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When Your Friends Start to Die

Photo by: iStock

Friday afternoon it rained heavily while I sat in the temple with the other mourners. I listened to the rabbi say beautiful things about someone I knew long before I was a wife, mother, writer, blogger, and social media addict.

Michelle was a strong, kind person who had lost her hard-fought battle with cancer.

My mind travels way back to a time before we each met the men we would marry, or answered to children who call us mommy. It was a time in our lives when anything was possible.

I was 23 and she was 25 when we met through a roommate finding service. Her old roommate was starting law school in California and I was looking for a place I could afford without financial help from my parents.

We would giggle, laugh, and cry as we shared our pasts and dreams for our future. Some nights we would discuss our views on politics and feminism. Other nights we would contemplate what type of wedding we envisioned, or what age would be the perfect one to start a family.

I tried to remember if in all those late-night conversations, we ever spoke about what we would like said at our own funerals.

I know we must have because there wasn’t much we didn’t share during our hours-long gab fests. We sat in our beds, in rooms separated by a thick wall. But since our “doors” were nothing more than curtains, our voices carried easily through the old railroad flat.

We were so proud of that dump – she would hate that I’m calling it that. That place was ours. We paid for it with paychecks from grown-up jobs. Nobody was supporting us. We reminded ourselves of this fact whenever one of our friends came over to crash overnight in the city and tease us about our home.

There was a lot to tease us about. The apartment had an old-fashioned kitchen with the sink behind the shower. The toilet was in a separate room across the hall. You had to walk through our bedrooms to get to the living room. I won’t go into detail about the roaches.

We laughed at our overnight guests after they left and then pat ourselves on the back. We had our own place on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. Our friends who were so critical still lived in the suburbs with their parents.

After a year-and-a-half as roommates, we moved into a new apartment on the 26th floor of a high-rise with a doorman. The apartment had a dishwasher, and a very distant view of the tree tops of Central Park. We were moving up in the world.

The method for our all-night gab fests changed because of the apartment’s layout. One of us had to knock on the other’s door and then come in to lie on the bed to discuss whatever was going on.

I remember coming home from my first date with Joe and telling Michelle that he was a nice guy, but he surely wasn’t the one I was going to marry. Three weeks later, I told her I was in love for the first time.

And I remember the night she came home all excited over the great guy she met while out with a few of her friends. The next day she went with me to buy my wedding dress, and when the saleswoman had her get into my dress so I could see how it bustled up in the back, we wondered if it was a sign that this new guy was “the one.” He was.

A little over a year later I was with her when she got fitted for her wedding dress.

All those memories, and more, were front and center in my my heart and mind as I heard tribute after tribute.

As often happens as we get older, our lives had moved on and our friendship faded. We never had a fight, we just drifted apart. I hadn’t seen my old roommate in years though we exchanged phone calls and vowed to get together as soon as we could.

Somehow we never were able to make it work with our busy, jam-packed lives.

The service was coming to an end, and I was brought back to the here and now as I glanced at the time and was reminded that I had to be home to get my nine-year-old off the bus.

I looked around the room, filled beyond capacity, mostly with people I didn’t know. People who knew and loved my old roommate.

I was happy to see the life Michelle had dreamt of so many years ago was the one she had achieved. And I was glad that I could say that same about my own.

Yet I couldn’t stop thinking of the girls we were back then, when most of our daily decisions were as life-altering as what outfit to wear on a date or what restaurant or movie to go to after work.

I am so grateful I had that time in my life to spread my wings and learn how to fly. I know I picked better places to land because of it. And I’ll always be eternally grateful to the friend I learned to do it with.

May you rest in peace, old friend. I’m thankful we shared some of life’s most memorable moments together.

Kathy Radigan is a writer, blogger, social media addict, mom to three, wife to one and owner of a possessed appliance. She posts a weekly essay each Sunday on her blog, My dishwasher’s possessed. She is honored to have essays in two anthologies, Sunshine After the Storm: A Survival Guide for the Grieving Mother, and The HerStories Project: Women Explore the Joy, Pain and Power of Female Friendship. You can follow her on Facebook, Twitter and Google+.

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