I wouldn't say that 'greater benefits' = 'seeing friend less'. It's more about what you've got to give back; the benefits of them knowing you. Otherwise, you're just using them, and that's not really friendship anymore.
alexander, I think that was part of the joke. You were expecting a friends with benefits joke but she defied the thinking and made it into something else. Jessica does this often, and actually seems to have done it in the previous post as well.
I'm so stupid, I thought it meant something like "oh, sure you have a friend with benifits, and you both have big important jobs, so you don't have time for eachother, but you can still bang" But the actual joke is much, much funnier.
This site is a little project that lets me make fun of some things and sense of others.
I use it to think a little more relationally without resorting to doing actual math.
11 comments:
Yes, but I would say that after a certain mark, the greater the benefits, the less you will see your friend. It's a very important balance.
Or: casual sex in between relationships.
Very true, I have seen my investment banker friends very little since college.
I wouldn't say that 'greater benefits' = 'seeing friend less'. It's more about what you've got to give back; the benefits of them knowing you. Otherwise, you're just using them, and that's not really friendship anymore.
Careful balance, indeed, however.
In the same lines as phraedus, you could have done a lot more with this!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friends_with_benefits
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=friends+with+benefits
;)
I wish I had a friend with a real job.
alexander, I think that was part of the joke. You were expecting a friends with benefits joke but she defied the thinking and made it into something else. Jessica does this often, and actually seems to have done it in the previous post as well.
yeah, i'm going to go with phraedus and alexander missed the boat. but very funny, jessica
@sam: I didn't miss the boat. Sometimes spelling out the obvious is a type of humour, as is side-skipping it.
I'm so stupid, I thought it meant something like "oh, sure you have a friend with benifits, and you both have big important jobs, so you don't have time for eachother, but you can still bang" But the actual joke is much, much funnier.
So what happens if your friend is in the "oldest profession?"
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