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Do I call you friend ?

I used to believe friendship

was a fire that learned endurance,

something older than distance,

older than years that gather cobwebs

inside forgotten school photographs.

 

We were boys once,

stitched together by scraped knees,

cheap laughter, thick and thin

borrowed cigarettes behind spaza walls, dreams too large for our pockets.

 

We carried each other through funerals,

through first loves,

through nights where the electricity died and the moon became our television.

 

Back then

friend meant

“I know your silence.”

It meant

“I’ll sit beside you in the dark.”

 

And maybe that still exists somewhere,

buried beneath the Social Media

and the marketplace of personalities.

 

Because now the word friend

feels strangely transactional,

like a receipt folded into a handshake,

what can they do for me today ?

 

People say,

“That’s my friend

look what he bought me.”

Or,

“She’s my friend

she always helps me out.”

 

As though friendship

must arrive carrying groceries,

money,

opportunity,

connections,

a ladder to somewhere higher.

 

What happened to the old kind?

The kind with no invoice attached.

The kind where mutual gain

wasn’t material

but spiritual

two people standing on the beach

fishing rod in hand watching the sunset

nodding and being part of a moment

two tired minds

keeping each other alive

through ordinary existence

or that moronic joke.

 

Life separates us slowly.

Some became fathers,

Husbands

Some disappeared into jobs

that swallowed their names whole.

Some drowned quietly in survival,

So many I know didn't make it

Just a memory.

 

And I always believed

real friendship survives absence,

that when you see someone

you call friend

time doesn't matter.

 

That if two people shared enough sunsets,

enough jokes,

enough wounds,

they could meet again after ten years

and continue the sentence

without rereading the paragraph.

 

But the funny truth is this:

 

sometimes people keep you close

only while you are struggling.

 

They keep your number.

Keep you on social media.

Watch silently from behind glowing screens

while you drag yourself uphill

through another exhausted year.

 

Not out of love

or a positive word

but because your struggle

makes their own feel balanced.

 

And then one day

you begin building something,

years of silent sacrifice.

 

A dream starts breathing.

Light touches your direction.

Your voice grows stronger.

You begin walking toward something

you once whispered about becoming.

 

Suddenly the watchers vanish,

and

silence becomes deliberate.

 

As though another human being

escaping despair

is an unbearable mirror

to those still negotiating with their own.

 

I spoke to someone recently

after nearly twenty years apart,

we were the best of friends.

 

I apologized first.

Said,

“I should’ve been a better friend.”

sorry I didn't reach out sooner.

 

And while the guilt was still warm in my mouth,

the first reply arrived:

 

“Can you loan me money?”

 

Not

“How have you survived?”

Not

“Are you happy?”

Not

“Hows the family?”

 

Just a transaction

wearing the mask of reunion,

and the only one who feels guilty is me.

 

And the strange part is

I still tried to understand it.

Because life is cruel sometimes.

Because people become desperate.

Because survival can empty the spirit

until every conversation

sounds like hunger.

 

But still I wonder , how could I have been so wrong about my concept of friend.

 

why has it become so difficult

to celebrate each other?

 

Why do some people only love you

when your light is dim enough

not to expose their own fears?

 

Why can’t friendship simply be:

 

“I see your joy

and it gives me hope.”

or

I'm glad you reached out

I've been meaning to myself.

 

Why can’t we stand beside one another

without secretly measuring

what can be extracted,

borrowed,

used,

gained?

 

or find some happiness in someone's struggle.

 

 

Maybe real friendship

has become rare earth.

Something buried deep beneath myth,

the lockness monster,

beneath envy,

beneath the economics of modern loneliness.

 

But I still believe it exists

even as the names in my telephone book grow fewer,

I have to.

 

Perhaps there are People who stay

even when there is nothing to gain

except conversation,

memory,

and the sacred comfort

of being known.

 

And perhaps that is the final funny truth:

 

the older we grow,

the less friendship becomes about proximity,

and the more it becomes about sincerity.

 

Not who watched your struggle.

Not who appeared for your success.

But who remained your rock

through both.

 

and to the rest - I wish them fairwell !

Request permission to use this poem
Written by
MalcolmG
M
Published
May 8
Lines·Words
163·736
Notes

08 May 2026

Thoughts about thoughts

 

https://youtu.be/vtq_B0A8XqI?si=JySQ3O7YCGJejNl6

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