The Friends We Keep: A Hearing Men’s Voices Program

The Friends We Keep:
A Hearing Men’s Voices Program By Paul Davidson, PhD

Introductory Comments

Today we’re talking about friendship, something that becomes more important as we age, yet often harder to maintain. For many men, friendships begin naturally in childhood. You lived near each other, played on the same team, worked together, or simply happened to be in the same place at the same time. But adulthood changes the equation. Careers, marriage, parenting, stress, distance, health issues, and simple busyness can slowly narrow our circles without us even noticing.

At the same time, research consistently shows that strong friendships are one of the most important predictors of emotional wellbeing, resilience, physical health, and even longevity. Men with close social connections tend to cope better with stress, recover more effectively from hardship, and experience less isolation and depression.

Many men still struggle to talk openly about friendship. We often discuss work, sports, politics, or current events, but not always the deeper questions. Jewish tradition places enormous value on friendship and companionship. Pirkei Avot teaches: “Acquire for yourself a friend.” Not just “have” a friend — acquire one. Build it. Invest in it. Protect it. Friendship is treated not as something accidental, but as something to invest in and hold sacred.

Our discussion today is an opportunity to reflect honestly on the friendships that have shaped us, the ones we may have lost, the ones we still value deeply, and the kind of friend we hope to become moving forward. As always, share only what feels comfortable and speak from your own experience. What is said here, stays here and be sure to respect others in the group at all times by listening and not judging.

  1. Think back to childhood or adolescence. What did you and your friends do together for fun? What made someone become your friend back then?
  2. How have your conceptions of friendship been shaped by your own parents or siblings?
  3. How has friendship changed for you as you’ve gotten older? Have they been easier, harder, closer, rarer?
  4. What do you think men most want from friendship that they often do not say out loud?
  5. Think about a time when a friend truly showed up for you. What did they do that mattered and could you appreciate the importance at the time?
  6. What makes maintaining friendships difficult for men?
  7. Is there a friendship in your life you’ve neglected or lost that you wish you hadn’t? What got in the way?
  8. What kind of friend do you want to be in this next stage of your life — and what kind of friendships do you hope to have?
  9. What’s one small action you could take this week to strengthen a friendship that matters to you?

“A faithful friend is a strong shelter; whoever finds one finds a treasure.” — Ben Sira 6:14

Written by Paul Davidson, PhD

“The Friends We Keep: A Hearing Men’s Voices Program” published in the June 2026 Edition of Health & Wellness, L’chaim.