Here are some tips on keeping in touch and staying close with the people you grew up with, high school friends, or anyone else you want to keep in touch with after moving cross country. you need to set up a solid base. However, that doesn’t necessarily have to mean that you need to know that person for years. how do you survive when the person who know you best lives thousands of miles away ?
Here are many ways to keep a long-distance friendship going strong.
Don’t talk to much yourself
If you are the only person who has moved out, we believe you have a lot of stories to tell, whether it’s about the whole moving experience or about the little things in everyday life that are different. However, while your friend will appreciate the fact that you want to tell every detail, you should not forget to ask what they are doing, what is new, and so on. Don’t forget the important dates and things that are important to them.
Selfie send your friends
Make the most of this selfie and snapchat craze. If your phone’s camera roll isn’t full of your best friend who has made some ugly faces on the planet, well, both of you aren’t trying hard enough. Also, Snap Chat wasn’t invented so you could laugh at your best friend from thousands of miles away and still feel like he’s working with you in Quebec.

Plans Trips
This is a great idea for friends who live all over the country or are better off all over the world right now. It’s a great way to look forward to something and give you all a chance to get involved. It can also give you all the opportunity to explore a place you never thought you’d visit.
Share memories with together
‘When it comes to properly maintaining friendships, old memories won’t suffice,’ explains Dr Levine. ‘Friends need to create rituals to build new memories together.
For your long distance friendship? Do you know a simple and easy way to dispel assumptions? Questions provide us with more information to help us respond and develop our actions and thoughts about a situation. You get interested in your friend’s life by asking about her children’s school, her social life and even what was in her food! Intimate details often outweigh the big picture.

