In most of these situations, there is no more contact unless someone dies and then you're brought back together again. This is not the best circumstances to have a reunion. At the time, you had good intentions to stay in touch but got caught up in the daily routine of life and you failed to pick up the phone or send off a quick email.
I was this way with my immediate family. We would meet up once or twice a year for the holidays and really enjoyed ourselves. Since we all lived within 1 hour of each other, we all decided we would commit to meeting once every 6 weeks. There were three different families between my brother, sister and my family so the plan was to rotate which families to host the gathering and we would schedule the date while we were all together. This way, the date was set in advance so nothing should come up to change your plans.
We did this for about two years. It was very easy. When we got together, we planned to eat a meal that was inexpensive and we mostly just visited. Our children played with each other enabling the bond of cousins to grow. I am very glad I did this. Prior to our routine visits, I was not very close to either of my siblings. Now I have developed a bond that will last forever. I'm very glad I did this. The second year of meeting, my brother passed away suddenly at the age of 40. No one anticipated this to happen. I was so grateful for the opportunity to get to know him as an adult and I cherish all of the times we spent together.
I know most of you don't have the close proximity of your family to be able to do this. You could do the same thing just with less frequency.
Something even easier than meeting frequently is to actually send that email to keep in touch. Send one telling them what a good time you had and how things are going for you. Ask them for an update on their life to prompt a response from them. If you have to, put it on your calendar every so often to drop your friends or family a quick email just to say hello. It means a lot to that person and you're doing your due diligence to keep the friendship going.
Another alternative is to call or email the person and tell them you'd like to meet them for lunch or dinner one day. Plan a date that's good for both of you and your chances for each of you actually making the date are high. I did this with a friend I used to work with. We both committed time out of our weekends to meet and in the end, we were glad that we did.
This is all hard to do when you have your immediate family to take care of especially if you have children. Cooking dinner, cleaning the house, helping with homework and breaking up fights are all a part of your life and the most important. Your family can do without you for a couple of hours if you want to go see a friend every once in a while. If you want to go visit family, they would benefit by going with you.
Try making plans or sending an email today. Tell me how it goes. I'd love to hear your success stories. Trust me, this really works and you'll be so glad you did.
Published by Sophie Adams
I work full time and write for AC part-time. I have two children and I am married. I dislike cold weather and love to live where it's warm. View profile
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- Make it a point to connect with friends and family.
- If you don't commit to keep in touch, you never will connect.

5 Comments
Post a CommentGood Idea Sophie! Family tend to drift away without realizing how long it's been since they've seen each other and when one dies that we don't expect, we often really regret not keeping in touch.
It is sad that so many people live so far away from loved family members. I am also so sorry for the loss of your brother.
I wish more people would pick up the phone to call family instead of relying so much on e-mail.. it is nice to actually hear the human voice of a loved one.
Great article!
Sorry for your loss. Thanks for this article. It seems like those that say "Let's stay in touch" are the ones that never do. I've been guilty of it myself.
Great article! I am also sorry to hear about your loss. Staying in touch feels harder than it really should be sometimes, I guess.
Great idea for an article, Sophie! I'm so sorry for the loss of your brother, but I'm glad you spent time with him as an adult that you might not otherwise have had.
I live 6,000 miles from my family, but I plan on going home to the UK to see them within the next few weeks (I hope). I usually hear "let's stay in touch" from people who don't really mean it, so I do not tend to trust people when they say it anymore. Unfortunately, in my case it is often a redundant phrase that sounds good at the time, but does not always amount to much.
Sophie