True Friendship
How can we find true friendship in this often phony, temporary world? Friendship involves recognition or familiarity with another person's personality. Friends often share likes and dislikes, interests, pursuit and passion. They start and finish the same road even if it means one of them has to get hurt.
We recognize the potential friendship when several signs include a common desire for a companionship and perhaps a common bond of some kind. Beyond that, genuine friendship involves a shared sense of caring and concern, a desire to see one another grow in time and develop with it, and hope for each other to succeed in all aspects of life. True friendship involves action, doing something for someone else while expecting nothing in return, but still you would like to get something from it, and also be able to share thoughts and feelings without fear of judgment or negative criticisms.
True Friendship involves relationship. Those mutual attributes I have mentioned before becomes the foundation on which recognition transpires into relationship. Many people say, "Oh, she's a good friend of mine," yet they never spend time with that '' good friend.'' Friendship takes time, time to get to know each other, time to build shared memories, time to invest in each other's growth. Time is very important because it builds the very cause and purpose of friends and friendship.
x-iloveavatar-x · Fri May 02, 2008 @ 10:17am · 1 Comments |