N
nanaka
Member
- Aug 30, 2023
- 25
I believe that the essence of what makes a true friendship is to know and resonate with the values that really count for your friends.
I believe that knowing what your friends' interests/hobbies are, or spending time with them, are not what builds a true friendship. These are just two surface things that help you get along with someone enough that they will start opening to you a little bit about what really counts to them.
With that said, I don't have many friends, and none which I would consider as a true friend, because one of the most important things that really counts for me is friendship.
I know this sounds corny. But to give a practical example, this means for example that when looking for a new job, being able to live near a friend is my highest factor of choice for that job, above salary or other advantages.
This is where I differ from the friends I have, and why I can't resonate with them as much as I would want to; because what they value is not friendship as well.
-one of my friends values family and so they moved to stay with their aging parents.
-another one values doing new things and meet people, so they moved to a capital city.
-my last friend values their lover, but they are in the middle of reevaluating what counts for them, because they feel like they are wasting away.
Of course, these are examples close to me right now, but I've also seen people for whom what seemed to matter most was extremely different, like: having and raising a child, have enough money to pay for anything they want, make the world a more safe/healthy/sustainable/efficient place, helping people in the need, travel around the world...etc.
Another thing is: I guess that what I call a true friend is essentially some kind of lover but in a platonic, possibly polyamorous way. Or rather: every lover should be a true friend, but with some more intimacy in the mix.
Unfortunately, couples with true friendship don't seem that common, but maybe it's just my own, wrong intuition. After all, what a couple truly values may not be visible to an outsider like me. But often, it is my impression that there is some kind of divide between what the woman does, and what her boyfriend does (speaking of heteronormative couples ofc).
Besides, having the same hobbies/interests doesn't mean your core values are 100% the same, but I like to think that interests DO have a better chance to attract like-minded people.
I'd like to know what you all think about my rambling, and also:
If you had to name only one, what is one core value of yours that drives you in life?
I believe that knowing what your friends' interests/hobbies are, or spending time with them, are not what builds a true friendship. These are just two surface things that help you get along with someone enough that they will start opening to you a little bit about what really counts to them.
With that said, I don't have many friends, and none which I would consider as a true friend, because one of the most important things that really counts for me is friendship.
I know this sounds corny. But to give a practical example, this means for example that when looking for a new job, being able to live near a friend is my highest factor of choice for that job, above salary or other advantages.
This is where I differ from the friends I have, and why I can't resonate with them as much as I would want to; because what they value is not friendship as well.
-one of my friends values family and so they moved to stay with their aging parents.
-another one values doing new things and meet people, so they moved to a capital city.
-my last friend values their lover, but they are in the middle of reevaluating what counts for them, because they feel like they are wasting away.
Of course, these are examples close to me right now, but I've also seen people for whom what seemed to matter most was extremely different, like: having and raising a child, have enough money to pay for anything they want, make the world a more safe/healthy/sustainable/efficient place, helping people in the need, travel around the world...etc.
Another thing is: I guess that what I call a true friend is essentially some kind of lover but in a platonic, possibly polyamorous way. Or rather: every lover should be a true friend, but with some more intimacy in the mix.
Unfortunately, couples with true friendship don't seem that common, but maybe it's just my own, wrong intuition. After all, what a couple truly values may not be visible to an outsider like me. But often, it is my impression that there is some kind of divide between what the woman does, and what her boyfriend does (speaking of heteronormative couples ofc).
Besides, having the same hobbies/interests doesn't mean your core values are 100% the same, but I like to think that interests DO have a better chance to attract like-minded people.
I'd like to know what you all think about my rambling, and also:
If you had to name only one, what is one core value of yours that drives you in life?