Skip to main content

An Accidental Friendship

John and Sarah have been friends of ours for years. We met in a student ward early in our marriages. We shared little but friendship at the time. Within two years both Sarah and I disappeared from the life grid while we paid homage to the porcelain god and gave birth to our first daughters within two months of each other. My husband and I moved to a house in their neighborhood and we soon enjoyed a full friendship with John and Sarah. 

Sarah and I grappled with working and parenting. We took our children to the park. Our daughters danced at the same studio. We met with another family for Sunday dinners. We shared our thoughts, processes, theories, parenting practices, time and love. It was an accidental friendship with a purpose.

We moved from that city nearly 11 years ago. We tried to keep up on occasional Sunday dinners but I could see us drifting apart. It was a natural conclusion to our friendship. Then I started dancing in the adult dance class where, coincidentally, Sarah was also dancing. I've shared before the importance of my dance friends. They are more dear to me than my dog. books. Definitely my dog.

Sarah and I continued our friendship without the husbands and children but included a couple of new female friends. We shared the ups and downs of our lives; children, adoption, depression, marriage woes, medical diagnoses, insurance, job losses/changes, infidelity, while ultimately finding strength in the sisterhood we shared and celebrating the small victories.

Last October, Sarah's marriage to John concluded with a painstaking divorce. Being privy to Sarah's pain, naturally, I joined her camp. I never see John anymore so I had no problem hating him for his choices and convincing myself I'd probably punch him if I ever ran into him. He's a complete idiot and jerk. Self-centered, self-serving, and the scum of the earth. At least I would throw up on him.

However, last time I saw Sarah, she confided that John had increasingly become a non-issue for her (besides the shared custody of the children). Regardless, he was scum.

Yesterday my 5 year old and I went to buy a bike for my husband for his birthday. We ran into John who regarded me warily. We haven't seen each other in years. Obviously, Sarah and I have talked. I felt something rise up in my throat. Was it bile? Would I really throw up all over him? Alas, it was a lump of grief. I grieve the loss of the friendship we shared as a family. I grieve the shared history and knowledge. I grieve that when I told him I was getting a bike for Scott's birthday, John knew it was the next day. When he told me he was bike shopping for his 15 year old daughter's birthday, I knew it was that very day. 

We know each other. We know the other's children, anniversary, history. And I grieve that he will no longer be included in our memories of things to come. Sarah will remarry. Our families will meet again on a Sunday afternoon and we will like her new husband but he won't be able to follow the conversation on certain topics because he didn't hear the introduction 17 years ago.
The introduction that started with a vital, accidental friendship.

Comments

  1. I feel that pain. We had friends go through a divorce and though we tried hard, one of the spouses was lost to us. Divorce is hard all around.

    ReplyDelete
  2. A divorce is like a bomb going off - there are direct casualties, and collateral damage.

    The survivors must pick amongst the wreckage and try to rebuild their lives - there's a crater left where we once saw happiness and family.

    Only the lawyers come out ahead.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Interesting in that I am dealing with that right now. Divorce is ugly on so many levels......

    You put the thoughts so perfectly

    ReplyDelete
  4. I have been lucky not to experience divorce on the friend level yet. I have a friend who married a guy that I love. The four of us hang out all the time, he's the one I text when we are planning social things, etc. It would kill me if they ever divorced.

    ReplyDelete
  5. How sad. I almost feel sad for John too, at his loss, but he made his choices.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I am so sad that I am going back to bed.

    ReplyDelete
  7. My best friend got a divorce and it was pretty ugly. He was a crazy freak though so that didn't matter, and she immediately moved. Well, it was so bad that she left him one night, moved, and THEN let him know when he got home from work they were getting a divorce. It hit him outta the blue, and since I was still around she asked me to be his friend and help him through. ... after hours of tear drying I totally understood why she left ;) BUt still, it was sad.

    played blog catch up.. you crack me up... tell your sponsors I dn't have readers but I want free stuff so come my way!

    ReplyDelete
  8. It can be difficult deciding who gets custody of the friends.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

How To Be A Dedicated Neurotic

Going through old files from graduate school, I found an invaluable pamphlet. Be a Dedicated Neurotic Remember the Past. . . and Regret it. Abhor the Present. Dread the Future. 1. Become preoccupied with the body, and make a long list of symptoms. Make them sound very clinical and professional... 2. BLAME your boss, your spouse, your partner, your neighbor, your kid. THEY are responsible for your miseries. 3. Feel trapped. You couldn't possibly declare your own independence without hurting someone's feelings. 4. Overeat. Rationalize and eat! Eat an insulated wall around yourself. Diet for a few days and say it doesn't work for you. 5. Self-pity. No matter what, feel sorry for yourself. Agonize over things about which no one cares. 6. Don't ever try. That way nobody can really accuse you of failure. You can always say, "But I could have done it." 7. Stress how shy you are. Insist that the world must come to you. You're special. 8. Your agg...

Pioneer Trek

Utah was founded by the Mormon pioneers in 1847 after enduring unimaginable losses and seeking a place of peace. July 24th marks the anniversary that the first wagon trains arrived in the Salt Lake Valley. Their numbers were greatly diminished by crossing the country in wagons and handcarts, dying of scurvy, tuberculous, malaria, starvation, unidentified fevers, and freezing to death. This, they found preferable to facing the extermination order put forth by Governor Boggs of Missouri. I believe this is the most courageous act of faith - to leave all they had that was familiar and travel the rough terrain in the unknown in search of a place where they could worship in peace. My daughters left this morning for a small re-creation of what the pioneers experienced. I don't love the idea since I know so many of the pioneers died but it is a way for many of the youth to connect to their ancestors and understand what many of the early members endured for their faith. The youth were asked...

Flu

The flu has been making its way through our family.  The first to be hit was the 15 year old.  She was very, very angry.  At me.  She had been begging for the flu shot for the past three months.  I kept forgetting.  She got better but it's one more thing to discuss on her future therapist's couch. Today I picked up my 5 year old from school.  He told me about making valentine's for his friends and how he gave his valentine to his best friend, Chase.  Chase is the little boy who grabbed my scarf on my way to my car today, looked at me earnestly and yelled his telephone number to me so fast I couldn't process it then ran away. "Today I felt so sick." "Why didn't you call me to pick you up?" "I told Teacher but she didn't call you." "What did you say?" "I told her my head hurt and I felt dizzy." "What did she say?" "She told me I wasn't sick." I took mental note to talk to his teacher about c...