Friendship is a term commonly used by children and young adults to describe the relationship they have with others. Children see this concept in a brilliantly lit view, with the age of the individual clouding and shading the light they once saw in their "friends". The term is meant to serve as the word to express trust in others who have shared interests. This definition is why I don't have "friends", or rather, as many as it may appear. There are people I am on speaking terms with, and people I have shared interests with, but the term "friendship" almost seems foreign to me. Now, don't get me wrong. I have had "friends" in the past. To this day, I have one or maybe two. But for me to actually trust someone? I can almost laugh at the thought. When the rare decision does come where my brain decides "Hey, we can trust this person", the typical response from the person is to wait until I'm blindfolded by an illusion of trust and drive a poisoned dagger of betrayal straight through my back and laugh as the false notion of trust I once had of them shrivels up and dies like an ant under a magnifying glass. One particular instance of impaling I can remember plain as day, as if I only suffered the wound moments ago. …show more content…
It would be my second convention I had ever been to, and I had been hoping the experience would be better than the disaster caused by my ex-"friends". If time travel was a thing of the present, I would gladly go back to that time and slap that notion out of her mind and informed her that going with Amanda would result in similar, if not worse, problems than the first convention. But whatever,