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friendship should be one of the high points of existence
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and yet it's also the most routinely disappointing thing we have to deal with.
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Too often you're at supper at someone's house,
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there's an impressive spread and the hosts have evidently gone to a lot of trouble.
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But the conversation is meandering and
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devoid of any real interest it flits
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from an overlong description of the
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failings of the in-flight service on a
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particular airline to a strangely heated
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discussion about the tax code. The
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intentions of the hosts are hugely
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touching, but as so often we go home
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wondering what on earth the whole
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performance was really about. The key to
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the problem of friendship is to be found
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in an odd sounding place: a lack of a
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sense of purpose. Our attempts at
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friendship tend to go adrift because we
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collectively resist the task of
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developing a clear picture of what
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friendship might really be for.
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The problem is that we're unfairly
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uncomfortable with the idea of
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friendship having any declared purpose,
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because we associate purpose with the
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least attractive and most cynical of
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motives. Yet purpose doesn't have to ruin
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friendship and in fact the more we
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define what a friendship might be for
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the more we can focus in on what we
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should be doing with every person in our
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lives, or indeed the more we can
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helpfully conclude that we shouldn't be
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with them at all.
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There are at least four things we might
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be trying to do with the people we know.
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Firstly, networking. It's an unfairly
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maligned idea. We're small, fragile
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creatures in a vast world. Our individual
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capacities are entirely insufficient to
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realize the demands of our imaginations.
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So of course we need collaborators,
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accomplices who can align their
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abilities and energies with ours.
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This idea of friendship was given a lot
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of space in classical literature.
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Take the Argonauts, the legendary ancient
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Greek tale, which traced how a heroic
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captain called Jason networked in order to
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assemble a band of friends to sail on
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the Arkham, in search of the Golden
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Fleece. Later, the same idea emerged when
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Jesus networked, to put together a band of
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twelve disciples with whom he could
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spread one or two world-changing ideas
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about forgiveness and compassion. Rather
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than diminish our own efforts as we hand
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out our business cards, such prestigious
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examples can show how elevated an
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ambitious networking friendships could
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ideally be. Secondly, reassurance. The
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human condition is full of terror. We're
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always on the verge of disgrace, danger
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and disappointment and yet, such are the
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rules of polite conduct that we're
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permanently in danger of imagining that
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we are the only ones to be as crazy as
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we know we are. We badly need friends
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because with the people we know only
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superficially, there are few
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confessions of sexual compulsion or of
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regret, rage and confusion. These
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superficial acquaintances refuse to
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admit that they, too, are going slightly
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out of their minds. Yet the reassuring
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true friend gives us access to a very
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necessary and accurate sense of their
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own humiliations and follies, insights
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with which we can begin to judge
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ourselves and our sad and compulsive
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lives slightly more compassionately.
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Thirdly, fun. Despite talk of hedonism and
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immediate gratification, life gives us
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constant lessons in the need to be
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serious.
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We have to guard our dignity, avoid
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looking like a fool and pass as a mature
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adult. The pressure can become onerous
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and in the end even dangerous. That's why
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we constantly need access to people we
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can trust enough to be silly with them.
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They might most of the time be training
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to be a neurosurgeon or advising middle
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sized companies about their tax
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liabilities, but when we're together we
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can be therapeutically daft. We can put
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on accents, share lewd fantasies or doodle
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on the newspaper, adding a huge nose and
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a missing front tooth to the President
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or giving the fashion model distended
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ears and masses of
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curly hair. The fun friend solves the
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problem of shame around important but
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unprestigious sides of ourselves.
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Fourthly, clarifying our minds. To a
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surprising degree it's very hard to
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think on our own.
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The mind is skittish and squeamish. As a
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result, many issues lie confused within
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us. We feel angry but are not sure why.
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Something is wrong with our job but we
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can't pin it down. The thinking friend
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holds us to the task. They ask gentle
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but probing questions which act as a
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mirror that assist us with the task of
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knowing ourselves. One side effect of
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getting a bit more precise about what
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we're trying to do with our social lives,
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is that we're likely to conclude that in
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many cases, we're spending time with
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people for no truly identifiable good
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reason. These proto friends share none of
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our professional ambitions or interests,
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they aren't reassuring and may indeed be
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secretly really very excited by the
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possibility of failure. We can't be
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catharticly silly around them and they
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aren't the least bit interested in
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furthering our or their path to self
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knowledge. They are, like so many of the
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people in our social lives, simply in our
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orbit as a result of some unhappy
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accident that we've been too sentimental
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to correct. We should dare to be a little
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ruthless in this area. Culling
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acquaintances isn't a sign that we've
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lost belief in friendship, it's evidence
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that we're starting to get clearer and
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therefore more demanding about what a
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friendship could really be. In the best
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way the price of knowing what friendship
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is for may be a few more evenings at home
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in our own company