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First Things
Men and Women-
Can We Be Friends?
Gilbert Meilaender
Copyright (c) 1993
First Things 34 (June/July 1993): 9-14.
In Xenophon's Oeconomicus, Socrates and Critobulus are discussing
household management, in which the wife plays a major role. The exchange
goes this way:
"Anyhow, Critobulus, you should tell us the
truth, for we are all friends here. Is there anyone to whom
you commit more affairs of importance than you commit to
your wife?"
"There is not."
"Is there anyone with whom you talk less?
"There are few or none, I confess."
Friendship between husband and wife is, of course, only one possible
kind of friendship between the sexes, though an important one. But most
classical thinkers-with the exception of Epicurus-were inclined to think
friendship between men and women impossible.
No doubt this can be accounted for in part, perhaps large part, by
social and cultural circumstances-differences in education, a public
life from which most women were excluded, constant warfare that drew
males away from home. In my own view, these circumstances have changed
considerably, but not everyone agrees. Thus, for example, Mary Hunt,
author of Fierce Tenderness: A Feminist Theology of Friendship
(1991), says: "Economic, political, psychological, and other differences
between the genders result in the fact that women find it difficult to
be friends with men and vice versa." Though I think Hunt is somewhat
mistaken about the reasons, it is true that the relation between the
sexes is in our society a tense and often anxious one. It still makes
sense to ask the classical question: Is friendship possible between men
and women? Or, more modestly put, are there reasons why friendship
between men and women may be more difficult to sustain than same-sex
friendships?
When we ask this question, the first problem that comes to mind is the
one raised by Harry Burns in the 1989 movie, When Harry Met
Sally. In the opening scene, as he and Sally are driving together
from Chicago to New York, Harry says: "Men and women can't be friends-
because the sex part always gets in the way." Harry has a point-indeed,
an important point. And, though I do not think that this is finally the
deepest issue that confronts us here, I shall devote a good bit of
attention to it.
Aristotle, whose two books on friendship in the Nicomachean
Ethics are recognized almost universally as the most important
piece of writing on the subject, tends to agree with Harry. Aristotle
recognizes, of course, that there is a kind of friendship between
husband and wife, but it is one example of what he calls friendship
between unequals. In such bonds the equality that friendship always
requires can be present only if it is "proportionate" rather than
"strict"-only, that is, if "the better and the more useful partner . . .
[receives] more affection than he gives." Still, of the three types of
friendship that Aristotle discusses-based respectively on advantage,
pleasure, or character-the highest, based on character, can exist even
between unequals as long as the proportion is present. And Aristotle
seems to think that, given the necessary proportionate equality, such a
character friendship is possible between husband and wife.
More generally, however, Aristotle suggests that a relation grounded in
erotic love will not be the highest form of friendship. (When he takes
up the question, he has in mind, it would seem, pederastic
relationships, but this does not affect his view of the relation between
eros and philia.) He distinguishes a bond like friendship, grounded in a
trait of character and involving choice, from a bond grounded in an
emotion. And, while there can be friendship between lover and beloved,
it will not be the highest form of friendship. It will be a friendship
grounded not in character but in pleasure-and it is, therefore, likely
to fade. "Still," Aristotle grants, noting how one sort of love may grow
from another, "many do remain friends if, through familiarity, they have
come to love each other's character, [discovering that] their characters
are alike."
It is important to note that eros and philia are indeed different forms
of love, even if they may sometimes go together. In making a somewhat
different point, C. S. Lewis suggested the following thought
experiment.
Suppose you are fortunate enough to have "fallen
in love with" and married your Friend. And now suppose it
possible that you were offered the choice of two futures:
"Either you two will cease to be lovers but remain forever
joint seekers of the same God, the same beauty, the same
truth, or else, losing all that, you will retain as long as
you live the raptures and ardors, all the wonder and the
wild desire of Eros. Choose which you please."
In recognizing the reality and difficulty of the choice we discern the
difference between the loves. That difference Lewis captures nicely in a
sentence: "Lovers are normally face to face, absorbed in each other;
Friends, side by side, absorbed in some common interest." Friends,
therefore, are happy to welcome a new friend who shares their common
interest, but eros is a jealous love that must exclude third parties.
Lewis believes that friendship and erotic love may go together, but in
many respects he agrees with Harry and with Aristotle that the
combination is an unstable one. He suggests that friendship between a
man and a woman is likely to slip over into eros unless either they are
physically unattractive to each other, or at least one of them already
loves another. If neither of these is the case, friendship is "almost
certain" to become eros "sooner or later." This is not far from Harry's
view of the matter. Having asserted that "men and women can't be
friends-because the sex part always gets in the way," Harry adds a
corollary when he and Sally meet again five years later: "unless both
are involved with other people." But then, in one of his
characteristically convoluted pieces of reasoning, he adds: "But that
doesn't work. The person you're involved with can't understand why you
need to be friends with the other person. She figures you must be
secretly interested in the other person-which you probably are. Which
brings us back to the first rule." A little more optimistic than Harry,
Lewis suggests that lovers who are also friends may learn to share their
friendship with others, though not, of course, their eros. Still, that
does not address Harry's chief concern: the instability of friendships
with members of the opposite sex when those friendships are not shared
with one's beloved.
We ought not, I think, deny that friendships between men and women-
friendships that are not also marked by erotic love-are possible. We
ought not, that is, let a theory lead us to deny the reality we see
around us, and we do sometimes see or experience such friendships. Nor
need we express the view shared by Harry and Lewis quite as crassly as
did Nietzsche: "Women can enter into a friendship with a man perfectly
well; but in order to maintain it the aid of a little physical antipathy
is perhaps required." Nor, surely, need we hold, as my students
sometimes do, that friendship between men and women is possible only if
at least one of the friends is homosexual (a view that will make same-
sex friendships difficult for those who are homosexual, unless, of
course, their experience of eros is in no way jealous or exclusive). At
the same time, however, there is no reason to deny some truth to Harry's
claim, even without the additional support provided by Aristotle and
Lewis, for our experience also suggests that there is something to
it.
The difficulties of combining eros and philia are the stuff of our daily
life. Equalizing the relation of the sexes, bringing women into the
academy and the workplace, has not made these difficulties disappear.
Indeed, in certain respects they may have been exacerbated. Men and
women are radically uncertain about how they are to meet in such shared
worlds. Friendship requires an easy spontaneity, a willingness to say
what one thinks, talk with few holds barred and few matters off limits-
precisely the sort of thing that some will find difficult on occasion to
distinguish from sexual harassment.
I have discovered that college students often wish to argue that Harry
is wrong, that there need be no obstacle to friendship between the
sexes. That, however, may be because they have great difficulty managing
erotic attachments (which are quite a different thing from sexual
encounters). Fearful of the kind of commitment eros asks of us-fearful
of being drawn toward one who is completely other than the self but to
whom the most complete self-giving is called for and before whom one
therefore becomes vulnerable-they take refuge in groups of friends,
hoping thereby to achieve what parents of thirty years ago saw as the
advantage of group dating: the domestication of eros. But eros is a wild
and unruly deity, unlikely, I think, to be tamed so easily.
It is wiser to grant the point. Friendship between men and women will
always have to face certain difficulties that will not be present in
same-sex friendships. There will almost always be what J. B. Priestley
calls "a faint undercurrent of excitement not present when only one sex
is involved." This may even give to the friendship a tone not easily
gotten any other way. Thus, as Priestley again puts it: "Probably there
is no talk between men and women better than that between a pair who are
not in love, have no intention of falling in love, but yet who might
fall in love, who know one another well but are yet aware of the fact
that each has further reserves yet to be explored." Priestley offered
this opinion in a little book titled, Talking: An Essay,
published in 1926 as one of several volumes in "The Pleasures of Life
Series." But he might well have been describing what many viewers found
appealing in When Harry Met Sally. In one scene, Harry and his
friend Jess are talking while hitting some balls in a batting cage:
Jess: "You enjoy being with her?"
Harry: "Yeah."
Jess: "You find her attractive?"
Harry: "Yeah."
Jess: "And you're not sleeping with her?"
Harry: "I can just be myself, 'cause I'm not trying to get
her into bed."
And yet, of course, not too much later comes the party at which Harry
and Sally dance cheek to cheek-and recognize the presence of Priestley's
"faint undercurrent," which we call eros. This is, let us face it, a
problem for friendships between men and women, even if it may also be
enriching. Eros always threatens; for, unlike friendship, eros is a love
that is jealous and cannot be shared.
If we grant this, we may not agree with Mary Hunt, whom I quoted
earlier. She ascribes the difficulties facing friendship between men and
women to "economic, political, psychological, and other differences"-
unwilling, almost, to admit the power and presence of erotic attraction
between men and women in human life. Nonetheless, it may be worth
thinking briefly about what she recommends: namely, "new models of
mutuality" which are most easily found among women friends. We ought
not, she argues, take Aristotle's model of friendship and suppose that
he simply forgot to include women when he talked and wrote of it-an
omission we can then easily correct. We should not take his model and
then just add women's experience "as if they should have been there in
the first place."
What is mistaken about Aristotle's model? Chiefly, it seems, that "[h]e
considered friendship something that decreased in quality as it
increased in quantity; the more intense the friendship, the fewer people
with whom it was possible to enjoy it." Thus, according to Hunt, women
need not worry about classifying friendships as carefully as did
Aristotle, nor need they worry about whether friends are best friends or
just good friends. "Only ruling-class men whose survival is not in
question have the dubious luxury of looking up and down at their
friends, companions, and acquaintances." Women, by contrast, in a
society which-in Hunt's view-is oppressive, cannot concern themselves
with levels of friendship. For them the simple truth is that "friends,
lots of them, are necessary for . . . survival in an often unfriendly
environment." Paradoxically, however, to the degree that Hunt's
assessment is correct, her thesis can have little to do with friendship
between men and women or, even, between those of the same sex. For, by
her own account, women would have every reason to seek as many women and
men as possible to be friends, and men who were not "ruling-class men"
would be in similar circumstances. Neither would have reason to seek the
kind of close, particular, and preferential friendships that Aristotle-
and many others since-have considered the highest form of friendship.
What Hunt seems not to realize is that she is, in fact, like Aristotle
in at least one important way. "How," Aristotle asks, sounding very much
like Hunt, "could prosperity be safeguarded and preserved without
friends? . . . Also, in poverty and all other kinds of misfortune men
believe that their only refuge consists in their friends." As it stands
in the Nicomachean Ethics, of course, this is for Aristotle
only one of the received opinions about friendship that he will refine,
and it will turn out that this is not for him the highest form of
friendship. More important, however, for Aristotle friendship is not
only a particular and preferential bond that must be limited in number.
He knows also a different kind of friendship, which we call "civic
friendship"; indeed, for him philia is the bond that joins together the
members of any association. The concept of civic friendship deserves
more attention than we can give it here. We need to ask whether it is
coherent, whether we really wish to call it "friendship," and whether-if
there is a coherent notion and we do call it friendship-it is helpful or
harmful in life. Those who, like Hunt, emphasize such a concept of
friendship may, despite their political concerns, have difficulty
explaining one of the terrible things about injustice: how it may
deprive us of the "luxury" of a private bond like friendship. But in any
case, in her emphasis upon friendship as a public, political relation,
Hunt is far more like Aristotle than she realizes; but, lacking his
interest in those more private bonds we have in mind when speaking of
friendship, she can shed little light on the problems of friendship
between men and women.
These problems go deeper than the presence of erotic attraction alone.
They involve the very nature of the bond of friendship. The friend is,
in Aristotle's influential formulation, "another self." At several
points, Aristotle considers whether friendship is more probable among
those who are like or unlike each other. And, although he notes
defenders of each view, he holds that friendship "implies some
similarity" and that in the highest form of friendship "the partners are
like one another." In arguing that a person of good character should
not-and ultimately cannot-remain friends with someone who becomes evil,
Aristotle again appeals to the notion that "like is the friend of
like."
Anyone who reads Aristotle's discussion of the friend as another self is
likely to find it puzzling in certain respects. It grows out of a
peculiar treatment of self-love as the basis of friendship, of love for
the friend as an extension of the friendly feelings one has for oneself.
And there are, in fact, aspects of his discussion that I would not claim
fully to understand. What he has in mind, however, in depicting the
friend as an alter ego is something we might discuss in terms of the
social origins of the self. The friend is the mirror in which I come to
know and understand myself. I have no way to look directly at myself and
must come to see myself as I am reflected by others-and especially,
perhaps, by close friends. In the friend I find that other self in whom
I come to know myself. That is why friendship "implies some similarity"
and why, at least in the most important kinds of friendship, "the
partners are like one another."
Friends wish, Aristotle says, to pursue together activities they enjoy.
"That is why some friends drink together or play dice together, while
others go in for sports together and hunt together, or join in the study
of philosophy: whatever each group of people loves most in life, in that
activity they spend their days together." I myself think that Aristotle
is largely correct here. We want in the friend someone who cares about
the things we care about; yet we want the friend to be "another" who
cares about these things, another with whom we can share them and with
whom we come to know ourselves (and our concerns) better. The friend
must be "another," but not entirely "an-other." Perhaps we do not,
therefore, seek from the friend quite that sense of otherness which the
opposite sex provides.
This takes us beyond the issue of erotic attraction alone-into much
deeper, perhaps unanswerable, questions about what it means to be male
or female. I do not know precisely how we can make up our minds about
these questions today; we have a hard enough time just discussing them
openly and honestly. A child of either sex begins in a kind of symbiotic
union with its mother, without any strong sense of differentiation
between self and mother. But as that sense of self begins to form, it
develops differently for males and females. In attaining a sense of the
self as separate and individuated we take somewhat different courses.
Thus, psychologist Lillian Rubin argues, boys must repress their
emotional identification with their mother, while girls, though
repressing any erotic attachment, can leave the larger emotional
identification with the mother (and, more generally, other women)
intact. The process of becoming a self involves identification with
those who can be for us "another self"-those, as it happens, who share
our sex.
This does not, in my view, mean that friendship between men and women is
impossible. It does mean, though, that J. B. Priestley was right to say
of their "talk": "It will be different from the talk of persons of the
same sex." These differences are the stuff of best sellers-and of much
humor. Thus, for example, Deborah Tannen, who teaches linguistics at
Georgetown University, could write a best-seller titled, You Just
Don't Understand: Women and Men in Conversation. Full of
illustrations in which one often sees oneself, Tannen's book suggests
that for men life is "a struggle to preserve independence," while for
women it is "a struggle to preserve intimacy." The sort of problem this
creates is illustrated clearly in a story Tannen recounts:
Eve had a lump removed from her breast. Shortly
after the operation, talking to her sister, she said that
she found it upsetting to have been cut into, and that
looking at the stitches was distressing because they left a
seam that had changed the contour of her breast. Her sister
said, "I know. When I had my operation I felt the same way."
Eve made the same observation to her friend Karen, who said,
"I know. It's like your body has been violated." But when
she told her husband, Mark, how she felt, he said, "You can
have plastic surgery to cover up the scar and restore the
shape of the breast."
Where she felt the need for understanding and sharing, he discerned a
problem to be solved.
If this can sometimes be disconcerting, we need not be too serious. And
these differences have provided the occasion for much humor. Dave Barry,
the columnist, can title a column "Listen up, jerks! Share innermost
feelings with her"-and most of us are likely to read it. "We have some
good friends," Barry writes,
Buzz and Libby, whom we see about twice a year.
When we get together, Beth and Libby always wind up in a
conversation, lasting several days, during which they
discuss virtually every significant event that has occurred
in their lives and the lives of those they care about,
sharing their innermost feelings, analyzing and probing,
inevitably coming to a deeper understanding of each other,
and a strengthening of a cherished friendship. Whereas Buzz
and I watch the play-offs.
This is not to say Buzz and I don't share our
feelings. Sometimes we get quite emotional.
"That's not a FOUL?" one of us will
say.
Or: "You're telling me THAT'S NOT A
FOUL???"
I don't mean to suggest that all we talk about
is sports. We also discuss, openly and without shame, what
kind of pizza we need to order. We have a fine time
together, but we don't have heavy conversations, and
sometimes, after the visit is over, I'm surprised to learn-
from Beth, who learned it from Libby-that there has recently
been some new wrinkle in Buzz's life, such as that he now
has an artificial leg.
Our world is full of attempts, not always terribly humorous, to remove
such differences from life. In Tannen's words, "Sensitivity training
judges men by women's standards, trying to get them to talk more like
women. Assertiveness training judges women by men's standards and tries
to get them to talk more like men." Better, perhaps, she suggests, to
learn to understand and accept each other.
In this effort, I have found Priestley's old essay quite helpful. If
talk between men and women is different from talk between persons of the
same sex, it will not give the same kind of pleasure. But it may,
Priestley suggests, compensate in other ways. The first condition of
such talk is, he says, "that sex must be relegated to the background. .
. . The man and the woman must be present as individualities, any
difference between them being a strictly personal and not a sexual
difference. They will then discover, if they did not know it before, how
alike the sexes are, once their talk has dug below the level of polite
chatter and they are regarding the world and their experience together
and not merely flirting." That is, to revert to the terms I drew from
Aristotle, they must find in the friend another self, another
individuality, but one whose otherness is not so overwhelming as to
threaten to engulf or invade their selfhood. No doubt this is not always
possible, for reasons we noted earlier when considering the impact of
eros on friendship. But when, for whatever reason, "passion is stilled,"
men and women may meet as individualities who care about the same things
or seek the same truth.
There may, however, be something dissatisfying about the suggestion that
a crucial aspect of our person-our sexuality-must, as it were, be
bracketed for such friendship to be possible. And this would be
unsatisfactory, I think, were no more to be said. Priestley goes on,
though, to suggest that friendship between men and women can go beyond
the play of individual personalities. "Secure in this discovery" of how
alike they are, men and women "will then go forward and make another
one, for at some point they must inevitably discover how unlike the
sexes are. . . . This double play, first of personality and then of sex,
is what gives intelligent talk between men and women its curious
piquancy. . . ."
In this second movement, when individual personality no longer brackets
sexuality, Priestley ultimately discerns something more fundamental
still-a third factor, which goes beyond the level of individual
identity. "Men frequently complain," he writes, "that women's
conversation is too personal." And, even writing in an age that knew not
Carol Gilligan, Priestley finds some truth in this judgment. I will
quote him at length:
[Women] remain more personal in their interests
and less concerned with abstractions than men on the same
level of intelligence and culture. While you are briskly and
happily generalizing, making judgments on this and that, and
forgetting for the time being yourself and all your
concerns, they are brooding over the particular and personal
application and are wondering what hidden motive, what
secret desire, what stifled memory of joy or hurt, are there
prompting your thought. But this habit of mind in women does
not spoil talk; on the contrary it improves it, restoring
the balance. . . . It is the habit of men to be
overconfident in their impartiality, to believe that they
are god-like intellects, detached from desires and hopes and
fears and disturbing memories, generalizing and delivering
judgment in a serene mid-air. To be reminded of what lies
beyond, now and then, will do them more good than harm. This
is what the modern psychologist does, but too often he
shatters the illusion of impersonal judgment with a kick and
a triumphant bray, like the ass he so frequently is, whereas
woman does it, and has done it these many centuries, with
one waggle of her little forefinger and one gleam of her
eyes, like the wise and witty and tender companion she is.
Here, then, is a third kind of play you may have in talk
between the sexes, the duel and duet of impersonal and
personal interests, making in the end for balance and sanity
and, in the progress of the talk, adding to its
piquancy.
In this sense, friendship between the sexes may take us not out of
ourselves but beyond ourselves-may make us more whole, more balanced and
sane, than we could otherwise be.
Indeed, I myself think that this is one of the purposes of friendship.
And by such teleological language I mean: one of the purposes God has in
giving us friends. We are being prepared ultimately for that vast
friendship which is heaven, in which we truly are taken beyond
ourselves, and in which all share the love of God. Something like this
understanding of friendship, though without the strong theological
overtone I have just given it, can be found in Katherine Paterson's
Bridge to Terabithia-a book about, among other things,
friendship, and a book that it would be misleading to describe simply as
a children's book.
The friendship in the book is one between a boy and a girl, Jess and
Leslie, though they are a little too young for eros yet to have an overt
impact on their relationship. In different ways they are both outsiders
in the world of their peers at school, and that very fact draws them
together. They create-largely at the instigation of Leslie-a "secret
country" named Terabithia, in which they are king and queen. This
country-a piece of ground on the other side of a creek, to which they
swing across on a rope-is, in Leslie's words, "so secret that we would
never tell anyone in the whole world about it." And, at least at first,
it must be that way. Were they to follow Mary Hunt's advice, were no
friendships of theirs to be special and particular, were they to have no
secret country that others did not share, they would never come to know
themselves as fully as they do. Thus, for example, Jess finds that his
friendship with Leslie opens up new worlds for him. "For the first time
in his life he got up every morning with something to look forward to.
Leslie was more than his friend. She was his other, more exciting self-
his way to Terabithia and all the worlds beyond."
Jess says that Leslie is his way not only to Terabithia but also to "all
the worlds beyond," but he learns that truth only slowly and with great
bitterness. When the creek is swollen from a storm and Jess is gone,
Leslie still tries to cross to Terabithia on the rope. It breaks, she
falls onto the rocks, and is killed. Grief-stricken and alone, without
his alter ego, Jess can barely come to terms with what has happened. But
he does, finally, and in doing so learns something about the purpose of
all friendship.
It was Leslie who had taken him from the cow
pasture into Terabithia and turned him into a king. He had
thought that was it. Wasn't king the best you could be? Now
it occurred to him that perhaps Terabithia was like a castle
where you came to be knighted. After you stayed for a while
and grew strong you had to move on. For hadn't Leslie, even
in Terabithia, tried to push back the walls of his mind and
make him see beyond to the shining world-huge and terrible
and beautiful and very fragile?
To learn to see beyond our own secret countries-to what is at the same
time both terrible and beautiful-is, from the perspective of Christian
faith, the purpose of friendship. And to the degree that friendship not
only with those of our own sex but with those of the opposite sex may
more fully enable such vision, we have every reason to attempt it,
despite its inherent difficulties.
We should not, therefore, underestimate the importance of the most
obvious location for friendship between men and women: the bond of
marriage. There are many differences between our world and that shared
by Socrates and Critobulus. By no means least of them is the formative
influence of Christian culture, with its exaltation of marriage as the
highest of personal bonds. To be sure, precisely because the husband or
wife as friend is not only "another self" but as fully "an-other" as we
can experience, friendship in marriage cannot be presumed. If there is
any truth in Lillian Rubin's analysis, each spouse may fear the
otherness of the partner and the loss of self that intimacy requires.
The man fears engulfment, "losing a part of himself that he's struggled
to maintain over the years." The woman fears invasiveness that threatens
the boundary she has struggled to maintain between her self and others.
Each is tempted to avoid such otherness, to settle for a friend more
like the self. But if we can overcome that temptation-in this case,
perhaps, with the aid of eros-we may find a bond that truly helps us see
beyond ourselves.
When Harry finally realizes that he loves Sally and wants to marry her,
he ticks off the reasons: the way she's cold when it's 71 degrees
outside; the way it takes her an hour-and-a-half to order a sandwich;
the way she crinkles up her nose when she looks at him. All these might
be only the signs of an infatuated lover looking at the beloved, not of
a friend who stands beside the friend and looks outward. But last in
Harry's litany of reasons is that Sally is "the last person I want to
talk to before I go to bed at night." And J. B. Priestley-though
worrying that spouses' lives may be "so intertwined, that they are
almost beyond talk as we understand it"-has a view not unlike Harry's:
"Talk demands that people should begin, as it were, at least at some
distance from one another, that there should be some doors still to
unlock. Marriage is partly the unlocking of those doors, and it sets out
on its happiest and most prosperous voyages when it is launched on
floods of talk."
In marriage, if we are patient and faithful, we may find that "balance
and sanity" which friendship between men and women offers, and we may
find it in a context where eros too may be fulfilled without becoming
destructive. Against the view of Critobulus we may, therefore, set the
wisdom of Ben Sira: "A friend or companion is always welcome, but better
still to be husband and wife."
Gilbert Meilaender, a frequent contributor to First Things, is
Professor of Religion at Oberlin College. This essay was first presented
at a program on "The Changing Face of Friendship," sponsored by the
Institute for Philosophy and Religion at Boston University, and it will
appear in a volume in the Boston University Studies in Philosophy and
Religion to be published by the University of Notre Dame Press.
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