字幕表 動画を再生する
Julian: Has it something that in your relationship either of you have acknowledged at one point
and brought up? Participant 1: Sex?
P2: Are you attracted to me at all? P3: Like us talking about sex?
P1: Us talking about sex together?
Julian: Can guys and girls be just friends?
Can they do it in spite of attraction? What if you find yourself in the friend-zone? What
about friends with benefits? As you can see this all gets complicated, fast.
Cross-sex friendships are actually shockingly recent to human history. It's really only annoyed
us for the past one percent of our existence. Only like a few thousand years. Before that,
for the first 99% when we were mostly nomadic there's almost no ethnographic evidence of
men and women having platonic friendships. But even though we're not wired for it, socially
we are way ahead of the curve. Men and women work together, learn together, and socialize
together. So if you want to thrive in the modern world, you better get good at having
platonic friends. Now at their core friendships are social exchange, each of you has needs,
and the trades got to be fair. When two people's needs are very different one person usually
gets hung out to dry. Now if you need someone to be more than a friend, but they only need
a friend, you might feel trapped in a friend zone. What about if you're in a friends with
benefits relationship and you develop the need for emotional support and commitment,
but your partner is just content with the physical side. We so often find ourselves
on one side of the fence because we only know what we need out of a friendship. But we never
even think about what the other person's needs are. So today, we gathered a group of male,
female friends and had them take a crack at awkwardly figuring it out.
Julian: So we have here a board of needs, and we want you to consider looking over all
this in your friendship what do you need out of that.
P1: What I need from a friendship? Julian: Yeah, things that you need from this
friendship. Go ahead, take your time, consider what you want, when you do just put them in
the circle alright? P3: Okay!
P4: That's an easy one. P5: Criticism.
Julian: So, what do we have?
P2: Well I have a lot of needs. P1: I picked money, humor.
P4: Stimulating conversation. P6: Dependability.
P2: Optimism. P3: Romance, in the platonic way. He's like
a romantic guy! P7: Keep me sharp and focused!
P8: Criticism. P6: An ear to complain to.
P1: And healthy competition. Julian: Since everybody was such a pro at
talking about their needs, we had them take a stab at telling us what the other person
needs out of the friendship.
P4: Won't overthink it. I'll just throw it on there because I could keep reshuffling
many many times. Julian: Have you ever considered what it is
that she might need out of the friendship before or was this the first time.
P1: This probably would be the first time. [laughs] It's kind of sad.
Julian: Was it difficult to pick these five out?
P3: It was a little tougher. P2: I feel like in friendships it's this system
of checks and balances where it's like alright I want to make sure that I'm getting my needs
met and I'm not really thinking about if they're getting their needs met. So it was nice to
be able to actually think about what Matt does want from me in a friend, even if I totally ignore it.
P3: I guess I never really thought about what
he needs from me! I guess I'm just selfish! Julian: Do you think most people only consider
their own needs in a relationship? P3: Well now I'm thinking that probably, yeah!
Julain: Alright Jared, Jennifer, what we have here is two venn diagrams. The one over here
on the left is what each of you thinks the other person needs and the one on the right
is what you each said you yourselves need. Julain: So looking over all this information
seeing that you kind of seem to understand what each other needs, how do you think that
affects your relationship with each other? P3: I think that's probably why we're such
good friends and that's why it's easy being friends!
P1: That's why we're staying good friends! Julian: Is there anything specific that you
guys get out of male female relationships that you don't get out of relationships with
members of the same sex. P5: Yeah!
P2: Just a different perspective, a different point of view.
P3: Because I really don't know. P1: We've had these conversations.
P3: What's going through dude's brains and I feel like Alex, what does this weird thing
mean. P5: In my female relationships I can be emotional
and they get it whereas like I think of like going out to lunch with my guy friends and
they're like "hm, what's up man." Julian: Why do you think a lot of people seem
to have difficulty with male female friendships? P1: Sex!
P3: Sex, yeah. P6: Self-control.
P2: Sex. P8: Because hormones!
P7: Hormones, yeah! P6: Yeah, I think really it comes down to
a matter of self-control and respecting the other person so much.
P8: You don't need to try to stick your thing in everything.
P7: Thank you! P8: It complicates things!
P2: Just because one person might be attracted to the other person, you know, doesn't mean
that you have to act on it, you know, if you value their friendship enough.
P6: That's the big part is momentary pleasure, does that defeat long-term rewarding fulfilling
relationships. Julian: What we found was really interesting.
Not only did almost all of these cross-sex friends feel some attraction towards each
other, they had openly discussed it and then opted to continue the friendship without moving
into a romantic relationship. Why? Because they realized the benefits of these particular
friendships outweighed those of a relationship. Julian: Are there benefits to just being friends
that you don't get out of a relationship? P3: Yeah, because there's less of a responsibility
I guess. P2: With boyfriends I feel like it's always,
the relationship lets talk about the relationship, whats up with the relationship, the next level.
With you it's like whatever, it just is what it is. There's not a lot of maintenance that
I have to do to maintain a friendship with you besides just being myself.
P5: I'm low-maintenance. P4: In romantic relationships where there
is sex involved a lot of times a lot of it gets shifted and put heavily on sex. To where
with Jennifer and I there's no sex involved there is so much focus on a lot of these things
that we both pick because that is what we share together and all of the intensity stays
right there. P2: I love that I don't want to have sex with
you. I wake up everyday "Thank god I don't want to have sex with you" so that we can
keep being friends! And you're able to fight you're attraction of me.
P5: Yeah, I'm able to fight my attraction to her that I can't bare.
P2: Are you attracted to me at all? P5: Yeah!
P2: Is this a question? I just want to know. P5: I mean I think you're attractive.
Julian: Has there ever been an attraction between you two?
P3: I'm totally attracted to you, he's like a beautiful person!
P6: Just because it's there, doesn't mean you have to engage in it.
P4: And we are open about it, like it's not something we try and act like doesn't exist
because any time you try and suppress any emotion or anything you're thinking it ends
up just bubbling up and being even worse that what it originally is.
P7: I think just having trust and just being open and just going with it, in todays time,
you want a good friendship with the opposite sex.
Julian: Attraction only breaks a friendship if you let it. Feeling attracted to somebody
isn't your choice, but addressing it is. The key isn't to repress it, but to acknowledge
that it exists. Whether or not you confess it to them, it's totally your call, but so
is letting it stop you from having friends of the opposite sex. So figure out what you
both need out of the friendship by considering how it looks from the other person's side.
It's worth it for you to understand what's in it for them.
I'm Julian, and this has been the Science of Love!
SoulPancake, Subscribe!