WHO IS OUR TRUE FRIEND (part 2)?
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Marks of a True Friend
An ancient text says: "One who stands
by you in times of famine, political revolution, and in the court of law is a true
friend." True friendship is utterly selfless. Such friendship has four aspects:
responsibility, care, respect, and knowledge. Friendship is an expression of intimacy
between two human beings that honors and leaves the freedom of each intact. To love a
person implies caring and feeling responsible for his life - not just his physical
existence but his total well-being. The need for care and responsibility denotes that
friendship is an activity, not a passion. Responsibility is not a duty imposed upon one
from outside but a response from within. Responsibility and response have the same root: respondere,
that is, to answer, to be ready to respond, to promise in return. Without respect for and
knowledge of the loved person, love deteriorates into domination and possessiveness.
Respect is not fear and awe. In keeping with the root of the word respicere, that
is, to look at, it denotes the ability to see and know a person as he or she is, to be
aware of his or her individuality and uniqueness.
True friendship is marked by mutual
tolerance - tolerance that is loving, not grudging. Tolerance is the positive effort to
understand another's beliefs, practices, and habits without necessarily sharing or
accepting them. Voltaire's dictum, "I do not agree with a word that you say, but I'll
defend to the death your right to say it," is for all ages and places the perfect
utterance of the ideal of tolerance. We often force our friends to conform to our
convictions and we thus violate the rights of others. In true friendship there is no place
for fear. Fear comes when there is a selfish motive, in the presence of which no true
friendship can grow. A true friend will always trust you. You won't have to prove yourself
to him in order to hold his loyal friendship. A true friend will never say anything behind
your back that he would not say to you in person. The law of friendship tells us that true
friendship cannot be taken for granted. It is like a plant that requires nurturing and
caring, without which it withers and dies. The saint-poet Bhartrihari warns us: "A
king is brought to ruin by evil counselors; an ascetic by moving in society; a child by
being spoilt; a priest by not studying the sacred writings; a family by the wicked
behaviour of children; good manners by bad habits; modesty by strong drink; agriculture by
neglect; affection by absence from one's household; friendship by want of love;
possessions by careless management; and money by waste and prodigality." ( To be
continued )
- Swami Adiswarananda
Spiritual
Leader
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