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Part I — The Architecture of Friendship

Life paths, distance, and the conditions that allow a friendship to take form

In this first part of the conversation with Andreas Fabritius the focus is not yet on defining friendship, but on the ground from which it becomes possible.

We move through different geographies, different rhythms of life, and the ways in which two trajectories continue to intersect over time. Distance, work, daily structures, and changing environments appear not as obstacles but as forces that test whether a bond can remain alive.

Friendship here is not introduced as an emotional certainty. It begins as something more fragile: a repeated return, a willingness to stay in contact, and an attention that resists the passive fading of the relationship.

The dialogue unfolds through lived experience rather than theory. Ways of living, forms of movement, and the pressures that shape each path slowly reveal what makes continuity possible between two people who are not sharing the same life conditions.

In the second part, the dialogue turns more explicit and philosophical, focusing on reciprocity, boundaries, responsibility, and the effort required for a friendship to remain alive without becoming use, habit, or convenience.

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