The 'No New Friends' Mentality: Healthy Boundary or Social Limitation?

Users who are viewing this thread

Urvashi

Active Member
Messages
857
Reaction score
14
Tokenz
2,313.22z
Many young people stick to childhood friends rather than making new connections. Is this self-protection or isolation?

When was the last time you made a genuinely new friend?
 
  • 6
    Replies
  • 149
    Views
  • 6
    Participant count
  • Participants list

Lolita

Active Member
Messages
711
Reaction score
10
Tokenz
1,892.19z
The "No New Friends" mentality can serve as a healthy boundary for those protecting their peace and energy. However, it may also limit personal growth and new connections, reinforcing isolation and reducing the richness of diverse social experiences.
 

Urvashi

Active Member
Messages
857
Reaction score
14
Tokenz
2,313.22z
I agree, the “No New Friends” mindset helps protect mental space and energy, which is healthy. But it can also create barriers, limiting growth and fresh perspectives. Balancing boundaries with openness to new relationships enriches life and prevents loneliness.
 

King Belieal

Member
Messages
103
Reaction score
0
Tokenz
357.60z
In my opinion, the 'no new friend' mentality is a social limitation. It is important to make a friend everywhere one goes because no man is an island of himself. Your childhood friend may not be close by to offer help or even company when you need it.
 

AUFred

WAR EAGLE!!!
Moderator
Valued Contributor
Messages
27,633
Reaction score
413
Tokenz
4,642.97z
At my age "new friends" are friends of convenience...ie what can I do for them. Happens too often. Tends to make me wary.
 

Nomad

Community Manager
Administrator
Messages
991
Reaction score
59
Tokenz
3,274.13z
Not having real friend is social limitation. While you don't need a lot of people around, you do need few people with whom you can talk face to face.
 
79,560Threads
2,190,634Messages
5,006Members
Back
Top