Friday
Sponsor
Ex)
If Friend = someone you know who asks you for things, and uses you, and says mean things, and threatens you with things, guilt trips you, steals your stuff, loses their temper at you, etc. (with friends like these, who needs enemies?)
Ami = Someone you know who doesn’t do those things AND likes you, and enjoys spending time with you, etc. AND that you don’t do those things to them, either (because Ami don’t do those things to each other) AND you like them, enjoy spending time with them, etc.
Grand ami = Ami PLUS this that and the other.
Don’t try to define what Ami feels like, if you haven’t had it. It’s something you come to learn what it looks like, and feels like, by doing it. In some ways it will feel the same to other relationships, in some ways it will feel very different. Because it’s its own thing, not a bouncing cat or huge mouse, you learn about it by doing it.
Ditto, don’t try to “force” Ami. If someone who might be an Ami starts acting like a “friend” by threatening you, stealing your stuff, asking for money, trying to sleep with you, only calling you when they want something, etc.? They’re not Ami. They just lost the right to be your Ami, by doing those things. They may still be your friend, if you choose to keep them in your life, but they are not your Ami.
Gradually, you’ll start having 2 groups of people in your social life... “Friends” and Ami... as you learn what really makes people Ami. What you want in an Ami. And how to be a good Ami, yourself.
If Friend = someone you know who asks you for things, and uses you, and says mean things, and threatens you with things, guilt trips you, steals your stuff, loses their temper at you, etc. (with friends like these, who needs enemies?)
Ami = Someone you know who doesn’t do those things AND likes you, and enjoys spending time with you, etc. AND that you don’t do those things to them, either (because Ami don’t do those things to each other) AND you like them, enjoy spending time with them, etc.
Grand ami = Ami PLUS this that and the other.
Don’t try to define what Ami feels like, if you haven’t had it. It’s something you come to learn what it looks like, and feels like, by doing it. In some ways it will feel the same to other relationships, in some ways it will feel very different. Because it’s its own thing, not a bouncing cat or huge mouse, you learn about it by doing it.
Ditto, don’t try to “force” Ami. If someone who might be an Ami starts acting like a “friend” by threatening you, stealing your stuff, asking for money, trying to sleep with you, only calling you when they want something, etc.? They’re not Ami. They just lost the right to be your Ami, by doing those things. They may still be your friend, if you choose to keep them in your life, but they are not your Ami.
Gradually, you’ll start having 2 groups of people in your social life... “Friends” and Ami... as you learn what really makes people Ami. What you want in an Ami. And how to be a good Ami, yourself.
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