
Art of
friendship takes patience and practice
It's a favorite story my
father loved to tell.
A good friend joined him for
coffee at a local diner. "How many friends do you have?"
the friend asked, making the question mark a sharp
fish hook instead of a
simple mark of punctuation.
"Oh, I
don't know," Dad replied, attempting modesty rather than
confessing ignorance.
"Give me a number," the friend urged, draining his
coffee cup and signaling the waitress for more, acting
smug, like he knew the exact answer and my father
didn't.
"Ten, five, three?" the friend probed, using fingers for
visual aids.
"Oh, you know me better than that. I've got a lot of
friends," Dad defended.
"Seriously," the friend said, "how many real friends do
you have? I mean, people who relate to you because of
you, not because of your role or position or station in
life?"
The question hung there, Dad recalled, begging for
attention and thought. They both creamed and sugared
their fresh coffee in silence.
Finally, the friend concluded, "Most of us can count on
our fingers, one hand only, the number of real friends
who would be our friends regardless of our position in
life."
My father's friend has a point. Almost all of the people
who relate to us on a daily basis do so because of the
position or role we hold for them in life.
It takes time and energy to develop true friendships. In
fact, creating a good friendship can be considered an
art.
Although it is easy to develop acquaintances, it takes
an artist to keep the process going until a deep
friendship develops. Aristotle contended that "The
business of every art is to bring something into
existence, and the practice of an art involves studying
how to bring this something into existence."
Developing deep friendship is not easy because it is an
art, and no art comes quickly, easily or without study
or thought. Becoming an artist in any area requires
creativity, practice and patience. The art of friendship
demands these as well. There is no magic formula to
employ.
Many of us use recreational activities to deepen
friendships. Nothing beats 18 holes of golf or an
afternoon fishing to strengthen a friendship. Some reach
out to acquaintances through their children's
activities. Others join clubs or organizations.
Committee work creates a great way to get to know folks
personally.
My mother, an avid note-writer and master of keeping in
touch with her friends, faithfully transferred important
dates from her calendar each year reminding her of
birthdays, anniversaries and other special days in her
friends' lives. Her heartfelt notes nurtured many
acquaintances into becoming real friends.
Dad's friend was probably right. We have a few genuine
friends, but hundreds of friendly acquaintances.
Friendship takes time and energy, and limitations of
both prohibit cultivation of more than a few close,
genuine friends.
But, oh, aren't they worth all our investments?
So don't give up. Emerson gives comfort and courage:
"Every artist was first an amateur."


1/28/2007 The Herald-Dispatch