Poll: How long do you keep friends?

Recommended Videos

Sampler

He who is not known
May 5, 2008
650
0
0
I'm good with computers so I'll always have friends who can call on me in their hour of need, seemingly even if I haven't seem them since high school (I'm nearly thirty) and I don't actually recall being pals with them then...
 

BehattedWanderer

Fell off the Alligator.
Jun 24, 2009
5,237
0
0
Depends on the friends. I've had some friends for more than 10 years, and I've had other friends that are just as important that I've known for two years. 7 years seems to be my average length of how long I've had my most name-dropped friends around, and have no intention of losing them.
 

Keela

New member
Aug 16, 2008
505
0
0
InnerRebellion said:
I lost most of my friends four years ago, and made new ones over the past two years... but now, having been diagnosed with split personality disorder, I'm starting to lose some of them as well.
I feel for you. As much impact as a few lines of text on the internet can console you, you've got my sympathies. Few personal problems are insurmountable, though, so do your best to soldier through. The internet (or this miniscule portion of it) lends you support.
 

DustyDrB

Made of ticky tacky
Jan 19, 2010
8,365
3
43
Well, I graduated college recently. Keeping in touch with friends as we all spread out and move forward in lives (some getting married, some already established in a career, others in grad school or working hard to get there) is very difficult. I've definitely lost more friends than I've kept.
 

Kenko

New member
Jul 25, 2010
1,098
0
0
Lifetime. But some people you meet along the way go seperate ways and its hard to maintain relationships like that.
 

Hippobatman

Resident Mario sprite
Jun 18, 2008
2,026
0
0
I'm in a group of friends I'm comfortable with, and I see no reason to why I should suddenly join a different.

I'm certain I will keep my closest friends around for as long as I'm sane, since they're not many. I have few genuinely close friends, and a lot of not-so-close friends that I only talk to now and then.
 

TheTim

New member
Jan 23, 2010
1,739
0
0
well i've never lost a friend that i've made, so i guess i keep them for lifetimes, even though im only 16
 

Keela

New member
Aug 16, 2008
505
0
0
The Man With the Soap said:
Keela said:
Well, I've been having some trouble maintaining a few friendships (that is, the only ones I've really tried to maintain).

My backstory: My dad was in the military for a very large portion of his life, and most of mine. Specifically, 10 or 11 of my 15 years alive. I've lived in seven states (USA! USA!), with 1-2 year intervals between most of them, on average. I've been in my current state, going to school in the same area for almost 5 years now, but because of my old habits and mindset, I've been moving between groups I've felt comfortable in constantly through the years. I'm starting to run out of groups to join, and my drifter-type lifestyle doesn't work so well in a long-term residency.

In short, I'm somewhat detached and... can't think of a term I like, so "not very close to" my friends will do. And what really blows is that many of my friends who I try to stick with seem to be blowing me off, but that's a bitching session I'll keep in reserve a while longer.

Am I weird? Does anyone else ever feel this way? Leave a story or two on your way out, if you'd like.
You tell your father that some random guy on the internet says thank you for what you do for all of us. (I make a habit of thanking a soldier in uniform whenever I see one, where ever I see one.)

On to the topic at hand, I keep friends for about one to two years. We always seem to just drift apart, but it never bothers me for some reason. Hopefully, I will develope some longer-lasting friendships when I join the Marines.
I wish you luck with your militarian conquests. Likewise, you have my support. As a random guy on the internet,



I salute you.
 

Jazzyjazz2323

New member
Jan 19, 2010
645
0
0
Well I only consider someone my friend if they continue talking to me after they've seen me drunk so far that's most of them.Though I don't have a lot of friends but those that I do have I'd do just about anything for them.
 

El Poncho

Techno Hippy will eat your soul!
May 21, 2009
5,890
0
0
Well since i've known my current friends for 5years I will have to go with that one.
 
Feb 7, 2009
1,071
0
0
Keela said:
The Man With the Soap said:
Keela said:
Well, I've been having some trouble maintaining a few friendships (that is, the only ones I've really tried to maintain).

My backstory: My dad was in the military for a very large portion of his life, and most of mine. Specifically, 10 or 11 of my 15 years alive. I've lived in seven states (USA! USA!), with 1-2 year intervals between most of them, on average. I've been in my current state, going to school in the same area for almost 5 years now, but because of my old habits and mindset, I've been moving between groups I've felt comfortable in constantly through the years. I'm starting to run out of groups to join, and my drifter-type lifestyle doesn't work so well in a long-term residency.

In short, I'm somewhat detached and... can't think of a term I like, so "not very close to" my friends will do. And what really blows is that many of my friends who I try to stick with seem to be blowing me off, but that's a bitching session I'll keep in reserve a while longer.

Am I weird? Does anyone else ever feel this way? Leave a story or two on your way out, if you'd like.
You tell your father that some random guy on the internet says thank you for what you do for all of us. (I make a habit of thanking a soldier in uniform whenever I see one, where ever I see one.)

On to the topic at hand, I keep friends for about one to two years. We always seem to just drift apart, but it never bothers me for some reason. Hopefully, I will develope some longer-lasting friendships when I join the Marines.
I wish you luck with your militarian conquests. Likewise, you have my support. As a random guy on the internet,



I salute you.
Thank you very much. I really mean that. I haven't recieved a lot of encouragement from most people on the subject, so the support means a lot (even if you are a random guy on the internet).
 

gl1koz3

New member
May 24, 2010
931
0
0
Hard to define what is a friend. For as much as possible, I'd keep them for lifetime. The rest can't quite be called "friends". People you know well, rather.
 

Underground Man

New member
Sep 20, 2010
228
0
0
I was also an army brat. I don't really have friends now, unless you include the cat. I mostly talk to my brother because he's my roommate, or sometimes internet folks, but I tend to go through those pretty quickly.

I'm a difficult person to get along with.
 

TheHecatomb

New member
May 7, 2008
528
0
0
My three closest friends have been around for 20, 9 and 8 years now. Then there's about 10 guys I'd rather call mates or buddies, which I've known for anywhere between 2-10 years. They're all lovely to hang out with, but it's not on a very regular basis. Sometimes I'll see 'em twice a week, sometimes I won't see them for a month or two. But that's mutually fine, everyone I hang out with knows exactly what they can expect from me and I know exactly how well I can count on them. And we all like to keep it that way.

Edit: Outside of that group I'm not particularly liked though. And I'll admit, if I don't know you and don't get an instant impression of wanting to know you I probably will be a prick to you. I don't really care about it, there's plenty of people I can count on, and I can honestly say I've been at the point where I really don't need anyone else around for a few years now. And it's great. :)
 

Keela

New member
Aug 16, 2008
505
0
0
The Man With the Soap said:
Keela said:
The Man With the Soap said:
Keela said:
Well, I've been having some trouble maintaining a few friendships (that is, the only ones I've really tried to maintain).

My backstory: My dad was in the military for a very large portion of his life, and most of mine. Specifically, 10 or 11 of my 15 years alive. I've lived in seven states (USA! USA!), with 1-2 year intervals between most of them, on average. I've been in my current state, going to school in the same area for almost 5 years now, but because of my old habits and mindset, I've been moving between groups I've felt comfortable in constantly through the years. I'm starting to run out of groups to join, and my drifter-type lifestyle doesn't work so well in a long-term residency.

In short, I'm somewhat detached and... can't think of a term I like, so "not very close to" my friends will do. And what really blows is that many of my friends who I try to stick with seem to be blowing me off, but that's a bitching session I'll keep in reserve a while longer.

Am I weird? Does anyone else ever feel this way? Leave a story or two on your way out, if you'd like.
You tell your father that some random guy on the internet says thank you for what you do for all of us. (I make a habit of thanking a soldier in uniform whenever I see one, where ever I see one.)

On to the topic at hand, I keep friends for about one to two years. We always seem to just drift apart, but it never bothers me for some reason. Hopefully, I will develope some longer-lasting friendships when I join the Marines.
I wish you luck with your militarian conquests. Likewise, you have my support. As a random guy on the internet,



I salute you.
Thank you very much. I really mean that. I haven't recieved a lot of encouragement from most people on the subject, so the support means a lot (even if you are a random guy on the internet).
If it's what you want to do, then it's what you want to do. If they just don't think it's the right choice: You know better than anyone else. If they are concerned about the dangers of being a grunt (If that is what you plan on doing): Better to die standing for a cause in a warzone than sitting miserably behind a desk.
 

Choppaduel

New member
Mar 20, 2009
1,071
0
0
Until they aren't willing to put effort into maintenance OR until they change their beliefs change in a significant way in which I find reprehensible.
 

InnerRebellion

New member
Mar 6, 2010
2,059
0
0
Keela said:
InnerRebellion said:
I lost most of my friends four years ago, and made new ones over the past two years... but now, having been diagnosed with split personality disorder, I'm starting to lose some of them as well.
I feel for you. As much impact as a few lines of text on the internet can console you, you've got my sympathies. Few personal problems are insurmountable, though, so do your best to soldier through. The internet (or this miniscule portion of it) lends you support.
Thanks mate. Luckily, it happens to only be a partial split, and I've been spending the past week learning to not repress the "other side" but to let the two merge, which is supposed to restore who I was before the split.
 

Zarmi

New member
Jul 16, 2010
227
0
0
Real friends, I keep for a lifetime. The others ain't friends, it's just people you know. "Friends is something you only got on one hand."