The Age of Friendship

Christine Senter
What characteristics define friendship? Are there any set rules to being friends? True friends can come in any size, shape, color, or gender, but what about age? Most people who consider themselves to be close friends are usually within a few years of each other. These people might find they have more in common than they would with someone several years older or younger than themselves. This doesn't have to be the case.

For those of us in our thirties, meeting new friends can be somewhat daunting. We look back at our twenties and feel our youth slipping away. We look ahead and see ourselves wishing for the dreams we once held with enthusiasm. It becomes a cliché of being between a rock and a hard place. Yet, this is the best place to be if you're looking to expand your line of friends.

Becoming friends with people in their twenties can help us retain the vitality we used to take for granted. We are now the ones with the experiences that can help bring someone else to a better place in their lives. We can give the younger generation advise in areas we once thought we'd never live through and revel in the knowledge that we were the ones that someone else has turned to.

Becoming friends with someone older than ourselves can help us cope with the idea of growing old. Living in a society that makes aging seem like a bad thing, these people can give us the ability to go on with hope. They have remarkable stories of life that only those who have lived it can tell. They know about things that we have yet to encounter and how to deal with them.

A true friend can come in any size, shape, color, or gender. They can also come in any age, whether older or younger than yourself. Allowing yourself to broaden your friendly horizons can bring great joy into your life as well as that of someone else. There may be a day when you just need someone to sit by your side and listen to your story and all the usual people are tired of hearing about it. Not because they don't care, but because they just don't know what to do to help. Widening the range of your friends' age group may be the only way for you to find that one person who knows the answer.

We are surrounded by people we see on a daily basis, but how many do we consider to be friends? For many of us, the answer is very few. With that many people around us, we have the ability to make a new friend almost everyday. If we could try and make a new friend every chance we're given, how many of us would ever feel completely alone again? How many people would live a little bit better, knowing that someone out there really cared about them? How hard would it really be to live in the age of friendship?

Published by Christine Senter

I've been writing online for the past 15 years. I've had several short stories and poems published on various sites and am currently working as a ghostwriter for several online bloggers.  View profile

4 Comments

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  • Christine Senter10/14/2006

    Absolutely, Xavier. Thanks for the comment and may you find friends around every corner.

  • Xavier Green10/13/2006

    Friends are our roots, and our canvas, our parachute, and the paints.

  • Christine Senter10/12/2006

    Thanks hon. I've always had a knack of making friends. One of my best friends is a little old man of about 80 yrs. old.

  • Michelle L. Devon10/10/2006

    I've often ponder how friends are made. I have met some people who just ended up 'falling' into friendship with them... and then there are other people I've met and spent a lot of time with, like them, but never really became friends with them. Thought provoking stuff.

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