How to Be a Good Friend (And What to Look for In Others)
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How to Be a Good Friend (And What to Look for In Others)

6 min de lectura

Created on 31/07/2022
Updated on 23/03/2026
Reina Gattuso

Reina Gattuso

Autor

From children’s movies centered on the princess marrying the prince, to adult social events that exclude folks who aren’t coupled, our society draws a stark distinction between romantic love and friendship. Typically, romantic love comes out on top. Yet, according to Candrea Davies, “The conversation around healthy friendships to me is the conversation around healthy relationships.” Davies is a licensed clinical professional counselor at AnnodRight, a therapy group by and for black womxn. She says that healthy and loving friendships and romantic relationships largely require the same foundations: shared values, mutual support, and empathetic listening. Because we’re taught to prioritize romantic relationships, it can feel much harder to make friends as adults. Forming adult friendships can also be more challenging because, according to research, we’re more self-conscious of the possibility of judgment or rejection. Yet there’s another, potentially positive reason that forming close friendships feels more difficult now than it did in grade school: “Friendships change in adulthood because we begin to know ourselves more,” says Davies. In childhood, “We are trying to figure out who we are, and so we build friendships based off of some external things.”
As an adult, building friendships that resonate with our values can be more challenging, but can also allow us to reflect on and affirm what is important to us.
Many of us have lost friendships over the course of the pandemic. We may have fallen out of touch due to isolation. Or we may have realized that our previous friends actually don’t share our values, or don’t wholly support our marginalized identities. This realization can be painful, but it can also be an opportunity to build relationships that more deeply support us. Here are some tips for nurturing good friendships.

Look for Shared Values

In contrast to the simple commonalities on which we form friendships as children — ”Oh you like the color red? I like the color red. We should be friends,” says Davies — solid adult friendships depend on shared values. Davies also suggests that it’s not enough to simply agree that qualities like trust are important to us. We also need to define what those values look like in action. “We have to agree on what trust is. We have to agree on what support is,” says Davies. As with romantic dating, we can observe how a new friend acts toward us and other people in their lives over time. If that person consistently treats people in a way that resonates with their stated values, that produces trust. You can also simply discuss values that are important to you with potential new friends. “As corny as it may seem, you can ask somebody, “Hey, what does trust mean to you?’” says Davies. “It will spark a great conversation.”

Date Your Friends

We’re familiar with the concept of dating a romantic partner — getting to know them in a way that unfolds over time. We can take a similar approach to making new friends. By getting to know a new friend with intentionality, we can identify shared values and learn more about our own intimacy patterns. Davies suggests that most of us weren’t taught many of the skills required to sustain close relationships: “In the same way that we’re not taught healthy relationships, we’re not taught healthy boundaries.” Good friendships can be a safer space to build healthy boundaries. We can also become better friends by learning how to validate other people’s experiences, including negative ones. “Validating people in how they feel is not a typical learned behavior in many households,” says Davies. “Emotions other than happiness, joy, and celebration are invalid.” For many of us growing up, negative emotions were not to be expressed, or were expressed by lashing out. This difficulty in processing negative emotions can lead us to feeling unsupported or being unsupportive in friendships. Instead of avoiding negative emotions or moving into an accusatory mode, we can expand our ability to process negative emotions with compassion.

Uplift Each Other

Building genuine, caring intimacy is a political act. Many feminist value systems, particularly the Black feminist practice of abolition, emphasize care as a means to build support beyond harmful state structures. For queer and trans people, as well as women and femmes — especially Black, Indigenous, and people of color — loving friendships with people who share our identities can be fundamental to our wellbeing. “It’s very important to feel validated, especially as a black woman,” says Davies. Meaningful friendships can be deeply sustaining in a system that teaches us to do disproportional emotional labor for cisgender men. “There are certain systems that support that viewpoint of, ‘Men have the final word, men control the narrative,’” says Davies. For example, men are taught that it’s “weak” to open up to other men, so many rely exclusively on women or feminine partners for emotional support. In contrast, when men build genuine friendships with each other, it can transform an entire community.

Practice Solidarity

It’s vital for people who have more privilege to learn how to interact supportively with friends and community members who have less privilege, especially when it comes to race. “The typical white household, they stay away from those uncomfortable conversations about race and political views,” says Davies. This denial is one of the strategies white people use to distance ourselves from the discomfort of processing white privilege. White people must question how our enactment of whiteness harms folks of color and impedes our ability to form caring and egalitarian relationships. We can become a better friend in general — and especially to anyone marginalized in a different way than we are — by practicing empathetic listening. This requires “believing somebody when they say something about their experience and how they feel,” says Davies. “Believing them and keeping a curious stance of, ‘Okay, I don’t understand that. Tell me more.’” Friendship gives us space to practice relating to other people in egalitarian, mutually caring, and socially just ways. It enhances our wellbeing and our romantic relationships. And it helps us ask a revolutionary question: What if we treated all people with the kindness and respect that we expect from our closest friends?

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Preguntas frecuentes

A: Un vibrador es un dispositivo personal de placer potente y versátil que crea vibraciones para estimular diversas zonas sensibles de tu cuerpo, como el clítoris y el punto G. Vienen en una amplia variedad de formas, tamaños y características, por lo que hay algo para todos.

Los vibradores pueden usarse en casi cualquier zona erógena, ofreciendo sensaciones únicas que pueden aumentar tu placer y ayudarte a descubrir qué se siente increíble. Algunos están diseñados para imitar la penetración, mientras que otros se enfocan en la estimulación externa para brindarte una experiencia inolvidable.

¿Sabías que menos del 20 % de las personas con vulva pueden alcanzar el orgasmo solo con la estimulación vaginal o el coito? Por eso, los vibradores han ido ganando popularidad y por qué empresas como Dame están dedicadas a amplificar la conversación para cerrar la brecha del placer.

Aprende más en el blog.

A: Usar un vibrador puede aumentar significativamente tu placer, pero dónde lo uses depende de tus preferencias y de si tienes vulva o pene. Comienza seleccionando un espacio cómodo y privado donde te sientas a gusto. Si lo deseas, utiliza lubricante seguro para juguetes sexuales, ya que esto mejorará las sensaciones y reducirá la fricción. Enciende tu vibrador (generalmente un botón en el extremo opuesto a la "cabeza") y explora diferentes configuraciones o intensidades usando los botones del dispositivo, encontrando poco a poco lo que mejor se siente para ti.

Para una guía paso a paso adicional, consulta las instrucciones detalladas aquí, que ofrecen información sobre técnicas, posiciones y consejos para un placer máximo.

A: Existen numerosos tipos de vibradores, cada uno diseñado para diversas formas de estimulación:

Vibrador para clítoris: Están específicamente diseñados para estimular el clítoris, a menudo con un diseño compacto y discreto para facilitar su uso.

Vibrador para punto G: Generalmente curvados, estos vibradores están diseñados para alcanzar y estimular el punto G, proporcionando sensaciones más profundas durante la penetración.

Vibrador para dedo: Pequeños y a menudo se usan en la punta del dedo, ofrecen un control preciso y son perfectos para la estimulación localizada.

Vibrador para parejas: Diseñados para usarse durante el coito, proporcionan placer simultáneo estimulando a ambos miembros de la pareja.

Anillo vibrador: Se usa alrededor de la base del pene, mejora las sensaciones para ambos durante el sexo y puede ayudar con la resistencia.

Vibrador de succión: Utilizan tecnología de pulsos de aire por succión para crear una sensación única en el clítoris, a menudo simulando la estimulación oral.

Vibrador varita: Conocidos por sus motores potentes y tamaño más grande, estos dispositivos versátiles pueden usarse en todo el cuerpo para un placer amplio.

Vibrador bala: Compactos y portátiles, diseñados para la estimulación localizada y perfectos tanto para el juego en solitario como en pareja.

A: ¡Sí! Los vibradores Dame están diseñados para ser impermeables, lo que los hace adecuados para usar en la bañera o la ducha. También cuentan con baterías recargables, eliminando la necesidad de pilas desechables y garantizando un placer duradero. La mayoría se pueden cargar mediante USB, lo que facilita mantenerlos listos para cuando surja el momento.

A: Los vibradores Dame son reconocidos por sus motores ultrasilenciosos, diseñados para proporcionar placer sin llamar la atención ni distraer durante los momentos íntimos. Si buscas un vibrador discreto, intenta buscar uno de tamaño más pequeño, como un vibrador tipo bala.