Posts Tagged ‘friend’

ririanHow many real friends do you think that you have? That’s a question I have been thinking a lot about lately, have you ever posed the question to yourself? Think about it, are you popular? Kind of in between, maybe a little shy? Do you think that you have dozens of friends or maybe just a few? I would bet the answer would really surprise you if you thought about it. I guess the first thing to be is to define what a friend is, is it someone you just hang out with, if you’re a girl is it someone you shop with or if you’re a guy is it a golfing buddy? If you’re single, is it who you go out with, and if you’re married is it the couple or couples that you spend time with? I bet most people have experienced losing what they thought was a really good friend, the person somehow really disappointed them, maybe it was a betrayal of some kind. We have all been through it in one way or another, the “friend” didn’t act in the way you were certain that they would, some form of trust was broken. So the real question is, were they ever really a friend to begin with? Think about it, the truth is, we just really misjudged that person, they were most likely never the person we thought they were to begin with, people rarely change so this breach of friendship must have come from a character flaw that was always there. The truth is, we probably just didn’t see it, the other parts of the relationship hid the flaw, maybe they were great fun or really funny, or maybe they were the person who was always available to hang out with,or maybe the chemistry just mixed well. But when the pressure was on, when you needed that friend to deliver the real act of friendship, the character flaw emerged.

And in the end isn’t that what true friendship is really about? It’s about the character and trust that is needed when the pressure is on, maybe when its not so easy to be a friend, maybe when that person has to choose your friendship over something that might be important to them, or maybe something not even that important. So, my question is, how many friends do you have that are really like that? How many people will be there when you need them through thick and thin, and not just when it is convenient for them? How many people do you really trust to do the right thing when it is much easier to do the easy thing. I thought about this question, when I started I thought I had fifteen close friends, and about fifteen other friends. Of course it was being burned by one friend that started the process for me. I discovered I probably have far fewer true friends then I thought. I counted, at the beginning of the process I thought I had fifteen “real friends” by the end I was down to six, I realized I just couldn’t count on the others, if I really needed someone, if I was in trouble, who could I count on to be there for me? The number was six, the others are still my friends, I still enjoy their company, but at the end of the day I need to know who is going to be there for me. It was an interesting process, almost a cleansing, I think everyone should examine their friendships.

I learned a valuable lesson from the life of a friend of mine, this story takes place about twelve years ago but I use his life as an example to me every day. At the time, he was in his early thirties, married, and extremely successful, at least by most people’s standards. But he wasn’t just married, he was married to an incredibly beautiful woman, an attorney who was top of her class at one of the country’s most prestigious law schools, she was brilliant. And it wasn’t that he was just successful, he was in a high profile business, dealing with celebrities and captains of industry, the people you read about in People magazine. He bought a big house, two Mercedes, and traveled the world. He was the envy of most everyone he knew, had set out with goals when he left college and for all intensive purposes met every single one of them by the time he was thirty three years old. And despite all he had achieved, he was an extremely unhappy person, the more this couple had the more they wanted, the more he made the more his wife spent to “keep up with the Jones’.” He felt on a daily basis that he was, for lack of a better term, emotionally out of breath, he was constantly chasing and never catching. It would be easy at this point to take you right to a cliffhanger, to say this person couldn’t take it anymore, that there is a tragic end, that he abused alcohol or drugs, that he hit rock bottom and turned his life around. But he was really no different than most people, and most people who are unhappy with their lot in life don’t commit suicide, and they don’t abuse alcohol or drugs, most people just continue on the path they are on, never make changes and remain unhappy.

One day my friend decided he didn’t want to be unhappy anymore. He didn’t just walk out on his business, but he knew he didn’t want to be in that business anymore, the pressure was to great, the stress was no longer worth it, so over the next two years he closed it down in an orderly fashion. He knew he was unhappy in his marriage but he just didn’t walk out. He talked to his wife about what didn’t work for him, she didn’t understand how he no longer liked their life, they tried therapy, and although he probably knew it was over from the beginning, he tried until he couldn’t try anymore.

At age thirty five he had given up life as he knew it, his work, his marriage, and set off on a new path, but this isn’t a fairytale. He was not instantly happy, he had spent thirteen years working and achieving everything he hoped for, achieved it all and was miserable, now he faced the hard part, he had to figure out why? Why he was so unhappy. Why his dream job and fairytale marriage did not make him a happy person. And how to move forward with his life.

It took years, but ten years later, he was remarried, still successful in an entirely new business and happy. It took him years to figure out what went wrong and how to try and put his life on the right path.He learned that his mistakes were the same that most people make, chasing things that don’t matter, going after material objects, being concerned what others think of you. He learned material objects are great, success is wonderful and an admirable goal, the respect and admiration and even envy of your peers is a wonderful thing to have, but if it defines who you are, if it is your life’s sole ambition, then unhappiness is sure to follow. Life is a constant journey of understanding who you are and what you need, and it constantly changes. If you are unhappy in your life or simply content, strive for more. Not all change needs to be radical like my friends, most often it is just simple adjustments in life, focusing on the things that are most important like family health, and knowing you are the best person you can be. Its about trying to live as stress free life as possible, and that the things are most important come from the inside.

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