The Sweetest Mother's Day Gift!

After spending the weekend with friends at an adult tap dance convention, I realized how important friends are after 40. It seems to be more challenging to not just make but to cultivate those friendships in midlife. Maybe it’s because we are being pulled in so many different directions. I feel friendships are so important to improving our lives and our sanity, especially at this age.

We all need different friends for different reasons, but here are four types of friends I believe we all need:

1. The Control Freak

You know hershe always has a planner and is on a schedule. She not only has a to-do list, but she completes it! She is organized and responsible.

Why you need her: She will be the first one there if you ever have a crisis. She won’t wait for you to ask for help, she will swoop in and take control. In all honesty, this is my favorite friend. She has your back.

*Bonus: If you make plans with her she will be the one to track down a restaurant, read reviews, and make the reservations. You just have to show up!

2. The Hot Mess

Unlike the control freak, hot mess never seems to know what is going on. She is the one who is always late, never organized, yet manages to get things done. We can’t help but love a hot-mess friend.

RELATED: Dear Friend, Invite Me Into Your Mess

Why you need her: Hot mess friend will make you feel like you have your life together. She helps you realize you don’t need to have everything in perfect order. She helps you accept and even celebrate your flaws.

*Bonus: She will never judge you for having a messy house or car.

3. The Fun One

This is the friend who will force you to go out with her. She will attend concerts with you and push to the front of the crowd, dragging you with her. She is always ready for fun.

Why you need her: She will pull you out of whatever rut you are in and remind you that you can still have fun, no matter how old you are.

RELATED: Life is Too Short for Fake Cheese and Fake Friends

*Bonus: She’s the one who will convince you to take a personal day and see a matinee with her, thus saving your sanity.

4. The Inappropriate One

She is sometimes loud, and many times inappropriate. You never know what will come out of her mouth. She speaks her mind, no matter what.

Why you need her: She will tell you like it is. She won’t sugar coat it. Sometimes we need to hear the cold, hard truth, and she’s not afraid to give it.

*Bonus: She will make you laugh harder than anyone else. I’m talking pee your pants, big belly laugh.

RELATED: I Live Loud and Love Big—And I’m Not Sorry

Here’s the thing—you don’t necessarily need four different friends. Many women can be two or more of these types. Personally I can be all fourI can be the one to take charge, sometimes be a hot mess, be the friend who gets others out there, or say the most inappropriate things. Just ask my close friends about that last one . . . on second thought, please don’t!

So don’t just go out and look for these friends, BE this type of friend. Believe me, it makes life a lot more manageable. And more fun!

Previously published on the author’s blog

So God Made a Grandmother book by Leslie Means

If you liked this, you'll love our book, SO GOD MADE A GRANDMA

Order Now!

Amy Young

Amy Young is an author, educator, and mother who lives in Austin, Texas. Visit her blog at http://genxmomconfessions.com/

Maybe that “Mean Mom” Is Just Busy

In: Friendship
Woman walking away

Ever since Ashley Tisdale wrote about leaving her toxic mom group, I have noticed something shift among women my age, moms in our 40s who built friendships through school drop-offs, soccer sidelines, neighborhood walks, and birthday parties. Here is the thing….no one wants to be labeled the “mean girls mom group.” Recently, I was out to dinner with a friend when she shared something that stuck with me. A woman had quietly left their local moms’ group and later treated them as if they were exclusionary. The final straw? She had sent a group text at dinnertime and no one...

Keep Reading

We Fell Out of Friendship

In: Friendship
Woman gazing out window with coffee

It was just a normal Monday afternoon, sitting in the waiting room at the dentist’s office. I had one kid reading her Kindle quietly, one loudly proclaiming facts about the different fish in the large tank, and one arguing with her just because he could. I had completed all the forms online before our appointment, so we were simply waiting. Then you walked in. You, who used to be the sister of my heart.  Summers of sleeping in tents in my parents’ backyard, while you told me terrifying stories. The smell of hairspray from ’90s dance recitals while we twirled...

Keep Reading

True Friends Trust You with Real Life

In: Friendship
Two women sitting, one with head on other's shoulder

I used to think the mark of real friendship was inclusion. If I got invited to the brunch, the beach trip, the weekend away, the cute, coordinated outings, then I must matter. Those moments felt like proof that I belonged. But as life kept unfolding, something softer and truer kept showing up. The deepest honor in friendship is not being included in the pretty moments.It is being trusted with the honest ones. I realized it the day a friend asked me to come over even though she was behind on absolutely everything. I walked through her doorway and straight into...

Keep Reading

The Mom Friends You Make by Default Are Pretty Great

In: Friendship
Two women sitting on back porch laughing

I never thought I would expand my group of friends in my mid-30s and 40s. As an introvert, I wasn’t seeking any new people to include in my friend circle. I was perfectly happy with my existing friends, all of whom I could count on one hand. But then I had kids, and my kids had friends they wanted to hang out with frequently. Which meant I was forced to befriend their friends’ parents—particularly their moms. Of course, this didn’t mean I needed to be best friends with every mom I met. And that didn’t happen. But I did happen...

Keep Reading

The Friends You’ve Had Since Childhood Are Special

In: Friendship
90s young friends sipping soda out of cups at table

I never thought the girl I used to hang out with in Grade 5, talking about Trolls and Tamagotchis with, would be the woman I now go on weekly walks with, talking about lack of sleep and perimenopause. I never thought the girl I used to sit beside in elementary school would end up being my maid of honor, and I hers, and that I would end up babysitting her toddler one day. I never thought the girl I used to have sleepovers and watch Blockbuster movies with back in high school would be the woman I set up playdates...

Keep Reading

The Women In My Life Have become My Lifeline

In: Friendship, Living
Group Of Smiling Mature Female Friends Walking Arm In Arm Along Path

In my early 20s, I thought all I ever wanted or needed was a man to love and who loved me back. We could ride off into the sunset and build our beautiful family together. The white picket fence dream. I met a man when I was twenty-one that I fell head over heels in love with. I shaped my whole life around him and our future together. We had bumps like anyone at first, but after a while troubling red flags began to appear. I ignored them, blinded by my love for this man. I isolated myself from friends...

Keep Reading

True Friendship Is a Give and Take

In: Friendship
Friends walking and laughing together

Have you ever had one of those friends who wants to be invited to all the things and be “in the know”—but doesn’t show up in the ways that count? They seem to take far more than they give, yet expect the world of their friends? What do you do with that? I have an incredible group of female friends, but over the past two years, it slowly became apparent that some relationships weren’t healthy. It felt like some were missing reciprocity. If we didn’t open up, if we weren’t vulnerable, if we needed time to build trust, they became...

Keep Reading

Some Friends Don’t Journey with Us Forever

In: Friendship
Woman walking alone on beach holding sandals

It was a damp morning when we arrived in the UK after a week with my parents in the US. My family and I were about to collect our luggage when my phone pinged—it was my childhood best friend back in California, and she was thoroughly disappointed with me. Astonished and barely awake, I realized my immediate response was needed. The whole drive home, I had an anxious heart. I knew exactly why she was upset with me; however, I felt equally frustrated that she lacked grace. With regular annual trips between San Francisco and London, I had always been...

Keep Reading

Friendship Isn’t Something You Have, It’s Something You Nurture

In: Friendship
Two women smiling with backs together

Why does no one tell you that making a dear friend as an adult feels like coaxing life from rocky soil? In a season when people drift in and out like the tides, forging that rare, heart-sister connection feels less like stumbling into a kindred spirit and more like tending an unruly garden. Cultivating deep friendship in the chaos of motherhood—between nap schedules, grocery runs, and endless requests for snacks—takes patience, persistence, and the gentle art of intention. Gone are the days of childhood bonds formed effortlessly in the schoolyard or college dorms. Now, amidst the ever-spinning whirlwind of family...

Keep Reading

Here’s To the Friendships

In: Friendship
Women walking on beach

Here’s to the friendships. Here’s to the childhood friends. The friends who have grown up together. The friends who have seen us at our best and our worst. The friends who know each other’s secrets. The friends who know where we came from. The friends who made us laugh uncontrollably. The friends we ran to when our hearts were broken. The friends we stayed up with all night on the phone. The friends we got in trouble with and the friends we would get in trouble for. The friends who have seen us fall on our faces. The friends who...

Keep Reading