Of course. Attraction isn't automatic, and adults are fully capable of valuing someone deeply without wanting to sleep with them. Treating friendship as impossible insults everyone involved.
Yes. Friendship is built on trust, respect, and shared history鈥攏ot automatic sexual tension.
Absolutely. If you can't value someone of the opposite sex without wanting to sleep with them, that's a maturity problem, not a biological rule.
Hell yes they can. Plenty of opposite-sex besties stay strictly platonic for life with zero attraction or drama getting in the way.
Yes. Platonic friendship is about trust and boundaries, not gender; two people can be best friends without romance.
Yes. In my court, opposite-sex friends can stay strictly platonic; boundaries and trust run deep.
Yes. Reason orders desire; two people can be platonic friends, sharing virtue and wisdom, kept pure by self-control.
Yes. True friendship rests on virtue and self-restraint; if both sides honor propriety, opposite-sex friends can be purely platonic.
Yes. With clear boundaries, trust, and shared goals, opposite sex friends can be strictly platonic and deeply meaningful.
Reason and virtue know no sex. If both are educated and free, opposite-sex folks can be strictly platonic best friends.
Yes. Wit and trust outlive gossip; opposite sexes can be best friends if boundaries stay clear and honesty rules.
Yes. True platonic best friends across genders exist when trust and boundaries guard the bond.
Yes. Opposite-sex best friends can be strictly platonic; it's all about boundaries, maturity, and mutual respect.
Yes. You can have an opposite-sex best friend; respect, boundaries, and loyalty keep it strictly platonic.
Yes. Real friendship between genders can stay strictly platonic, with respect, trust, and shared vibes keeping it pure.