Re: Friends/sysdharma (zaibatsu), 10/30/2019
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User sysdharma recently wrote about making new friends after
moving abroad[1]. I had been thinking on this subject before
reading that post,  and have meant to respond.  No time like
the present.

My  friends  have  generally  come   from  a  few  pools  of
associations: work (before I worked at home), church, school
(when  I  was in  school),  and  family (including  extended
family). I'll add pubnix to that list, in more recent years,
due to the  amount of time I spend here,  and the quality of
conversation that  I encounter; I consider  you all friends.
That makes  me think that I  may need to define  "friend" at
this point.

Webster says that a friend(1) is "one attached to another by
affection or  esteem." That's pretty loose,  but reasonable.
I've  encountered  far  more  sentimental  definitions,  but
I'm  not  sure I  appreciate  them,  because they  introduce
unnecessary requirements  and restrictions on the  word. For
example,  if a  well-meaning  individual says  "a friend  is
someone who is always there  for you", then I'm obligated to
disagree, because I'm incapable of always being there for my
friends, but I love them all the same. If a deeply emotional
person notes that "a true friend will always respect you and
let you be yourself" then  my sensibilities would be piqued,
because I've  benefited from  friends telling me  to change,
pointing out  my flaws (purposefully or  not), and generally
smacking me  around a  bit when  I'm out  of line  (which is
often).

With Webster's friend(1),  I feel that I can  safely call my
affectionate and/or  esteemed acquaintances, whether  in the
flesh or digital, "friends". To be honest, I detest the need
to  distinguish between  physical/digital when  it comes  to
friendship  (after all,  they  are just  different forms  of
communication  between  actual  humans), but  there  is  one
distinction that I feel I must make: the ease with which one
makes  and keeps  friends in  digital space  vs. the  energy
required to maintain friendship in physical space.

My wife once observed that most friends generally exist in a
radius of proximity. In her experience, the radius was about
a 15-20  minute driving time. Within  that space, friendship
was easy, outside that space  it became much more difficult.
Obviously, this  is because those friends  have expectations
of physical  interaction (most  of them, anyway).  These are
people that we meet, enjoy, and meet again, with our bodies.

Digital friends, on the other hand, accept that there may be
a world (or more, in the  future) of space between you. They
understand  that you're  not  physically  present, and  they
don't require  you to be.  They appreciate what you  have to
offer mind-to-mind,  spirit-to-spirit, whatever-to-whatever,
directly. And now I'm  starting to introduce requirements as
to what a  friend is! But, it's only  to distinguish between
physical and digital...

Perhaps sysdharma  means mostly that  it's hard to  make new
friends in  physical space. I  have to agree (with  my guess
at  what sysdharma  means).  My experience  with friends  in
physical space has  been less than perfect. I  have my wife,
who is  an amazing friend of  the finest variety. I  have my
brothers, who I share a unique and unbreakable bond with, in
spite of  our differences.  I have a  "best friend"  from my
youth, who I refuse  to let go no matter how  far he is from
me, or how long it's been since we talked/emailed. These are
my primary  group of fellow travelers. These are my friends,
no matter what.

Then I have the rest of  my friends in physical space. These
come from the  pools mentioned above. They're  people I meet
by  chance, and  enjoy,  and who  (presumably)  enjoy me  as
well.  Sometimes I  encounter people  that I  enjoy who  are
too  busy  to  be  a friend  (in  the  invented-requirements
sense). Sometimes I  encounter a friend and  we have amazing
experiences  together;  but  then  I  move,  and  my  wife's
proximity rule comes into play on their part, and they don't
really email me back, don't really want to connect. That's a
little crushing, but they are only human after all.

Life is  pulling at me,  otherwise I'd ramble more  (you can
thank life!).  To sysdharm, if  he's reading, I'd  say this:
embrace your digital friends, who  are real, and do what you
can with the people directly around you as well. Ask some of
us  for  our  address,  or  send  us  yours,  and  see  what
our  handwriting is  like.  Accept that  in physical  space,
friendship  is quite  different,  and more  work. Maybe  you
already  know all  this. Know  one more  thing, and  that is
you  have friends  here on  gopher that  enjoy reading  your
thoughts, and  are glad you're  here with us in  this small,
fleeting way.

[1] gopher://sdf.org:70/1/users/sysdharma/phlog/./2019.10.15