What Therapists Should Stop Ignoring About Friendship
Friendship is often the most influential — and most overlooked — attachment bond in adult life. While therapy frequently prioritizes romantic relationships and family dynamics, platonic love can be just as formative, stabilizing, and painful. For many people, friends are their primary emotional support system, co-regulators of stress, and witnesses to their life story.
Yet when friendships fracture, fade, or become complicated, clients often feel there is nowhere to process that grief. Therapists may unintentionally minimize it, framing friendship loss as less significant than divorce, breakup, or family estrangement.
It isn’t.

Why Friendship Matters More Than We Acknowledge
Friendships uniquely combine chosen attachment, mutuality, and identity development. Unlike family bonds, they are voluntary. Unlike romantic bonds, they may be less scripted by social expectations. This makes them both deeply meaningful and painfully fragile.
Platonic love can provide:
- Emotional safety without romantic pressure
- Identity mirroring (“someone who knows the real me”)
- Regulation during stress and trauma
- A buffer against loneliness and depression
- A sense of belonging
When these bonds rupture, clients may experience symptoms similar to romantic heartbreak: grief, anxiety, shame, rumination, and even trauma responses.
Challenges of Platonic Love Clients Bring to Therapy
1. Friendship Breakups That Feel “Invisible”
There is no ritual for ending a friendship. No legal process. No culturally recognized mourning period.
Clients often say:
- “I feel silly for being this upset.”
- “It wasn’t even a relationship.”
- “I don’t know why this hurts so much.”
What therapists should notice: Disenfranchised grief — loss that society doesn’t validate.
2. Attachment Patterns Play Out Here Too
Friendships are attachment relationships.
- Anxious clients may overgive, fear replacement, or panic over distance
- Avoidant clients may withdraw or minimize closeness
- Trauma survivors may oscillate between dependence and shutdown
Sometimes clients repeat childhood relational patterns more intensely in friendships because they feel safer than romantic bonds.
3. The Complexity of Boundaries
Friendships often lack clear expectations about:
- Time investment
- Emotional labor
- Reciprocity
- Loyalty
- Privacy
This ambiguity can breed resentment, especially for clients who struggle with people-pleing, codependency, or fear of conflict.
4. When Friendship Becomes the Primary Relationship
For single clients, divorced individuals, or those in strained marriages, friendships may function as their main attachment system.
Therapists should explore:
- Overreliance on one friend
- Fear of abandonment if the friend’s life changes
- Identity collapse if the friendship shifts
5. Jealousy, Replacement, and Life Transitions
Adult friendships are vulnerable to:
- Marriage or new romantic partners
- Parenthood
- Moves or career changes
- Differing life stages
Clients may feel left behind but ashamed to admit it.
What Therapists Can Do Differently
Validate Platonic Love as Real Attachment
Say it plainly:
“Friendship loss can hurt as much as romantic loss.”
Validation reduces shame and opens space for grief work.
Assess Friendship Networks in Intake
We routinely ask about family and partners. Ask about friends too:
- Who are your closest supports?
- Have you lost any important friendships?
- Where do you feel most understood?
Teach Skills for Friendship Repair
Clients are rarely taught how to:
- Address hurt directly
- Negotiate expectations
- Apologize effectively
- Tolerate relational discomfort
Normalize the Evolution of Adult Friendships
Not all friendships are meant to last forever. Some serve a season, identity phase, or life chapter.
Helping clients reframe endings as transitions can reduce self-blame.
The Deeper Truth
Humans are wired for connection — not just romantic connection.
Platonic love can be:
- A secure base
- A healing corrective experience
- A mirror of self-worth
- A site of profound trauma and repair
When therapists overlook friendship, we may miss one of the most powerful relational forces shaping our clients’ emotional lives.
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