A few months ago, I realized I had a problem: I hadnât spoken to a guy, romantically or platonically, in nearly half a year. Some may say that thatâs not a problem at all, and to those people, I would respond, fair enough. Iâm a girlâs girl through and through: I work at an all-female company, I surround myself with incredible female friends, and my love life knows no gender limitations. Given the widening gender divide, I understand that thereâs an extent to which being able to cut off all contact with men who are not blood relatives is a major privilege. After I graduated college, I needed a break from dudes, and I was lucky enough to be able to take one. But after a while of not having male friends, I had to admit that something wasâ¦missing.
In college, I had my share of fulfilling male friendships. I had guys I liked to cook and drink with, guys I could connect with over shared interests in class, and even some gym-bro types I bonded with over an interest in fitness. When I graduated, those connections quickly evaporated. Making friends as an adult is hard enoughâbut making male friends as an adult? Thatâs a tall fucking order. Between the Bumble BFF population being 95 percent female and the fact that I would rather watch a movie than a football game, my options for finding male friends feel slim to none. But why is that? Does it have to be this way? And if I really want one, what does it take to make male friends in 2024?
Can men and women be friends?
Letâs get the obvious, sexist question out of the way here: Can men and women be platonic friends? If youâre asking this question, itâs probably because youâve had a crush on a friend of the opposite gender before. Trust me, Iâve been there, and in the moment itâs hard to feel like men and women can really be friends. But the assumption that neither gender is capable of developing truly platonic feelings for the other is dehumanizing. Just because itâs harder to reach across that gender divide and find someone who simply wants to be pals doesnât mean itâs impossible.
Thereâs nothing wrong with crushing on your guy friend, just like thereâs nothing necessarily wrong with your guy friend crushing on youâbut entering all opposite-sex platonic relationships as if theyâre bound to be flirtationships erases the value that friendship inherently holds. âSafety. Validation. Support. These are the key tenets of friendship, regardless of gender,â wrote Allie Volpeis in her recent piece for Vox on opposite-sex friendships. When we assume that âmen and women canât be friendsâ based on antiquated ideas of romance, we assume that at least one gender is going to let down their side of the deal of offering safety, validation, and support. And thatâs a problem.
Why is it so hard to make male friends?
Meeting people in the wild is harder than ever
For me, the struggle to make male friends has been a problem of sheer accessibility. My interests lean almost 100% âfeminineâ: I love homemaking, reading, watching movies, putting together cute outfits, and cooking. Obviously, I know that men love these things, too, but theyâre not exactly being loud about it online, which is the #1 way Iâve met people in my post-grad life. The Bumble BFF landscape is nearly all women, and the addition of an algorithm to the friend search doesnât exactly make diversifying your desired friend group very easy.
âEntering all opposite-sex platonic relationships as if theyâre bound to be flirtationships erases the value that friendship inherently holds.â
The places where I interact with men in public are at bars and the gym, which (frankly, thanks to men) arenât exactly safe spaces for platonically approaching a potential buddy. Even rec league sports, which have given me the closest thing to male friendships in my post-grad life, make it challenging to genuinely sustain a lasting friendship with one or two people of the opposite gender. After the volleyball game is over, most people just want to go home, which is not exactly conducive to getting to know one another.
Marriage makes it harder to maintain guy-girl friendships
Aside from my own, very early-20s coded struggles to find a place where I could even meet a guy friend, there are other, bigger reasons why itâs so hard to find and maintain opposite-sex friendships. Marriage, for instance, is a huge one. As New York Times friendship correspondent Anna Goldfarb reported in her book, Modern Friendship, â43 percent of married women say they have a close friend who is a different gender. Meanwhile, nearly two-thirds of single, unmarried women say they have a close male friend. Clearly, marriage is an obstacle that the majority of different-gendered friendships canât overcome.â
Having guy friends isnât just a challenge for gals like meâyoung women simply trying to meet as many people as possible out in the world. Itâs also hard for people in heterosexual marriages, who have limited spare time to spend with friends. Even if weâre all evolved and know that men and women can be platonic friends, it might seem like the easiest friendship to drop as life gets busier is the opposite-sex one. Jealousy is real, and since our culture prioritizes romantic relationships over platonic ones, maintaining guy friends post-marriage is tough. Heck, even non-married committed heterosexual relationships can throw a wrench in plans with friends of the opposite gender.
Hereâs the biggie that no one wants to talk about when it comes to opposite-sex friendships: Itâs not just hard for girls to make guy friends. Itâs hard for guys to make guy friends! Look, I get that conversations about the âmale loneliness epidemicâ have been twisted into making excuses for menâs absolutely abominable behavior in the dating world, but that doesnât mean that the male loneliness epidemic doesnât still exist. According to the Survey Center on American Life, 15% of men claim to have no close friends. As John Patrick Hatcher, author of Anxiety Hacks for An Uncertain World, put it in Psychology Today, â[Men] would rather take a Razor scooter to the ankle 30 straight times than feel shamed for appearing needy or lacking an already existing base of friends.â
âGiven the fact that dudes have a hard time even just making friends with each other, itâs no wonder a guy friend is so hard to find. Chances are, many of them havenât even admitted to themselves that they want a new friend at all.â
To be clear, I donât think itâs any womanâs job to fix the fact that men donât consciously reach out for friends. But given the fact that dudes have a hard time even just making friends with each other, itâs no wonder a guy friend is so hard to find. Chances are, many of them havenât even admitted to themselves that they want a new friend at all.
Is having male friends even important?
When I realized I had no guy friends, my initial reaction was, âWhatâs the big deal?â Iâm incredibly happy with my life, which doesnât include men. Why would I want anything to change? But as I navigate my young adult life, I know that limiting my friendships to one gender isnât going to help me learn or grow as a human being. Thereâs probably a lot that a guy friend could teach me that Iâm simply missing out onâand, obviously, a lot I could teach him, too.
As it turns out, there are plenty of reasons to have a friend of the opposite sex. For one, it opens both genders up to different things to do with friends. âAccording to research, women tend to lean into self-disclosure when hanging out, while men get together for shared activities or helping each other with a project or task,â said Volpeis. I wouldnât know about the joys of rec league volleyball in a sweaty high school gym on a Monday night were it not for my hunt for male friends. Likewise, I know that many of my male friends in college yearned for a co-ed wine night where they could openly talk shit with me and my other girl friends, since that wasnât a part of their male-only interactions.
Iâm going to keep doing my rec league sports, crossing my fingers that theyâll lead to a close guy friend who just wants to be a pal. In the meantime, though, opportunities for men and women to become friends need to broaden, both on and offline. If the gender divide is ever going to close, men and women need to at least have a chance at seeing each other as humanâand that starts with being a friend.
MEET THE AUTHOR
Emma Ginsberg, Associate Editor
Emma is a writer, editor, and podcast producer who has been creating at The Everygirl since 2021. She writes for all sections on the site, edits the Entertainment and Community sections, and helps produce The Everygirl Podcast. With a degree in American Studies, Emma is especially passionate about evaluating the impact pop culture and internet culture have on the day-to-day lives of real women.