depression, and avoid violence and poor health habits. Three recent Swedish studies measured the effect of friends and social networks on the health of men.
The first followed a group of 50-year-olds over six years. Those with fewer friends and support were more likely to have heart disease.
A second followed the amount of social interaction for six years in people ages 30 to 75. Men who had minimal social networks had higher death rates.
A third followed a group of 68-year-olds for five years. Men who lived alone had little social life or low emotional support had a higher mortality rate.
Friends can also make the stresses of life feel easier. In two separate small studies, people who were with a friend estimated that a hill was less steep when compared to estimates made by people who were alone. And participants who thought about a supportive friend while looking at a hill saw it as being less steep than those who thought about a neutral person or someone they didn't like.
Making friends
As men age, more of their time and energy may drift toward relationships with relatives and close friends that are more supportive. Less intimate relationships often fall by the wayside.
If you're looking to develop new friendships, it may be time to review some of the basics of making and keeping friends.
Keeping friends
View the original Making friends when you are an adult male article on myOptumHealth.com
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