lengy said:
How are you with your friends? Few and close? Superficial and many? A bit of both? Are most friendships we have destined to fail or drift apart? There are a world of people out there. Are you one of those who try and maintain them all or do you make friends and dump them? Whatever your intentions how have your friendships been and how much do you value your current friends? Do you see yourself still as friends in a years time? A decade? Your entire life?
I have a couple of each, with the ones I go out of my way to spend time with or communicate with being the close ones. The superficial ones are extremely tiring and often involve the other person taking everything and never giving (ie: it's all about them).
I am one who tries to maintain friendships, but I refuse to take any bullshit and can walk out of a situation that is obviously going to hell (particularly with those superficial ones). I don't like to make friends and dump them when I get bored with them or as soon as things look rocky. That's literally the reaction of a pre- or primary school kid, and says a lot about maturity.
I have known my best friend for about 15 years, and I can see that one lasting for years still. Possibly indefinitely. We went through school together, and even though we're at different unis, I still go golfing/paintballing/drinking/whatever with him occasionally. He's also my tech support when my computer screws up.
There are very few other school friendships that I have maintained or have a desire to. Apart from my best mate and my girlfriend, there are maybe only one or two people that I talk to or see regularly. The rest of my school friends haven't changed at all, despite almost all of them going on to uni, and they're incredibly boring. As fun as it was in high school, it's obvious that the fact that we were in the same environment was the only thing keeping it together.
Friends from uni are usually just people I see occasionally and have a chat about our subjects or whatever with. I don't see a problem with that.
I have some very good friends from BOS who I have had classes with or spend time with around campus, and they're awesome. The ones I have formed strong friendships with are ones I can see sticking around for some time yet.
Superficial friendships are the worst. They're good for a bit of fun, but don't expect them to last. Odds are the people don't care enough about you to stick around.
And for reference, these are Selman's (1981) stages of friendship. There might have been more, but I didn't get them down in the lecture (quoted from my notes, but with a couple of extra comments).
Stages 1 & 2:
-Preschoolers and [primary] school age.
-Companion of convenience [regardless of convenience to the other].
-One way partnership of fair-weather co-operators [ie: friends until things look difficult].
-More selfish than adult relationships.
Stage 3:
-Adolescence.
-[Development of] a friendship philosophy.
-Approx. 12-13 years.
-Intimate and mutually shared friendship.
-Awareness of continuity of relation[ship] and affective bond between close friends.
Stage 4:
-Autonomous interdependency.
-12-15 years.
-Belief that friendship can grow and be transformed through balance of dependence and independence.
-Continues through adulthood.