To be completely honest I'd have a hard time calling any of the people I know in real life my "friends". It's just never been a useful construct for me.<p>How do <i>you</i> define friendship? Do you have much friends in real life? What about online?
One day well into my 50's, I realized being a friend is what matters.<p>It's the only thing I have control of.<p>My working definition is "what would I do if I was a friend?"<p>Then I consider doing that.<p>Being a friend is valuing people as friends.<p>That means making them feel valued.<p>It means putting up with their human failings.<p>The point is putting in the effort.<p>---<p>Part of this is that my 189 Facebook friends are friends.<p>Those relationships of course are across a spectrum of intimacy and fondness. Some are people who I like to hang out with. Some are people that I never will outside a funeral or high school reunion.<p>Approximately, they are people above the happy-birthday and sad-your-dog-died thresholds. Though, yes, there are people whose online behaviors are unacceptable and that's why it's only 189 friends.<p>Good luck.
As I got old it seems to me that "friend" is too binary, and I stopped categorizing people that way since that builds expectations that could lead to frustration. There's even people I used to have fun with but I can't anymore because that would hurt my marriage, for example.<p>So I don't have friends, but people that I "know", to which I can talk, that might help me or I could help them without expecting anything back.
If I can easily consider my friend's house as a place to sleep a night when I need it as well as I do with my relative's houses while travelling - that is one of crucial signs. Another one is similar hobbies when we are helping each other - this sign might be useful even for online friends you have not seen offline. If one of signs is true - this is my friend; both true - this is my best friend.