Subscription Friends

JRock3x8

Shared on Sun, 03/04/2007 - 16:28

Please read this as philosophical and not cynical :

This particular entry is not so video game related. It's a mini-rant about what I call "subscription friends".

I grew up as a latchkey kid in suburban Chicago. My mother really didn't like me leaving the house while she was at work if she didn't know exactly where I would be and what time I would be home. I didn't like it at the time, but now that I have my own kids, I get it. Unfortunately, this meant that I was stuck inside a lot as my mother was quite busy at work and I couldn't always get a hold of her. Hence, my love of videogames begins.

The other side effect of this pseudo confinement was a lack of friends, and to some extent, it stunted my social growth. I became whimsical about exactly what was a "friend". I've come to realize after many years that friends come in two basic flavors :

1) friends that you hang out with to waste time, to talk, to share experiences, play video games, watch movies, etc, etc, and

2) friends that you only hang out with while there's money being spent (hence the term "subscription friends"). These are the people who you won't see unless you're going to a movie, going out to eat, or playing fantasy football.

The former variety tend to be my outside-of-work friends and the latter tend to be my "at work" friends.

My house is on a very strict budget. My wife and I made the decision very early on - even before we were married - that we would be a single income family and she would be a stay at home mother. This makes "subscription friends" extremely difficult to manage in the scope of my social life. Some of my friends seem to scoff at my suggestion that I can't go out for lunch for the 10th time this month because I've run over my budget for dining for the month.

I guess at the end of the day you have to be thankful of whatever friends you have, regardless of how you interact with them, but it is a challenge to manage it at times.

Comments

doodirock's picture
Submitted by doodirock on Sun, 03/04/2007 - 16:32
Yeah, i call them my going out friends or my staying in friends. Staying in friends as the people that dont mind just hanging out with some beers at the house and shooting the shit. The going out friends only want to hang out if you are at a bar, concert, restaurant, and spending money. As I have grown older, those friends are few and far between. Or maybe its because I just have no money. ;)
JHall55's picture
Submitted by JHall55 on Sun, 03/04/2007 - 16:43
I couldn't agree more. Although now that my wife and I have gotten a bit older and moved away from most of our friends, it seems our "subscriptions" have run out...and that's fine with us. Staying in friends are more fun anyways...who's up for beer and board games??
DEEP_NNN's picture
Submitted by DEEP_NNN on Sun, 03/04/2007 - 17:15
I sure can sympathize on the single income decision. My "going out friends" dropped us like we didn't matter. We bowed out over the sheer expense of wine parties and such. Sad thing was, none of those people ever came to visit again. It was like, no money, no friendship. Some of them were people I used to hang out with too. My workplace has always been bad for the same reason too. You get treated like you're an outsider just because you can't offord to spend money like water. The dual income families and bachelors couldn't keep themselves from saying, "C'mon, it's only $5, $10 or $20".
Stryker927's picture
Submitted by Stryker927 on Sun, 03/04/2007 - 18:54
Yeah, we are single income as well and knew we would sacrifice some of those things. But I have had more fun at laughing over cards or finding the funny little things that are said at 1 am in the morning by people who aren't used to staying up that late. hehe Your REAL friends don't mind "keepin it real". ;) Don't forget the third group, your virtual friends (XBL :P) that always sounds sexier and never quite look like what you thought. :D

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