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I have had a lot of trust issues too, Good Doctor. I know how you feel. ((hug))I'm still in the process of figuring that out now. I don't think I can trust anyone and I'm freaked out that certain people are conspiring to kill me.
My opinion: friendships are inherently disappointing. You promise yourself things that don't really exist and there is always a context in which someone will betray you; that's life.
I've brutally severed around 10+ "friendships" just so I can keep my own "ship" afloat. This is in the last 6 months.
Life can be incredibly ugly and vicious. So fight!
This is really beautiful, Mycroft...and true. Maybe we are all afraid to be vulnerable, at the end of the day. Is vulnerability always necessary for successful friendships? Lasting friendships? (in your opinion?)The sharing of vulnerabilities. We get close to someone the more they – and we – find ourselves able gracefully to depart from the official story of what human beings are like, and can start to show the awkward truths which underlie the cheerful facade. These are the truths with which we have been lonely for too long: how unlike ‘normal’ sexuality our sex lives actually are; how full of envy our careers are proving; how unsatisfactory our family can be; how worried we are all the time.
Revealing any of these things places us in great danger. Others could laugh; social media would have a field day. That’s the point. We can only get close by revealing things that would, in the wrong hands, be capable of inflicting appalling humiliation on us. Friendship is the dividend of gratitude that flows from an acknowledgement that one has offered something very valuable to someone: not a fancy present, but something even more precious, the key to one’s self-esteem and dignity.
Like, how do you personally define it?
I never think about it, I meet people, and some I get along with others I don't, and that's the way it should be, we are all different, just go along with it and don't think too much about it, or you will never be satisfied with either way
There is also an Arabic proverb that translates to "the friend is there for you when you need them". Interestingly, there is an English equivalent proverb for that which is "a friend in need is a friend indeed".
The Arabic proverb makes sense, but the English one doesn't. (They're not saying the same thing.)
Hmm, I thought that "a friend in need" means when you are in need and a friend specifically come to helps you.
I guess the arrangement of words to give the rhythm affected my understanding.
Well, to me, it doesn't convey that. I would rephrase it as follows: "A friend indeed is one who helps you when you're in need."
Makes more sense. Too bad it loses the poetry feel to it
Okay. I'll try again:
"A friend indeed is one who helps another in need."
Friendship is willingness to run risks and go through inconveniences on other person's behalf, because that person's well being is important to one.Like, how do you personally define it?
How do you decide if a friendship is worth keeping or not?
Have you ever severed a friendship, and why?
Are you a good friend to others?
You have correctly translated the idiom. The problem comes from how we use prepositions, the phrase often modifies last noun or pronoun.I don't have close friends to know how to define friendship, but the word "friend" can also be derived to "friendly" so the more friendly the people you know and usually meet up, the closer they are to be a friend. There is also an Arabic proverb that translates to "the friend is there for you when you need them". Interestingly, there is an English equivalent proverb for that which is "a friend in need is a friend indeed".
1-It's like love and trust some people (not relatives) , and don't hurt them .Like, how do you personally define it? How do you decide if a friendship is worth keeping or not? Have you ever severed a friendship, and why? Are you a good friend to others?
Just wondering....
This is really beautiful, Mycroft...and true. Maybe we are all afraid to be vulnerable, at the end of the day. Is vulnerability always necessary for successful friendships? Lasting friendships? (in your opinion?)