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Friends Are Precious Gifts by Daniel O'Rourke; and 2)


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2) Jesus said, 'I call you friends,' but not on Facebook by Eugene Cullen Kennedy

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1) Friends Are Precious Gifts

By Daniel O'Rourke

Comedian Lily Tomlin said, “Remember we are all in this alone,” but she was wrong. We are not in this alone; we are not in life alone. If we’re lucky we have friends to help and support us as we face the ups and downs, the joys and sadness of life.

The most important decisions we make in life are the choices of our friends. As the priest psychiatrist Henri Nouwen tells us, “It is not without reason that parents are very concerned about who their children bring home as playmates, friends, or lovers.They know that much of their children’s happiness will depend on those they choose to be close to.”

Real friends, however, are not as numerous as they seem. Sister Joan Chittister tells us, “Count your friends one at a time. When the number gets past five, count again. You’ve gone too high.”

Friends are not acquaintances, associates, co-workers or colleagues. We might occasionaly find a friend among them, but friends are something different. With friends we are completely at ease. Instinctively we can bare our souls to them. Friends increase every joy and make every sorrow bearable. They are the ones we go to for advice. They are whom we want to be with. They are extensions of ourselves.

That’s why Facebook friends aren’t friends at all. Someone told me recently about her son in a distant city who had over two hundred “friends” on Facebook. He needed someone to drive him to the hospital for surgery. Not one of those Facebook “friends” could help him. He was forced to take a taxi.

Friendship does not mean that friends have to agree on everything. Real friends are able to recognize honest differences even on important issues but love their friends anyway. Friends, moreover, will not be friends for very long, if they can’t forgive each other’s failings. For our friends, like us, are imperfect and flawed. We must forgive them for being human.

We have to work on friendship. Friendships will die if we don’t. Regular phone calls are helpful. Meetings for coffee, lunch and conversation are better. One way or the other though, we must keep our friendships in repair.

Some will say, I don’t have any friends. How can I make some? On this Dale Carnegie has excellent advice. “You can make more friends in two months by becoming interested it other people than you can in two years by trying to get people interested in you.”

Friends are good listeners. They are not judgmental. They are not quick with advice. Dinah Craik, the 19th Century English novelist in the poetic language of her day say it well. “Oh the comfort, the inexpressible comfort, of feeling safe with a person; having neither to weigh thoughts nor measure words, but to pour them all out just as they are, chaff and grain together, knowing that a faithful hand will take and sift them, keep what is worth keeping and then with the breathe of kindness blow the rest away.”

Friends, moreover, can influence each other. We absorb the good qualties of our friends just by being with them. They can make us stronger, calmer, better human beings. On the other hand, if persons make us fearful, anxious and agitated, they are not friends at all. They are just negative people and we should avoid them.

Friends are precious gifts. We should carefully cultivate and treasure them. They heighten life’s joys and lessen its sorrows.

Daniel O’Rourke lives in Cassadaga, New York. His column appears in the Observer, Dunkirk, NY on the second and fourth Thursday each month. A grandfather, Dan is a married Catholic priest. His new book, “The Living Spirit” is a collection of previous columns. To read about that book or send comments on this column visit his website
http://www.danielcorourke.com/

Reprinted from The Observer, Dunkirk, New York (July12/12).

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2) Jesus said, 'I call you friends,'  but not on Facebook

By Eugene Cullen Kennedy

Right now, someone -- frequently more than just one as these web dwellers gather like flash mobs at the farthest end of long chains of tenuous connections -- is planning to “friend” you on Facebook.

Who the hell are these people, one is tempted to ask, as you survey the “notifications” that this now dominant social network slips into your in-box concerning people who, even if they are located beyond the famous six degrees of separation in the human family, apparently know somebody who knows somebody who may know you, and now, want you to be their friend, excuse me, to “friend” you.

This may be the closest thing to a drunken stranger at a cocktail party insisting that you go out afterward for another drink together, “Whatsa matter, you don’t like me or something?”

You may be able to get rid of the stranger at the cocktail party but there is no way to fend off forever the strangers seeking to “friend” you on Facebook for the latter Internet monster is as relentless as the IRS in telling you that “You have notifications pending.”

“Oh, call it,” if we may apply the ancient Zeno’s advice about friendship, “by some better name, for ‘to friend’ seems too cold.”

Indeed, the devaluation of genuine friendship and the unexpected out-sourcing of sorrow are the principal by-products of what has now become a money making enterprise, correction, an enterprise trying desperately to make money.

But what could be more real in contemporary history than Facebook? After all, a movie has already been made about it, and if this basically unreal phenomenon is turned into a reality TV show, it will be stamped genuine and be invested with secular immortality.

In almost every language but ours, it is clear that the word friend comes from the word meaning love, as in the French ami from the Latin, amare, to love. Not often recognized is the prefix pri-, that is found in other sacred words, such as freedom, that means “to make a safe place for those you love.” That is why family members feel free under the same roof with each other.

There is an echo of freedom in friend, as there is in Friday, the day of Venus, the day, therefore, of love. Friendship is something whose depth fits human aspirations and fulfills human possibilities. It has heft to it, as a gold-piece does and a gambling chip does not.

There is Mystery in Friendship and people speak of it as something that gives them life and that is worth dying for. It is the prerequisite for intimacy for, as Henry Adams wrote, “Intimates are predestined,” and, if you surrender your intimacy indiscriminately, you will never feel the wonder of friendship or the magic of true love.

Only recently have there been reports of the side-effects of the open range pseudo-intimacy of Facebook exchanges. Facebook may not only propapagate cyber-loneliness but exacerbate the pain of loss that estranged family members feel when they hear only indirectly, through a third-party posting, news of a child or parent with whom they have not spoken in years.

In a recent story in The New York Times (6/15/12) psychologist Joshua Coleman says, “I frequently hear, ‘I just learned from somebody else who read it on Facebook that my son just got married,’ or ‘My daughter just had a child, and I didn’t even know she was pregnant.’ These are events, he notes, that parents “assumed all their lives they’d be there for, then they hear in a very public third hand-way about it, and it adds a level of hurt and humiliation.”

If you have seen the movie about the founding of Facebook you might have the impression that its inventors seemed more like children than adults. But we read about children every day who have caused serious accidents by playing with things, like loaded guns and matches, whose destructive potential they are not mature enough to understand. If war is too serious to be left to generals then love and friendship are too serious to be left to the children who did not grasp that they were outsourcing sorrow in a way never done before in a world that already has more pain than it can manage.

Reprinted from National Catholic Reporter online (July 19/12).


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