Friendship
Have you ever loved a friend so much that you found yourself… quietly competing for them?
Not in the obvious way. Not in the “I need to win” kind of way. But in the soft, invisible spaces. The calendar slots. The text threads. The “who did they call first” moments.
It’s a strange feeling, because it doesn’t come from jealousy as much as it comes from connection. From wanting closeness. From wanting to be chosen.
Friendship, at its core, is built on shared time. It’s built on showing up, laughing, venting, sitting in silence, doing life side by side. But life doesn’t always cooperate. Schedules clash. Seasons shift. Priorities rearrange themselves like furniture you didn’t ask to be moved.
And when that happens, something subtle can creep in.
You realize… if I’m not available, someone else might be.
And they should be.
That’s the part no one really talks about. Healthy friendships don’t exist in isolation. Your friend has a whole world outside of you. Other people who meet them where they are when you can’t. Other conversations, other memories, other moments you weren’t part of.
And somehow, that can feel both completely right… and quietly uncomfortable.
Because a part of you wonders:
Will I still matter the same?
Will I still be their person?
There’s this unspoken emotional math happening. Not keeping score, exactly, but noticing patterns. Who initiates. Who shows up. Who gets the time.
And when you can’t align schedules, it can feel like you’re slipping out of rhythm. Like a song you used to know by heart, but now you’re missing beats.
So what do we do with that?
First, we name it. Because pretending it doesn’t exist gives it more power. This isn’t pettiness. It’s attachment. It’s care. It’s the human desire to feel significant in someone else’s life.
Second, we reframe it.
Your friend spending time with someone else isn’t a loss. It’s an expansion. Their world growing doesn’t mean your place in it is shrinking. Relationships aren’t pie slices. They’re more like candles. Lighting another one doesn’t dim yours.
And third, we come back to intention.
If someone matters to you, you find ways to show up. Maybe not always in big, perfectly timed ways, but in consistent, meaningful ones. A voice note. A quick check-in. A “thinking of you” text that lands right when it’s needed.
Because friendship isn’t built on perfect availability. It’s built on presence, however that shows up.
And here’s the truth that softens all of it:
The right friendships don’t require you to compete for space. They make space for you.
Even when life gets busy.
Even when schedules don’t align.
Even when seasons change.
You’re not being replaced.
You’re just sharing a human you both happen to love.
And maybe that’s not something to compete with…