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A question that came out of a discussion about on-line friends.

How many of your best friends are online only?


I value the entire online experience; it gets me thinking. It (often) makes me laugh,. I enjoy the kibitzing, and the ideas, that come from an environment in which both like minds and very unlike minds can meet, clash, and discuss. I value the sense of familiarity, the sense of community; you can certainly fit more people on a blog or an LJ board than you can in a room, and time becomes less critical in some ways -- if I'm suffering a bout of insomnia, the information is still there, and I can still respond to it, partaking in the discussion.

Discussions like these kept me sane when I first became a parent, because phone calls were impossible without interruption, and face it, baby screaming in your ear is not something you can ignore for more than about ten seconds, most of which are spent apologizing and getting off the phone.

But.

In a discussion with another online LJ denizen, something that struck me as odd came up: She said that many of her closest friends were people she'd never met or spoken to; that she couldn't actually put a voice to their online names or identities.

This made me pause. None of my best friends are online only. This doesn't mean that I don't value online friendships, but at some point, they cross the real world boundary in some less public way -- they almost have to.

Many of the friendships I value started in online venues (GEnie, for instance, but also in extended email interchanges), but developed over time with use of the phone and in-person meetings. I'm not entirely comfortable with the online-only version of friendship because what we present of ourselves -- both good and bad -- can often be so selective, we can't convey the whole picture. Nor can we derive the whole picture from another's selective information. We each come from different cultural contexts, and the way we use language -- to let off steam, for instance -- or the way we invoke privacy, are bound to be misunderstood by people who are completely reasonable, from their own cultural context. Or even just a different age; I cannot imagine what a conversation between my fifteen year old self and my forty year old self would be like, if it existed at all..

This may be some inherent flaw in the way I socialize. Or it could be my age.

So. Curious.

Yes...

Date: 2005-02-23 11:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ally-in-canada.livejournal.com
I know I'm coming into this conversation a little late. However, I have to say that while most of my e-mail and IMing are related to my family (far-flung and no one close by), I have made at least 2 very close friends on-line, one of whom I have met only once, but with whom I exchange e-mails two to three times a day.

You see, after I got pregnant with my 2nd child, I got involved in a pregnancy board, with women all expecting a child the same month as me. Oddly enough, through various flame wars and group permutations, I am still involved with a core group of about 20 women. We write pretty much daily, about all the little things in life. In the olden days of my mother's generation, maybe I'd be on the phone all day long with my gal pals, but instead, I exchange e-mails. From this group, I have become particularly good friends with two of the ladies. One, who lives in Quebec, has probably moved beyond whatever is defined as on-line friend, since we visit about 2 or 3 times a year, and have vacationed at each others houses. Another, who lives in the states, I've only met once, but she is now probably one of my closest friends.

So yes, you in my opinion you can make friends on-line. And to come back to the question, I'd say I have one best friend who is on-line only. I'm not one to use the phrase lightly either! Besides my spouse, I'd say I don't have any "best friends" IRL, at least not here. All my "best friends" are from university, and mostly, we keep in touch with e-mail.

-Ally (wife of Ted. You know Ted)

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Michelle Sagara

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