Consigliere on Nostr: šļø Once, a longtime friend asked me to help him out with money for mobile ...
šļø
Once, a longtime friend asked me to help him out with money for mobile credit. An emergency. He promised to pay it back on the 5th. Forty reais.
I didnāt hesitate. I didnāt even worry about whether, if the roles were reversed, heād do the same. I gave him the moneyāwhich meant Iād never hold it against him; whatever happened, Iād know if I had a friend worth more than gold.
On the 5th, the money was in my account.
By honoring small commitments, I understood that I could trust him with bigger ones.
So, my advice to you is: never give your trust completely.
Build it up slowly, so that trust has value and you donāt lose too much.
āNever test the depth of the water with both feet.ā
Finding out a friend is false in a moment of crisisāthatās reckless.
Therefore, pay close attention to the trivial things in day-to-day life, because, as the saying goes, the devil is in the details. That is: disloyalty, dishonesty, liesāthey donāt just appear in the moments of ruin in a friendship or relationship; theyāre right in front of you, in the lie your girlfriend tells her parents, in the underhanded moves your friend makes with his business partner. But you prefer to ignore it, because it hasnāt affected you yetāor worse, because it benefits you.
In my case, I figured 40 reais was a small price to pay to see if a friendās word had weight and value.
As Iāve seen happen before, since it wasnāt āa huge amount,ā some might say:
- āIāll pay it back later, I have bigger bills to coverā (and thereās never a smaller bill).
- āIf he asks, Iāll return itā (trying to win through forgetfulness or wearing them down).
Or, my personal favorite:
- āAsking for ten reais back? If youāre starving, just let me know.ā
Dishonesty knows no limits.
But itās up to us to show what happens when they cross the line of our kindness.
Once, a longtime friend asked me to help him out with money for mobile credit. An emergency. He promised to pay it back on the 5th. Forty reais.
I didnāt hesitate. I didnāt even worry about whether, if the roles were reversed, heād do the same. I gave him the moneyāwhich meant Iād never hold it against him; whatever happened, Iād know if I had a friend worth more than gold.
On the 5th, the money was in my account.
By honoring small commitments, I understood that I could trust him with bigger ones.
So, my advice to you is: never give your trust completely.
Build it up slowly, so that trust has value and you donāt lose too much.
āNever test the depth of the water with both feet.ā
Finding out a friend is false in a moment of crisisāthatās reckless.
Therefore, pay close attention to the trivial things in day-to-day life, because, as the saying goes, the devil is in the details. That is: disloyalty, dishonesty, liesāthey donāt just appear in the moments of ruin in a friendship or relationship; theyāre right in front of you, in the lie your girlfriend tells her parents, in the underhanded moves your friend makes with his business partner. But you prefer to ignore it, because it hasnāt affected you yetāor worse, because it benefits you.
In my case, I figured 40 reais was a small price to pay to see if a friendās word had weight and value.
As Iāve seen happen before, since it wasnāt āa huge amount,ā some might say:
- āIāll pay it back later, I have bigger bills to coverā (and thereās never a smaller bill).
- āIf he asks, Iāll return itā (trying to win through forgetfulness or wearing them down).
Or, my personal favorite:
- āAsking for ten reais back? If youāre starving, just let me know.ā
Dishonesty knows no limits.
But itās up to us to show what happens when they cross the line of our kindness.