<p>Is it possible to become friends with someone without that friendship changing you?</p>
<p>what can i write ?? anyone ??!</p>
<p>This is a personal question, and as such no one can tell you “what” to write. Rather, I suggest that you simply look at one or more friendships you’ve attained throughout your life. Friendship can be defined as a healthy exchange of ideas and interests. Sometimes those ideas and interests conflict. When they do, usually ideas come together in a sort of hybrid form. </p>
<p>I realize the above is a bit of an abstraction. To bring it down to earth, consider who your friends are and what ideas they represent. Do any of them have significant religious, cultural or political differences? If they do, what is your tendency toward them? Do you allow their ideas to influence yours, and vice versa? How? </p>
<p>There are other ways you could approach the prompt, of course, but a personal testament framed by the questions above would probably prove the fastest way to achieve an effective essay.</p>
<p>Make up an example. Talk about the “King of Bavaria’s friendships caused him to become a more liberal leader” or “the president of Maldives’s friendships made him reconsider his ethical policies” instead of a personal example in order to impress your graders. You could also use benedict arnold in philadelphia hanging out with the British caused him to become a traitor.</p>
<p>If you cant think of any examples for a prompt it is often because you are more impressed by the other side of the argument. </p>
<p>Switch your position on the prompt: People remain true to who their are despite passing friendships.</p>