Image: Hannah and Marnie, just one of Girls‘ turbulent friendships (HBO)
Author and motivational speaker Jim Rohn once remarked that we are the average of the five people who we spend the most time with. And he’s right. As you’ve probably experienced yourself, who you surround yourself with affects the way you think, the way you feel, and the decisions you make.
For this reason, it’s critically important that we all surround ourselves with the “right” people and distance ourselves from the “wrong” people. But how are we supposed to know who the “right” people and who the “wrong” people are?
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This is something I really used to struggle with, so I asked a psychologist for his advice. Below is a simple exercise that he taught me to do, and it worked wonders.
I’ll lay it out like a high school science experiment, just for a bit of fun.
Aim:
To figure out who the “right” people and the “wrong” people to surround ourselves with are.
Materials Needed:
- An A4 piece of paper.
- A pen.
- A person that’s ready to learn and improve their surroundings (that’s you!).
Method:
1. Draw a mind-map connected to a centre circle that asks, “what do I value in a friend?” This should look like so: