Real Friends vs. Deal Friends

Deal friends (sometimes called transactional friends) are relationships built on mutual usefulness — you’re in each other’s lives because of what you exchange: status, access, convenience, shared activities, or professional benefit. Real friends are built on genuine care for each other as people, independent of what either party provides.

Here’s how they compare across key dimensions:


The Foundation

  • Deal friends – The relationship exists because of a role, circumstance, or benefit. A gym buddy, a work ally, a fellow parent at school pickup. Remove the context and the friendship often dissolves.
  • Real friends – The relationship would survive context changes. They’d still be in your corner if you changed jobs, cities, or life circumstances.

Loyalty Under Pressure

  • Deal friends – Loyalty is conditional. When things get hard — when you’re struggling, embarrassing, or no longer useful — they tend to drift or disappear.
  • Real friends – Show up because things are hard. They’re the ones you hear from during a crisis, not just a celebration.

Honesty

  • Deal friends – Tell you what keeps the relationship comfortable. They validate, agree, and avoid friction because the relationship is too transactional to risk conflict.
  • Real friends – Tell you difficult truths because they care more about your wellbeing than about keeping things smooth.

Reciprocity

  • Deal friends – Keep score, consciously or not. The relationship feels balanced only when the exchange is roughly equal.
  • Real friends – Give without tallying. There are seasons where one person gives more, and both parties accept that without resentment.

How You Feel After Spending Time Together

  • Deal friends – Often mildly draining or neutral. You may enjoy the activity but not feel particularly known.
  • Real friends – Usually energizing or grounding, even in silence. There’s a sense of being truly seen.

What They Know About You

  • Deal friends – Know your surface: your job, your opinions, your fun side.
  • Real friends – Know your fears, your history, your contradictions — and like you anyway.

The Nuance

Neither type is inherently bad. Deal friendships are a normal and often enjoyable part of life — not every relationship needs to be deep. The problem arises when you mistake one for the other: leaning on a deal friend during a real crisis, or keeping a real friend at arm’s length out of habit.

The clearest test? Imagine yourself in a genuine low point — lost a job, going through a breakup, facing health news. Who would you call? Who would actually show up? That list is usually much shorter than your contact list, and those are your real friends.

The concept of ‘real friends versus deal friends’ is derived from the book From Strength to Strength authored by Arthur C. Brooks.

25 Things About Life I Wish I Had Known 10 Years Ago

We might learn things quickly, but we often forget things at the same rate—and sometimes we need to remind ourselves of the things we’ve learned.

Here are 25 of those reminders that others taught me.

1. Struggle Is Good

Never say “I can’t take it anymore.” Say “Bring it on!”

2. Don’t Complain

Complaining is the biggest waste of time there is. Either do something about it, and if you can’t, shut up about it.

3. Spend Time With People You Love

That’s your family and best friends. If you don’t have a family, create one. Most people in life are only visitors. Family is for life.

4. Don’t Start A Relationship If You’re Not In Love

I’ve done this more than once. You kind of like someone and think: “We might as well give it a shot.” Not a good idea. You’re either in love, or you are not. Don’t fool yourself. It’s not fair to you and the other person.

5. Exercise Daily

I didn’t get this until recently. A healthy body is where you have to start everything in life. If you can’t build a healthy and strong body, what CAN you build in life?

6. Keep A Journal

No, keeping a journal is not for children. It helps you to become a better thinker and writer. “I don’t want to be a writer” you might think. Well, how many emails and texts do you send a day? Everybody is a writer.

7. Be Grateful

Say ‘thank you’ to everyone and everything. “Thank you for this beautiful day.” “Thankyou for your email.” “Thank you for being there for me.”

8. Don’t Care About What People Think

We all die in the end, do you really think it matters what people think of you?

9. Take More Risks

Don’t be such a wimp.

10. Pick An Industry, Not A Job

If you want to become good at something, you need to spend years and years doing that. You can’t do that if you hop from industry to industry. Pick an industry you love and start at the bottom. You will find the perfect role for you eventually.

11. Lead The Way

When you find yourself in a situation where everyone looks at each other, it’s time for you to lead. You‘re a leader when you decide to become one. There’s no initiation or a title. Just a decision.

12. Money Is Not The Most Important Thing

You have to train yourself not to care about money and focus on providing value instead. Also, don’t become too dependent on the stuff you own — otherwise, the stuff will own you.

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I want to live my next life backwards..

 

I want to live my next life backwards:
You start out dead and get that out of the way. Continue reading