English, asked by Sakshigoyal7482, 1 year ago

emotional essay on friendship.....
atleast 2

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
9
Friends bind people in a bond of love, mutual trust, understanding and loyalty.

Friendship is a relationship which involves mutual self respect, trust, loyalty and affection. Good friends enjoy each others company, share the same interests and are loyal to each other.

A friend is some one, who stands by our, even during difficult times. It requires honesty and mutual understanding md has to be nurtured with devotion and patience.

Just as it takes patience grow a garden, in friendship, too, first a seed is planted and then it has to le taken care of, nourished and watered, daily. One has to tend it with love and care.

Friendship is Man’s emotional and psychological necessity. You can share your feelings, frustrations and happiness with your friend. You can also depend upon your friend for keeping your trust.

A true friend never lets up down even under most threatening circumstances. He/she will never jet ray you even under pressure.

The importance of friendship cannot be undermined because we cannot survive without good friends. It is a very important relationship in the emotional life of every human being. A friend, who supports him only when it is convenient, is called a “Fair-weather-Friend”.

The one, who supports his friends, through emotional difficulties, is a “True Friend”. He is ready to make sacrifices in order to help his friend. A true friend is some one, whom you [know will be there for you, whenever you need him.

Friendship is a necessary part of every human’s life as none of us is self sufficient. A friend is a trust-worthy companion who cherishes special moments and memories of life with another person.

A good friend plays an active part in his friend’s life. He is happy when his friend is happy. He feels achieved with his friend’s accomplishments. They share affection, which fills them with positive energy, they spend time thinking of their friends, of who is important for them and how to find ways to help them.


Friendship requires devoting time and patience. There can bal disagreements and quarrels also, which is natural, but one must have till patience to deal with such frustrations. Being reasonable, a forgiving nature! Willingness to compromise when one can and persistence to rebuild friends are needed for a true and lasting relationship.

True friendship cannot flourish! Without a give and take attitude the more the efforts put into it, the morel will lead towards everlasting happiness and trust. Friendship also helps in molding the kind of person you are.

Never rush to make friends because friendship needs a good foundation. We must accept our friend as he is. The essence of friendship is sincerity and giving one’s self to your friend without thinking of getting anything in return. At times, when we meet new and interesting people,! Our loyalty changes and old friends are forgotten. A lesson to be learnt, “Do not forget old friends while making new ones.”


Anonymous: u r wlcm
Sakshigoyal7482: mention not
Anonymous: it's my pleasure
Answered by jap8
4
Making friends growing up was easy. You have things in common with your classmates and you eventually get to know each other, but once you enter the post-college world that effortless connection isn't always so easy. In fact, after I had my daughter in 2007 I started becoming more distant with my contemporaries. Everyone was going through a major life change—getting married, changing jobs, moving across the country, having kids.How are 30 and 40-somethings expected to stay close when our lives are changing so drastically at the same time? It turns out that we typically drift apart, and after years of drifting I realized how truly starved I was for a friendship. I felt isolated in my stay-at-home mom life, but then in the spring of 2013 I met Edythe, and that isolated feeling vanished forever.


Edythe and I met when we sat next to each other on the first day of a Mandarin class we'd both enrolled in at the local library, and at first glance you would assume we have nothing in common—mainly because at the time she was 83 and I was 41. The thought of having a close friend twice my age had never crossed my mind, but Edythe and I just clicked. I've always considered a good friend to be a good listener and someone who genuinely cares to know how you're doing and Edythe was both of those things. 
Early on in our friendship she and I began to see each other far more than twice a week at Mandarin class. We would see each other at library and community events and chat on the phone, and for the first time since my daughter was born we were having conversations that didn't involved motherhood. She and I never ran out of things to talk about – our love of reading, for one - and she quickly became a role model for me. 
Edythe had already experienced life's successes and failures, but she still had a confidence about her that made her easy to trust, and I very much did. One day after class I began to confide in Edythe my frustrations about my new position as head of the PTA at my daughter's school. I was hopeful at the prospect of making my daughter's school a better place, but I had no experience leading a group and had no idea what I was doing, and Edythe listened to my concerns. Instead of jumping into a whirlwind of advice, she told me about a time that she'd also jumped into something headfirst with no experience. 
Years before, Edythe became frustrated with her apartment's management company, so she rallied other tenants of the building to ditch the company and helped turn her building into a co-op. Suddenly, she was serving on the board and had to learn first-hand how to manage a crisis like a broken boiler in the middle of the night, but Edythe told me that even though it was a new situation, she thrived because she wanted it to be successful. Her gentle reminder helped me realize that you have to find something you're passionate about if you want to make a difference, and after our conversation I threw myself into making the PTA something I could be proud of. 
My daughter was a terrible eater from birth and I knew I couldn't be the only parent at this school with a picky eater. In my research I found a free 8-week nutrition program that could be brought to schools. They would set up a class, provide new recipes, and allow parents to learn to prepare food for the pickiest of eaters. It was slow going at first, but each week more and more parents would show up to try new recipes with their kids. What had begun as a way for me to help my child grew into something bigger, and through this workshop I found three active parents who would later help me turn around the PTA. 


I owe a lot to Edythe. Thanks to her I now have a supportive circle of friends as a volunteer at our library. I now know that I don't have to fix everything, and I know that sometimes silence is severely underrated, but perhaps the most important thing I've learned from her is that friendships are a very precious gift at any age. 
 
Similar questions