Angela Lee

YOU CHOOSE: Your friends… or your values?

By Angela Lee
Father and baby with identical punk hair styles.

Bad influence is everywhere.

That people change so much through the course of their lives is just one reason why friendships are put to the test so often. Our friends discover new interests that are different from ours, and soon, we have trouble relating to each other. What usually happens is that they will encourage us to take up their new interests too, thereby keeping the friendship going. But what happens when the things they want you to pick up go against all your principles? Do you compromise your morals to keep a friend?

It’s not often that you find the people you cherish in your life fall prey to the scourge of drugs or alcohol, but it does happen. And when it does, the stress that it puts on your relationship with them can be debilitating.

Aaron’s tale is a sad one. He and Adam had been friends for nearly twenty years when Adam lost himself in a bottle. Although Aaron and he had spent many a drunken night in bars together, there was always some sense to their binges, and it was never more than twice a week. But two years ago, Adam began asking Aaron to hit the bottle with him almost every night.

“I would never say no to Adam, so I went along with it,” says Aaron quietly. “But after a couple of weeks, I had to start turning him down. But even then, it wasn’t because I didn’t want to. It was just because I couldn’t keep up with him.”

But why the change in Adam? Nothing had changed in his life. There was no tearful break-up with a girlfriend, no one had died in his family and his business was thriving. Aaron reckons that Adam had simply picked the bottle up once too often, and suddenly found it hard to put down. He makes no guesses as to what made Adam the alkie he had become, but he did know one thing: their friendship was definitely on the rocks.



Buddy, don’t preach

Michael Wano, author of Refill for Life, reasons that how we see others is often determined by how much we share their values.

“Typically, we get along with people that share certain interests,” says Wano. “But individuals that share our values are the ones that become our closest companions.” Any decisions that Aaron makes regarding Adam’s behaviour will be based on how much Aaron values their friendship.

“You certainly want to be there for your friends and help them cope with their problems, whether it is with drugs or alcohol or some other terrible habit,” says Mr Wano. “But they must be willing to help themselves; they need to value your support.”

That was what was wrong with Aaron’s friendship: Adam didn’t recognise that there was a problem. As far as he was concerned, getting sloshed virtually every night was just ‘unwinding’.

Some friends aren't worth saving.

“I loved him so much, and I hated to see what he was becoming,” says Aaron. “But he wouldn’t listen to me. I felt like strangling him.”

Bill Cottringer, a socio-cultural researcher and author of You Can Have Your Cheese and Eat It Too,, does not think anyone will have much luck in preaching about positive changes to people like Adam. But he does think that ‘living right’ and remaining a friend and role model can bring about some good.

“Your actions will always outspeak your words,” says Mr Cottringer. “Everyone is evolving morally and developing themselves at different paces. We all have to do this on our own schedule.”

But what is ‘living right’, after all?



The value of values

Maryanne and Adeline were once good friends in college. They double-dated and stuff, and had a lot in common. When Adeline had her first one-night stand, Maryanne giggled along with her as she recounted her adventure. But it was half-hearted, full of misgiving and fear.

“I didn’t approve of it,” says Maryanne, 25. “I’d always thought of Adeline as a very reserved girl, so it came as quite a shock when she told me about her affair. I found myself questioning my friendship with her.”

Maryanne decided to overlook the whole thing and pretend it never happened, because there was still so much to like about Adeline. But when it happened again a few months later, Maryanne couldn’t help but cry.

“Always stick to your values,” write Graham and Julie, advisors and founders of Desktop‑Meditation.com. “They are yours and no one else’s. When you forget your values a voice goes off in your head that says, ‘You shouldn’t have.’ You would have destroyed your equilibrium, and entered a world that is not yours but someone else’s.”

Grandma asking baby to light her cigarette for her.

Values are becoming scarce. Seriously.

Still, Maryanne remained silent over the whole thing. Then one night, when they were celebrating the end of the semester, she witnessed Adeline in action at a disco. She felt uncomfortable, to say the least. Maryanne had no choice but to talk to Adeline about how she felt right there.

“She didn’t take it well, and told me it was none of my business how she lived her life,” says Maryanne. “That hurt a lot.”

According to Graham and Julie, the more you want to live according to your values, the more you will be tested and the more you will learn.

“It may be difficult to watch friends slide into a different world, treating you differently because you refuse to be drawn into it too,” they say. “But success and freedom can only come by being true to your own values.”

It would have been easy to succumb to the exciting lure of free sex, but Maryanne chose not to. Slowly, she dropped out of their circle of friends completely, banished as a ‘stiffy’ that ‘didn’t know how to have fun.’

“It wasn’t easy to do,” says Maryanne. “But I asked myself a simple question: would I be able to live with the guilt of having thrown away all the morals that my parents struggled so hard to teach me just because of my friendship with Adeline? The answer was No.”

Friends and acquaintances are not the same. The former are firmer, more important relationships that you need to nurture and pay attention to. But the latter you can afford to lose. Mr Wano’s advice is simple: if you find yourself sharing similar interests, but are constantly at odds over values (in Maryanne’s case, this would be Adeline’s casual attitude towards sex), you may need to reclassify those friends as acquaintances.

Aaron still keeps in touch with Adam, but in his heart he knows that their friendship is wasting away. He has stopped trying to tell Adam to lay off the drink, because it was becoming an issue between them — Adam loves Aaron, but doesn’t take too kindly to his advice.

“Is my friendship with Adam worth all this trouble?” says Aaron. “You bet. And that’s why I’ve not had a drink with him in over a year. I think I’m a better friend by not encouraging his habit.”

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