Jealousy in female friendships isn’t always a bad thing. Here’s why
Jealousy has often been an inevitable part of many female friendships.
Whether it’s the feelings of envy when your friend receives a promotion at work or bitterness when she spends time with another friend.
This might have happened to you: Your friend is having a baby or has scored her dream job. You’re happy for them, genuinely, but some parts of you are saying “it could have been me” or “why did she get it and I don’t?”
Jealousy is common in friendships and it’s hard to ignore its presence. We can’t deny the common negative association with the word. However, research has shown that jealousy can add spice to friendship, and that a little bit of jealousy can bring something positive to some friendships.
There is a fine line between good jealousy and bad jealousy, and between a healthy and toxic friendship. So, how can jealousy affect your friendship, to some extent, in a positive way?
A joint study from Arizona State University, Oklahoma State University, and Hamilton College has found feelings of jealousy can be a useful tool in maintaining friendships.
As many might expect, jealous feelings tend to arise when another person enters the picture. This is called ‘third-party threat’, which tends to evoke the fear of replacement. It might encourage one to become a better friend and value the friendship even more.
“The third-party threat to a friendship was not just related to a best friend spending time away from us: It mattered whether the person they were spending time with could replace us as a friend,” said Douglas Kenrick, professor of psychology at ASU and an author on the paper.
“We found people felt less jealous about their best friend spending the same amount of time with a new romantic partner than a new acquaintance, which means what makes us most jealous of is the possibility that we might be replaced.”
Jealousy can be a signpost
According to Dr Robin Stern, Associate Director at Yale Centre for Emotional Intelligence, jealousy is the emotion we feel when we are fearful of losing someone or a relationship that is very important to us.
Hence, the feelings of jealousy can inform you of the importance and value of the friendship.
This view is supported by the aforementioned study, which suggests that jealousy could lead people to commit to being a better friend.
“Getting jealous can sometimes be a signal that a friendship is threatened, and this signal can help us jump into action to invest in a friendship that we might have been neglecting,” said Athena Aktipis, assistant professor of psychology at ASU and author on the paper.
Cassandra Goodman, founder of The Centre of Self Fidelity and an experienced personal coach, believes jealousy is a signpost for the friendship and could encourage one to reflect and reaffirm the core values.
“Jealousy can be a signpost to notify people that they must reflect on the relationship, and that there needs to be a shift from comparing and competing to connecting and looking within for more uplifting emotions,” she said.
“We have parts of us which are jealous, but in our cores, we are loving and caring beings.”
Ms Goodman believes that emotions are not good or bad, they are simply information.
“When you feel that way, it’s informing you of some parts in your relationship that need revision and changes, which you need to work on.”