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Our closest of friends |
“Hey, I ran into the Jenkins today and they said they missed
you and to tell you hello. They’ve been thinking about you and want to get
together.”
I stared at him as my mind screamed “Bullshit!” My phone
number is the same. So is my address. They know both and so if they really
wanted to get in touch with me and say hello or get together for coffee and a
game of Go Fish, they know where and how to find me. But they don’t want to do
either of those things, so why say that nonsense to our children?
It’s a knee-jerk guilt reaction. They feel they have to say
those things because they once knew us and we did hang out quite often. However,
now we have nothing in common and instead of just asking how everyone is doing,
they feel they have to make some type of false effort to show they truly are
caring people. Again, I call bullshit. Asking how we are doing is enough to
show there was some interest at one time and covers the polite thing to do
pretty well. There is no need to go above and beyond saying things like they
were meaning to call and they wish we could get together. Why would we get
together now when we haven’t for the past seven or more years?
This was even done on Facebook recently when someone said,
“Hey, you should tell them that we need to get together.” The weird thing was
that I’m even on this person’s Facebook page. Why not just message me and say
it? It’s ridiculous and a social game I will not play.
Needless to say, if I want to get together with you, I will
make the necessary overtures that implies such a notion. I won’t tell your
children or send messages to mutual friends. We’re out of junior high so there
doesn’t need to be a go-between. It’s silly.
And it’s hypocritical.
Former friends even told my son once that we were still
friends because we were on each other’s Facebook and talked all the time. That
was bullshit, as well. Well, not all of it. We were on each other’s Facebook,
but we didn’t converse. They may have scrolled through my updates and silly
photos and check-ins, but neither of us talked or commented on anything of the
other person’s. It’s more like a nosy stalker relationship as opposed to
friendship.
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These ladies always have my back |
To be honest, I don’t like Facebook’s use of the word
“Friend” and much prefer Twitter’s “Follower”. That’s what we do, after all. We
follow each other, rarely commenting or making mention of anything the other
one has done. We may know everything the other has shared, but that makes us
tabloid readers, not friends. Conversation is not reading each other’s
newsfeeds, but actually having a dialogue with the other person, sharing
stories and ideas. It’s communication.
In today’s society it is just too easy to find someone if
you really wanted to do so. There is no need for pretense that you’ve wanted to
but just hadn’t been able to yet. That may actually be true, but if it was
something you really wanted to do, you would find a way to make it happen. We
have friends that if we haven’t seen in a while–and by a while I mean usually since
last weekend–then we call and make plans to get together. We don’t allow weeks,
months, or even years to go by before reaching out. This is friendship. Both
parties making the effort to stay connected and included in each other’s lives.
It’s not one-sided and it’s not a guilt phrase spewed because you saw someone’s
child. These are friends that will last. These are the people I surround myself
with. So should you.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
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We've been thinking about you and want to get together. No really, it's been 2 weeks and we're going through withdrawals
ReplyDeleteFire up the grill and start the hot tub lol
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