Trophies stay in the cabinet gathering dust, but friends are for life.
What a footballer wants above all else is to win, regardless of who the coach is.
My time in England is where I have felt truly like a footballer, and I have put my name among the best players. I'm very proud to have played almost 400 games with Liverpool.
Logically, if there was a chance to improve and go to a bigger club, it would be a good opportunity, although there are few clubs bigger than Liverpool.
I want to aspire to titles. Liverpool will always be a big club, but we are not at the level of Manchester United, Manchester City, Chelsea, or Arsenal.
For sure, I would like to continue my life with the strings of football by being a coach, manager - I don't know. But one thing is clear: I will continue doing something related to football.
I thought I had joined one of the best clubs in the world, one of the biggest names around, and I had, though within a few years, it became clear that I had arrived at one of the worst moments in Liverpool's whole history.
A club like Liverpool has to be involved in Europe, whether it is the Europa League or Champions League.
I'm very happy and satisfied at Liverpool. I feel valued and respected.
Kenny Dalglish was absolutely right: anyone that doesn't want to be at Liverpool can leave. Players will come and go.