One of my bestfriends is a Jesus freak and believes in creationism
ROOOFFFLLLLLLLLLLLLL![]()
They way we deal with it is we just don't talk about religion.![]()
Depends on whether it's a simple, rational disagreement, or whether one of the persons is certifiably insane.
In case you don't know, you're the crazy one.
One of my bestfriends is a Jesus freak and believes in creationism
ROOOFFFLLLLLLLLLLLLL![]()
They way we deal with it is we just don't talk about religion.![]()
That isn't all that uncommon. Being a younger version of Carrie White's mother, is.
Sure, unless they're a Laker fan.
I have a friend that looks like this (see pic) and he loves Radiohead. Our Last.fm profile says that we are not compatible. Long story short, in spite of our differences we are now currently engaged.
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Last edited by Dinamita; 03-25-2010 at 06:48 PM.
I thought this was a friends with benefits thread...
Yes BTW
yeah
i have friends who like the movie the life aquatic, trust me
This is really more what I was referring to. I still really care about my single girlfriends and vice versa. But I almost feel like we are living in different worlds now. I feel like I am not as relevent to them now since my two closest friends are career women and very successful at it.
So my writer friend is busy with an impressive internship. My best friend works for an accounting firm. And my greatest joy yesterday was finding this amazing slip cover that transformed our comfty but ugly couch into something beautiful that coordinates wonderfully with the rest of our furniture.
So imagine this conversation.
Writer friend: I just finished interviewing Tommy Lee Jones.
Accountant Friend: I just completed this complicated tax return for a major client.
Me: I just found a slipcover!
My friends are great and so would actually care about the fact that I fixed my couch. So it is not that I feel inferior but rather I am sensible about how very different our worlds and focuses are now.
So in that sense, I was pondering... since I am going to be primarily a homemaker... will I ever be close friends with a career woman? Or will I always feel most comfortable around fellow stay-at-home wives/ moms. Would a career woman enjoy a friendship with me. Will there come a point in my life where I will be so far removed from the workplace that I can not longer relate to life there? And if so, how do I feel about that?
Will there come a point when my current friends feel I am no longer relevent to them?
I don't expect these questions to be answered quickly or maybe ever in an internet thread.
But, since this has been on my mind, I just wanted some more food for thought.
Ain't exactly great friends if what you do for work, or don't do, is the tie that binds the friendship.
Honestly, I don't give a rat's ass what my friends do at work or even if they have a job. Talking about work for more than 30 seconds is an instant convo killer and a good way for me not to talk to you anymore.
Nobody cares.
I have good friends who disagree with me on the most basic of issues, including religion and politics - the answer is "Yes".
My wife is a professor of Biochemistry. Although she would love to have friends who are homemakers - they generally shy away from her; not vice-versa. They DO seem to have some kind of complex/guilt/whatever - they find reason NOT to hang with her - even though they may actually share interests; sewing/crafts/etc....they are, IMO, intimidated.
Be careful, Angel, you might be the ones erecting walls.
After I got married, my friendships with my single girlfriends did change. I kept asking myself, "is it me"? who has changed, only to find out it was. I didn't have that extra time to spend with them so they felt neglected. Some friendships you can continue to have, some aren't fixable. You will soon find yourself hanging out with more married couples.
Don't get me wrong, I love my single girlfriends and I will always be there for them, we just don't hang out that often. Luckily for me, I work with my bestest closest friend.![]()
i think you have too much free time on your hands angel. you need to just live your life as you deem best and let the chips fall where they may and not worry so much, and not try to pinpoint everything and figure it all out. just put your faith in a higher power. your true friends will always be your true friends, no matter what.
Angel, relax, you are just going thru an adjustment periodYou've been marrried for only a few months, it's normal that right now your marriage and home is the focus of your life. Give yourself some time, you and Bo deserve this time to be just you 2 to solidify your relationship. It's only natural to lose a little touch with your single girlfriends, you are in a different place right now and you have different priorities. Just give yourself some time.
As far as the professional-career-woman to stay-at-home mom friendships, they are very common. I've been both, and they are both equally challenging and fulfilling. I have to wonder if maybe 101A may be looking at only one side of the situation in his belief that the homemakers shy away from his wife and feel guilty or inimidated around her. My personal experience has been that, in whichever role I've been in, if I reach out to someone with warmth and sincerity, they will respond, in spite of whatever role they have taken at that time. Once more, mutual respect is what will determine the outcome of the friendship.![]()
The people you care about and have relationships built primarily on care of the person regardless of anything will last. The people that you have relationships built primarily on common interests will dwindle.
Most of my friends have children. While several of my friends have had miscarriages, no one has had the death of a child as we have. After we lost Gabriel, I grew closer to half my friends and the other half are no longer my friends. It was pretty easy to see why - I had solid relationships built on things other than pregnancy and motherhood with the former and didn't really with the latter. When my life was so drastically changed, the common ground between us crumbled and so did our relationships.
If you want to, you'll be able to find ways to make new friends based on commonalities. Some of those may develop into something more. If you make an effort, some of the friendships you currently have may survive the adjustment period or be renewed when there is more in common.
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