Now that 2010 is well underway--two months nearly gone--I can feel a bit of distance on the events of 2009, specifically the events connected to two friends. Recent events have brought them back into my life, in little ways.
I think I've mentioned that last year, in 2009, four women I've known very well for a long time died, between January and October. One of those four was a woman who had been a very good friend of mine for about eight years, really a best friend, but when she died I hadn't seen her or spoken with her outside email for about three years. This month, one of the libraries at My U bought a book for their collection in her name, a rare book of songs for pilgrims heading for Santiago de Compostelo. It is a book my friend would have enjoyed seeing, even owning, and perfect for her legacy as a teacher and scholar.
My friend was a complicated person. At her memorial service--the real one, the first one--her students showed up to talk about her as a teacher or to play music in her memory. That is such a nice legacy for a life-long teacher. It matters less what administrators or even colleagues say, in the end, because the association wiht them is about bureaucracy and policy, not the mentoring or delivery of information but also life lessons and the ability to enlarge one's mental, emotional, and physical life by asking questions. It was truly lovely to hear what her former students had to say about her toughness, her persistence, her rigor, and her laughter.
She was intellectually bright, and I am certain musically talented--although I never heard her play the piano. She was one of the funniest people I'd ever met. We used to laugh a lot, and we shared certain interests: teaching, history, music and theatre, books, cooking, and above all Paris.
Here's the other side, probably the legacy of a painful upbringing where she was a misfit in her family, a divorce, and life in a town she didn't like much. She was distrustful, maybe unable to trust even friends. She was distanced from her family. She was angry, and constantly complained, argued, ranted against policies, people, and colleagues although she never worked actively to change things. I think she felt powerless a lot of the time, without control over the events around her.
Twice, at big moments of my life, she wasn't present, although we were good friends. When I was denied tenure, she didn't get involved on any level. Other colleagues and friends stepped up during that month, helping me prepare a file, talking me up, and writing support material. She did nothing, although she was tenured and knew everyone in the school and the university. Again, when my book was published, she said she was going to throw me a publication party but never managed to make it happen. After four months of excuses and postponements, another colleague simply gave the party.
When she died last year, her office and apartment were left in a mess. There was no will, no file, no plan of any kind prepared for her belongings or her inheritance, even though she had known she was very, very sick. One of her long-time friends stepped in and took over the role of executor; fortunately, this person is organized and dedicated.
The worst thing was that there was no evidence of the book she'd been talking about for a decade.
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Such a complex, difficult person. Frightened, controlling, isolated. Funny, witty, intelligent, curious, angry, private, giving, distrustful. before she passed, she did mend fences with her nieces and her great-nephews--which gave her so much pleasure.
I expect to see her every day in the halls, not as a ghost but just herself. I miss her, but I had already moved on from our friendship, which leaves me with a small, lingering trace of guilt--because I wasn't there when she died, because we never made it up, because it was easy to let go of her as a friend. Because she made it easy to let go of her. I know she is at peace now, and I hope happier.
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She is single and it has been some time since she had a relationship; bad experiences left her, I think, uninterested in trying again. She wanted to make a change by adopting a baby: I got notice this week that it has happened, that she has indeed adopted a boy. I am very happy for her, so happy, but one reason I have stepped away from her is the anger, frustration, drama, and lack of control in her life. "Lack of control" meaning her participation in the ongoing problems in her workplace and family. I love this friend, she is such a good person and deserves happiness, but she is stuck in her drama. Same problem, same players--or even new players in same roles.
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Life is a process, not a product. I tell my kids this about theatre and art, but it is true, true, true. I am trying to understand and affect my ongoing process. I hope to connect with these friends again, now or in a future life, but until I get my drama under control...
Pearl