One of the most important ways to take care of your mental health is by building healthy friendships.
Friendships might not always seem like part of “health,” but they actually matter just as much as things like sleep, exercise, or nutrition. The people around you can influence how supported, understood, and confident you feel.
Because life gets busy with school, activities, and family responsibilities, friendships sometimes happen naturally—but strong friendships also grow when we put intentional effort into them.
Having people you trust in your life can make stressful moments feel easier to handle.
For many teens, school pressure, social situations, and future worries can feel overwhelming. Knowing there is someone you can text, call, or talk to after a tough day can make a big difference.
Friends can support you in many ways:
Emotional Support
Friends can listen when you need to talk. Feeling heard and understood can help you process stress, disappointment, or frustration.
Sometimes a friend may notice when you seem quiet, withdrawn, or upset—even before you say anything—and check in with you.
Encouragement
Friends can motivate you when things feel difficult.
For example:
Supportive friendships often help teens feel more confident and less alone.
Many of the best parts of teenage life happen with friends—laughing, learning new things, and creating memories together.
These shared experiences can help build a sense of belonging, which is very important during adolescence.
When Loneliness Happens
There may be times when friendships change or when you feel disconnected from people around you. This can happen when:
Feeling alone sometimes is normal, but long periods of loneliness can affect both mental and physical health. That’s why it’s important to care for your social well-being, not just academic or physical success.
Building Healthy Friendships
Friendships can grow in many places. Friends might be:
A healthy friendship usually includes mutual care, trust, and respect.
Good friendships often feel balanced—both people support each other.
Ways Teens Can Build Friendships
Some simple ways to start building connections include:
When getting to know someone new, it helps to:
Friendship usually starts with small interactions that grow over time.
Some teens feel pressure to have a large friend group or to be popular.
In reality, having a few close and supportive friendships is often much healthier than having many shallow connections.
Friendships may change during different phases of life, and that is normal. What matters most is having at least a few people you can trust and rely on.
Maintaining Healthy Friendships
Friendships need care over time. Even strong friendships benefit from effort and attention.
Healthy friendships often include three important qualities:
Trust
Trust grows when people are reliable and honest.
Ways teens can build trust include:
Care and Understanding
Good friends listen and support each other.
Ways to show care include:
Enjoying Time Together
Friendships are also about having fun.
This might include:
Positive experiences together help strengthen friendships.
Setting Healthy Boundaries
Sometimes friendships need boundaries.
A boundary simply means being clear about what you are comfortable with and what you are not.
For example:
Healthy boundaries help friendships stay respectful and balanced.
Not all friendships last forever. Sometimes people grow in different directions, or a relationship becomes stressful rather than supportive.
If you have tried to communicate, set boundaries, and improve the situation but things still feel unhealthy, it may be okay to step back from that friendship.
Letting go of relationships that cause constant stress can create space for friendships that are more supportive and positive.
A Small Friendship Check-In
Ask yourself these questions:
Friendships don’t have to be perfect. What matters most is building relationships where people care about each other and feel safe being themselves.
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