Tag Archive for: Internet

What Makes a Friend?


Friends used to be people you grew up with or worked with or
lived next door to, and of course, they still are. But friends are now also
people who live across the country from you whom you never worked with or went
to school with or even physically met. The internet has changed our lives in
that way, connecting us closely to people we never would have met in the old
days.

Some of my closest friends are people I only have a chance
to see once a year or so at a national conference. Still, we are in touch all
year long, and we give each other all kinds of support and real old-fashioned,
loyal friendship through the internet. Some of my good friends are people I
have never had the chance to meet in the flesh. We’ve done projects together,
set up funds for good causes together, carried each other’s sadness during hard
times, and confided secrets to each other, but our hands have never actually
touched.

I think this is one of the big changes that the internet
brought us—this kind of intimacy with someone 
we may never have the chance to meet physically. Yet is it so strange?
People are marrying people they meet online and building successful marriages
and families with them, so why wouldn’t we build strong, important friendships
that way also.

I’ve been thinking about this because a dear friend (whom I’ve
never physically met) is going through a tough time as her husband’s cancer has
come back and she has her own severe physical health issues. We have been there
for each other through deaths, surgeries, disability, and various cancers. She
has certainly been there for me, and I am trying to be there for her. Given her
situation and mine, we may never actually meet in person, though we have spoken
by phone, as well as Facebook, Twitter, and emails.

I suddenly find myself working on an anthology of poetry for
a great cause with a friend I’ve never met in the flesh, although we laugh
about the many things we have in common and wonder if we’re sisters somehow
separated—couldn’t be twins because I’m much older. Next month, I’m going to
stay with a friend whom I have met in person at a conference after making our
acquaintance by the internet—and keeping in touch the same way. We’ve become
closer and closer friends, even though we see each other once a year or less
often.

Each of these three women are people I count as dear
friends, closer than many people who live near me and whom I see often. They
are heart friends. I have some deep heart friends whom I’ve known for many
decades and see often, and then I have these deep heart friends whom I almost
never see. Neither category of heart friend is closer or more valued than the
other. It’s rare enough to make that kind of connection so I value it wherever I
find it.

So here’s to good, close friends, whether we’ve known them
forever and see them often or we’ve only met online. A sympathetic soul and a
heart connection are what matter when it comes to friendship, after all.

Do you have heart friends whom you’ve never or seldom seen
in the flesh? How do you think the internet is changing friendship?

Linda Rodriguez’s third novel featuring Cherokee detective Skeet
Bannion, Every Hidden Fear, was a
selection of the Las Comadres National Latino Book Club and received a 2014
ArtsKC Fund Inspiration Award. Her second Skeet mystery, Every Broken Trust, was a selection of Las Comadres National Latino
Book Club and a finalist for the Premio Aztlan, took 2nd Place in
the International Latino Book Award, and was selected for Latino Books into
Movies. Her first Skeet novel, Every Last
Secret,
won the Malice Domestic Best First Traditional Mystery Novel
Competition, International Latino Book Award Honorable Mention, and was a
Barnes & Noble mystery pick.

Her short story, “The Good Neighbor,” which appeared in Kansas City Noir (Akashic Books), has
been optioned for film. For her books of poetry, Skin Hunger and Heart’s
Migration
, Rodriguez received numerous awards and fellowship, including the
Thorpe Menn Award for literary excellence, the Midwest Voices and Visions
Award, the Elvira Cordero Cisneros Award, the 2011 ArtsKC Fund Inspiration
Award, and Ragdale and Macondo fellowships. She is chair of the AWP
Indigenous/Aboriginal American Writers Caucus, immediate past president of the
Borders Crimes chapter of Sisters in Crime, founding board member of Latino
Writers Collective and The Writers Place, and a member of Wordcraft Circle of
Native American Writers and Storytellers, Kansas City Cherokee Community, and
International Thriller Writers. Find her at http://lindarodriguezwrites.blogspot.com.

 

Define Cheating

Good heavens. What is the world coming to when I’m quoting Hugh Hefner?

“When you get married, you make a commitment. I had a lot of girlfriends, but it’s not the same as cheating. I don’t cheat. I am very open about what I do . . . I think that when you are in a relationship, you should be honest. The real immorality of infidelity is the lying.”

You know, he’s right and I sort of feel like I need to go take a shower, having admitted that. Although to be fair, I used to snicker when I would hear how guys read Playboy for the articles. But now that I’m doing a Young Adult biography of a celebrity, some of the best insights I’ve found on this movie star have been in a couple of interviews he gave to Playboy. Hmmm. Don’t judge a magazine by its centerfold?

Anyway, to go back to Hugh’s comments about honesty in a relationship, I think he’s zeroed in on a critical issue. So much of a strong marriage is based on a fundamental trust between the two partners. I don’t care what the rules of a relationship may be, as long as both partners willingly buy into them. Personally I don’t understand the appeal of “open marriages,” but if two consenting adults want to live that way, then it’s none of my business.

But what is never okay is when one partner unilaterally changes the rules that both have agreed to live by. Pardon the earthquake analogy, but surely infidelity is considered pretty high on the relationship Richter scale. Once you shake up the foundation, it’s possible that the “house” can stand, but you sure would want to bring in a contractor (or in this case, a marriage counselor) to work on the cracks that have inevitably been opened up.

Now I’ve got a question for the Stiletto Faithful. Do you consider it cheating if there isn’t any contact between the two people? Is internet flirting a form of cheating? For me, infidelity doesn’t have to have a physical component. In fact, the idea of emotional cheating sounds more destructive. But what do you think?

Marian aka the Northern half of Evelyn David

Murder Off the Books by Evelyn David
Murder Takes the Cake by Evelyn David
http://www.evelyndavid.com/