The Friends Who Stay: What Vikings Knew About Loyalty That We're Still Learning
There's a particular kind of ache that shows up around your thirties or forties, one nobody warns you about. You look around one day and realize most of your closest friendships didn't end with a fight or a falling out. They just... drifted. A move, a new job, a marriage, kids, time zones, life. Nobody did anything wrong. And yet the people who used to know everything about you now get a holiday text once a year, if that. If that ache sounds familiar, you're not broken, and you're not alone. You're just living in a culture that quietly stopped treating friendship as something that needs tending — and the Vikings, of all people, might have something to teach us about fixing that. A Word We Don't Have Old Norse had a concept called félagi — roughly, "fellow," but carrying weight our English word doesn't quite hold. A félagi wasn't just someone you liked. It was someone you'd trust with your life, your reputation, your household, while yo...