Making Friends Online

I've been online a very long time. Since the late 80's. That's before what we currently know as the net was much more than a twinkling in a small handful of San Francisco computers.

So, I've had a lot of time to think about the intricacies & common pitfalls of meeting someone online.

The first thing to do is let go of the idea that there's anything particularly special about "meeting someone on the net."

The internet is just a way of communicating. It's no different from meeting someone face to face, via the telephone (don't laugh, I ended up dating someone for years that I first talked to over the phone), or even really old school — by writing, aka pen pals. The only difference is the bandwidth of the medium.

The Importance Of Bandwidth

What do I mean by bandwidth? Simply put, how much information is transmitted while you're communicating.

How do you figure that out? Just think about how much you can tell someone and then how much delay there is during that conversation.

If I can only type one word at a time and there's ten minute delay between words, that's not a lot of bandwidth. Compare that with being face-to-face, being able to see, hear, touch someone. That's super high bandwith.

In terms of bandwidth, there's a definite hierarchy:

  1. Twitter/SMS (140/160 chars at a time, slow back-and-forth)
  2. IRC/IM (short message, but less delay)
  3. Email (can go into much more depth, nested conversations etc)
  4. Voice
  5. Skype (video)
  6. Face-to-face

& once you're face-to-face of course, there's a further hierarchy.

  1. Formal situation (eg work place).
  2. Informal, but physically distant.
  3. Informal, but physically close (within a foot or two)
  4. Naked, close
  5. Naked, touching
  6. Energetically entwined/internal

The key with physical distance is — the space around us is not empty. There's information there. This is one reason you can feel if someone is standing "too close" to you, or why you feel uncomfortable. It's not just about the physical, it's their energy interacting & interfering with ours.

So why is this even relevant? Because all human interaction is about communication, & the higher the bandwidth, the better the communication.

The critical point here: When getting to know someone, more bandwidth is better.

How We Make Friends

Making friends is a pretty straight forward process. This is similar regardless of the depth of the relationship we're building towards (acquaintenances, buddies, friends, emotional support network, intimate partners). The only difference is how far we take the process, & the level of discrimination we apply.

  1. Similar interests? (easy to determine, low invasiveness)
  2. Similar world view? (takes more time, but critical for mutual approval & understanding)
  3. Do we like them? (although it is possible to be friends, eg with people we dislike but respect, it is harder)
  4. Do we trust them? (this'll determine how much deeper we let the relationship go)

With low grade friendships (eg guys we hang out & watch football with) we typically only need to go as far as stage 1. With a healthy intimate partner, we'd need to go all the way to level 4.

Once we're ok at one level, we can choose to investigate the next.

Of course, there is a lot more complexity here, I'm simplifying for the sake of clarity.

How Do We Get To Know Someone?

Fundamentally, we progress through the above process in direct proportion to how much bandwidth (ie, information) has been shared between us.

Spend a week in close proximity to someone, you'll get to know them a lot faster than a week spent texting. This is why you can spend years getting to know someone at a distance, but the relationship really doesn't start in earnest until you're both in the same physical space.

So if you want to get to know someone, become friends with them, the trick is simple: Increase the bandwith as quickly and as much as possible.

The longer we spend at the low bandwidth end of things (twitter, sms, facebook etc) the more likely we are to fundamentally misunderstand or misjudge someone we might otherwise become excellent friends with.

If we want to build a quality relationship with someone, we need information before we can make a qualitative judgement. This is the "I thought you were awesome, but you're actually a complete dick!" problem.

If we want to know how far or how deep to take the relationship, we need information. This is the "You looked hot with the lights out, but now they're on.. ARGH!" problem.

If we want to know whether to trust someone, we need information. This is the "I told you my secret, but you blabbed it to everyone!" problem.

How do we get the information we need? By communicating, of course — regardless of the medium (telephone, text, email, voice, face-to-face). The more communicating you do, the better you'll know someone. The higher the bandwidth you're able to achieve between each other, the more you can communicate.

Really, getting to know someone on the internet is exactly the same as getting to know someone off — except you have  significantly more varieties & amounts of bandwidth to communicate over. It's still not as great as spending time face-to-face, but it does enable the chance to get to know someone even if you're not able to regularly spend time in the same physical space.

Some Advanced Tips

Communicating over the net has some surprising benefits that face to face doesn't. Often people will tell you far more by what they don't say than what they do.

  1. If someone regularly doesn't respond to certain types of conversation — this is usually a sign they're avoiding something. This sounds obvious, but it's very easy for messages to fall through the cracks. It's worth paying attention to whether the other person is just sloppy replying in general, or whether it's always the same subject. Is it taboo in their culture/upbringing, are they shy, or is this going to be a point of contention in trying to progress the relationship any further?
  2. Are you both putting in similar amounts of effort? If one of you is initiating contact a lot more, or writing in more detail & only receiving off-the-cuff responses, a reasonable interpretation would be "they're just not that into you".
  3. Do you communicate at a similar level? Differences in grammar or spelling are obvious, but if one of you is only interested in talking about football, but the other would prefer to discuss the philosophical motivations that encourage societies to perpetuate acceptable proxies for inter-tribal violence, this difference may be worth paying attention to.
  4. Is communication frequency similar? Some people are happy emailing or texting once a day, or once every few weeks. Some prefer longer missives. Some prefer short bursts but more often. If there's a mismatch, that can spell difficulties down the line. Communication is difficult enough, without the added frustration of feeling that someone is always down your throat, or never responds when you try to connect with them.
  5. Does the person show as much interest in you, your family, the things you care about, as you do in them?
  6. Are you genuinely excited to hear from them? If not, that may be telling you you'd be better off spending your time and energy on someone who does.

None of these things are foolproof, of course, any more than body language is an exact science. However, if you look at them together, they will typically tell you far, far faster than you would otherwise know whether someone is worth pursuing any kind of friendship with. This, of course, then frees you up to spend your time & energy on those who are excited to see you, will love you as deeply as you love them, & where you will both enrich each others lives.

Communicating over the net is no substitute for time spent in each others presence, but it truly is a wonderful way to meet & get to know people faster & more effectively than ever before.

  • Lynnivere

    Yes. I completely agree with the "bandwidth" concept. My online friends are just as much a part of my everyday connections as are my relationships w my genetic family & geographically close-by friends.

    Having known you for some few years online, I have to say that you rank in the top 2 people I seek to hear about regularly from the internets. I refer to these 2 people as "my Australia & Florida connections" & my sister calls you Sid because she once mis-read your user-name & it's our in-joke. You are known in my family as one of my "friends", real & true, even though they're aware we've never met face to face.

    Admittedly, I'm not too sure how much I can invest in connections real world, online, or in the ethers, as I need great spaces to process & it can be easily misunderstood/misread as lack of interest.

    Still, it fascinates me how time & text & consistency of being able to observe & relate w another without judgments, without hurry & in a considerably safer environ than daily physical interactions can build a deep & palpable connection.

    You're right, who knows how it would be in the flesh.. but I find this bandwidth fulfilling & deeply satisfyng.

  • http://themickmorris.com Mick Morris

    Hey Si, I love this analysis of online friending and its translation to the broader world. The ability to create meaningful links to, and build relationships with people all over the world can make our lives far more interesting and it often leads to some amazing conversations.

  • http://sidawson.org Si Dawson

    Ahh, as insightful & articulate as ever.

    I put you in the "haven't met yet" category, because there's no doubt in my mind that we will, it's just a matter of time.

    In my experience that first meeting is always fascinating. There's the initial instinctive distance, of a "who is this person?" nature, followed by odd skuffling by either party, then a sudden recognition "ohh, I know this person!" & finally a joining together of all of the new knowledge (motion, physique, body language etc) with the old, deeper knowledge.

    It's almost like getting to know someone backwards. You already have all the stuff that takes time — but you don't yet have the "first impression" information. An odd experience, but extremely fascinating.

  • http://sidawson.org Si Dawson

    I'm finding it's almost the rule, rather than the exception, these days. Everyone is so connected, & in terms of finding people with any overlap at all of interests etc, the online world is astronomically more efficient for doing so.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-10560-Special-Needs-Kids-Examiner Heather E. Sedlock

    I found this post interesting. I found the comments even more so.

    I met my first love over the phone. I had just moved back to Boston and he was a mate of my brother's calling for him. I answered, he asked for my brother. I replied he wasn't there and could I take a message. He said just to tell him that he called. So I said okay and hung up. Fifteen minutes later, he called again. Again, I said he's not home and may I take a message (I'm such a good secretary!). He left a different name (his nicname) and said "Yeah, tell him the naked Elvis pictures he wanted are in." and hung up. It was love at first joke for me. He called back within two minutes and asked who I was. LOL. I explained I was his sister and he said, "Man. I didn't realize he had a sister." I said, "He has three of them." He replied, "So, he wasn't born in a pod?" LOL… Yeah… I miss loving that guy although I don't think we ever officially dated (that's another topic!).

    I met my current husband online first. In a chat room of all places. We'd known each other since Sept. 2002 but didn't meet in person until August 19th, 2007. I take things slow :)

  • http://sidawson.org Si Dawson

    Wow. Five years? You're not kidding.

    That's.. mind boggling to me.

    I'm not sure I've even lived in one place for five years at a go since I was living at home as a child.

    Wow.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-10560-Special-Needs-Kids-Examiner Heather E. Sedlock

    Oh, I so didn't stay put for those five years. I met him when I was living in Huntsville, Alabama. Then I lived in Boston, MA… then Mansfield, MA… then Kingston, MA… I've calmed down a lot in my travels since I've had children. I only move every couple of years now. We've moved three times since we've met though. LOL So maybe not as calmed down as I thought. Yeah.. I'm still averaging at least once every two years. Oh well. I survived moving like that as a kid and I'm sure mine will as well :)

    I'm not a "roots" kind of person. Too much out there in the world to see.

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