What Real Friendship Actually Looks Like
You Don’t Need More Friends. You Need Real Ones.
Hey! I’m Chris and I write Faith Unplugged. An encouraging lifeline for you when you need it. Join us by subscribing, and if this article helps you, consider supporting this work by buying the next coffee.
I remember sitting in my truck one evening, engine running, hands still on the steering wheel like I was waiting for something, but I didn’t even know what.
It had been one of those days.
Not terrible. Not dramatic. Just heavy.
The kind of day where you show up for everyone else, say the right things, smile at the right moments, and then realize no one really asked how you were doing.
And honestly, I didn’t even know how I was doing.
I just sat there thinking,
Man, it would be nice to have someone who just gets it.
No fixing.
No advice.
No pressure to be “on.”
Just someone who sees you and stays.
The Thing We Don’t Always Say Out Loud
We all want that kind of friend.
But here’s the tension most people carry quietly:
“I don’t know if I actually have that person.”
Or maybe even deeper:
“I don’t know if I’ve ever had that person.”
We’ve got acquaintances.
We’ve got group chats.
We’ve got people we laugh with on Sundays.
But when life gets quiet, or heavy, or confusing.
It can feel like you’re walking through it alone.
And if we’re honest, that loneliness hits harder when you’re the one who is usually strong for everyone else.
You’re the encourager.
The helper.
The one people call.
But who do you call?
A Friend Who Stayed
There’s this moment in the life of David that I keep coming back to.
But to really feel it, you have to understand what led up to it.
David wasn’t just having a bad day.
His life had completely unraveled.
The same king who once brought him into the palace.
The same man he served, honored, and refused to harm.
Now wanted him dead.
Saul had turned on him.
Not quietly. Not subtly.
Spears thrown.
Soldiers sent.
Orders given.
David went from playing music in the palace to running for his life in the wilderness.
Caves became home.
Fear became constant.
Isolation settled in.
And you have to wonder.
Did he start questioning everything?
God, I thought You anointed me for something, so why does it feel like I’m losing everything?
How did I go from promise to this?
And then Jonathan shows up.
Which, if you think about it, is kind of wild.
Jonathan is Saul’s son.
He has every reason to distance himself from David.
To protect his position.
To stay quiet and safe.
Instead, he goes looking for him.
Scripture says:
“Jonathan went to find David and helped him find strength in God.” (1 Samuel 23:16)
Don’t miss that.
David didn’t go find Jonathan.
Jonathan went and found David.
In the middle of the caves.
In the middle of the fear.
In the middle of the questions.
And what did he do when he got there?
He didn’t fix David’s situation.
He didn’t overthrow Saul.
He didn’t hand him a strategy.
He didn’t say, “Hey, I talked to my dad, you’re good now.”
He just helped him find strength in God.
Maybe he reminded him of the anointing.
Maybe he spoke truth when David’s thoughts were spiraling.
Maybe he just sat there and said, “I’m with you.”
We’re not given all the details.
But we’re shown what matters.
He showed up.
He stayed.
He strengthened.
And that’s the kind of friend everyone needs.
Not the one who has all the answers.
Not the one who disappears when things get complicated.
But the one who walks into your hard season and helps you remember who God is when you’re struggling to see it yourself.
Not a Savior. Just Faithful.
We tend to think great friendship looks like having all the right words.
But most of the time, it looks like presence.
It looks like:
“I don’t fully understand what you’re going through, but I’m not going anywhere.”
It’s someone who reminds you of truth when your thoughts get loud.
Someone who doesn’t disappear when things get inconvenient.
Someone who doesn’t need you to be impressive to stay connected.
Just faithful.
Here’s the Honest Part
A lot of people are waiting for that kind of friend.
But very few people are becoming that kind of friend.
And I get it.
We’re busy.
We’re tired.
We’ve been hurt too.
Sometimes we hold back because we don’t want to be disappointed again.
But if we’re not careful, we end up building lives where we’re surrounded by people, and yet, still alone.
The Reframe
What if the kind of friend you’re longing for is the kind of friend God is inviting you to become?
Not perfectly.
Not for everyone.
But for someone.
Because here’s the truth:
God often meets people through people.
And while you might be waiting for someone to show up for you.
There’s a chance someone in your life is quietly hoping you show up for them.
What This Actually Looks Like (In Real Life)
Let’s keep this simple and real.
If you want to build this kind of friendship, here are a few ways to start:
1. Check in without a reason
Don’t wait for a crisis.
A simple “Hey, I was thinking about you. How are you really doing?” goes further than you think.
2. Listen more than you fix
You don’t need the perfect response.
Most people just need space to be honest without being corrected or rushed.
3. Be consistent, not intense
Friendship isn’t built in big moments.
It’s built in small, repeated ones.
A text. A call. A coffee. Again and again.
4. Say the encouraging thing out loud
If you think something good about someone—say it.
Don’t assume they already know.
5. Stay when it gets uncomfortable
This is the big one.
When things get messy or awkward, don’t disappear.
That’s when your presence matters most.
6. Let yourself need people too
This one’s hard.
But friendship isn’t one-sided.
Let people see you. Not just the strong version of you.
You’re Not As Alone As You Feel
If you’re reading this and thinking,
“I wish I had that kind of friend…”
I want you to hear this clearly:
You’re not strange for wanting that.
You’re not needy.
You’re not weak.
You’re human.
Even Jesus Christ had close friends.
He shared meals.
He brought people into moments others didn’t see.
He even asked them to stay with Him in His hardest hour.
You were never meant to do life alone.
And If You Don’t Have That Yet
Start small.
Ask God for one or two real connections.
Then take a step.
Send the text.
Start the conversation.
Open up a little.
It might feel awkward at first.
That’s okay.
Most meaningful things do.
A Final Thought
That night in my truck, I eventually turned off the engine and went inside.
Nothing had magically changed.
But I remember thinking:
“I don’t need a hundred people. I just need a few real ones.”
And honestly. Even one.
If this resonated…
This is why I write. Because I know what it feels like to carry things quietly and wonder if anyone else gets it. If you’ve ever felt alone in your faith, in your life, or even in a room full of people:
You’re not alone here
You’re welcome here
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Great post. I have one friend like that. She's such a blessing from the Lord. But after reading this, I'm going to ask God to bring a couple of people into my life that need such a friend.
The last two resonated. Active listening is so helpful. Others can gain a new perspective when we reveal our struggles in the middle of tough stuff.