Friendship requires heart and an element of art. This is not a lecture, but a realization from experience. In treating a friend, regardless of gender, one should avoid being overly intense, lest the other feels suffocated by the attention, yet also avoid being too indifferent.
In this colorful world, no one is an island; everyone has friends. Although differences in gender, age, education, and profession exist as unchangeable realities, true friendship should be based on equality and mutual respect.
When friendship meets love, love asks, "Since I am here, why do you need to exist?" Friendship smiles and replies, "Love may cause tears, but friendship exists to help wipe them away." A friend is someone who worries for you, cares for you, keeps you in thought, and strives to bring a smile to your face.
Familial love is depth, friendship is breadth, and romantic love is purity. Familial love is sunshine—unconditional and selfless; friendship is a vast shore where one can rest peacefully; and romantic love is a mysterious, boundless radiance that illuminates the soul.
The greatest sorrow of friendship is when you consider someone your best friend, but they do not feel the same about you.
Friendship is like fine wine; in a rush, it only quenches thirst, but when savored slowly, its true richness is revealed.
Friendship is the two figures under an umbrella, the shared glances over a desk; it is a small flower in the soil of ideals, and a harmonious note in a grand symphony.
Friendship requires a blend of various rare and precious qualities in perfect harmony. As a poet once said, "It is the matching of souls, a conversation between natures."