To see her
On New Year's Eve, I lost one of my oldest friends, Linda.
Many years ago, while getting her PhD., she contracted hepatitis C while working in a hospital.
She joked about it then; a resident stared at her, and she thought, "Well, hel-lo there!", till he leaned over and said, "You're jaundiced; see a doctor immediately." She had a brilliant liver transplant, and life went smoothly for the next thirty years.
She became a noted epidemiologist and professor whose area of research was women's health; after her retirement, she continued to serve as a volunteer in developing countries. Linda had a long, happy marriage. Having children was off limits; she poured her nurturing into her students.
We were friends since university days; I loved the contrasts she embodied so naturally: a fresh-faced beauty who swore like a stevedore, a late-night pub crawler who made the honour roll. She was deeply kind, and she also would warn me, "I'm half Greek and half Irish, don't get me mad."
Linda lived far from me; one of our retirement projects was to see one another again, "soon".
When I did not hear from her by New Year's, I had a premonition, and googled her name to find she had died the day before.
I wrote her husband; he replied immediately, saying he had dreaded telling me that a small problem begun by an infection had inexorably escalated through the fall. By mid-December they knew time was running out.
Near the end, he told me, they received dear friends for a special dinner, then lay in their bed, sleeping and talking, and she said, "It was heaven". She died surrounded by family and friends.
I have very few regrets, most of them trivial, but this one is not: that I delayed a trip to an inconvenient destination, that we did not 'make it happen', somewhere.
I never dreamed time was limited, but of course it is, for all of us. Now, my only choice is to go to that distant place for a life celebration, which feels surreal and sad.
I sit here, playing the songs that sparkling girl danced to long ago, mourning her and the mistake I made.
Many years ago, while getting her PhD., she contracted hepatitis C while working in a hospital.
She joked about it then; a resident stared at her, and she thought, "Well, hel-lo there!", till he leaned over and said, "You're jaundiced; see a doctor immediately." She had a brilliant liver transplant, and life went smoothly for the next thirty years.
She became a noted epidemiologist and professor whose area of research was women's health; after her retirement, she continued to serve as a volunteer in developing countries. Linda had a long, happy marriage. Having children was off limits; she poured her nurturing into her students.
We were friends since university days; I loved the contrasts she embodied so naturally: a fresh-faced beauty who swore like a stevedore, a late-night pub crawler who made the honour roll. She was deeply kind, and she also would warn me, "I'm half Greek and half Irish, don't get me mad."
Linda lived far from me; one of our retirement projects was to see one another again, "soon".
When I did not hear from her by New Year's, I had a premonition, and googled her name to find she had died the day before.
I wrote her husband; he replied immediately, saying he had dreaded telling me that a small problem begun by an infection had inexorably escalated through the fall. By mid-December they knew time was running out.
Near the end, he told me, they received dear friends for a special dinner, then lay in their bed, sleeping and talking, and she said, "It was heaven". She died surrounded by family and friends.
I have very few regrets, most of them trivial, but this one is not: that I delayed a trip to an inconvenient destination, that we did not 'make it happen', somewhere.
I never dreamed time was limited, but of course it is, for all of us. Now, my only choice is to go to that distant place for a life celebration, which feels surreal and sad.
I sit here, playing the songs that sparkling girl danced to long ago, mourning her and the mistake I made.
Comments
Darla
My condolences.
Rosie
May you find solace in the many wonderful memories you have of times with your dear friend. Take care.
Something similar happened to my husband in 2013 when an old pal died. He simply said, "I always thought I'd see him again."
-Dee
VC
You made no mistake. Nowadays, we live far-flung lives. You had no way of knowing that your friend had taken a turn for the worse; lots of people live with some kind of sword over their head, some for longer than people who've never had serious health issues.
C.
Karen
Thank you for telling us about your friend. Play some music, drink something good, think about her and feel happy that you were such good friends. I bet she appreciated your friendship as much as you did hers...
There are no easy answers (I am in my 60s and have seen dear friends die) all I think is this: tell your loved ones how much you value them while they are alive and it is clear you did this.
Warmest good wishes
Sue
So, when a decade later I learnt that a friend much closer to me in age had received a terminal prognosis, I moved immediately. I dropped everything, my husband took two days off work to look after our children, I travelled the length of the UK via 4 trains and a taxi ride. It was worth it. Still is, ten years on from her death.
Since then I have dropped everything on other occasions, often much happier ones, determined to make a friend's wedding, their child's bat mitzvah, an important wedding anniversary celebration, whatever key thing I am honoured to be invited to. These are the ties that bind in good ways. They are worth me making space for them. I sometimes need to remind myself of that fact, so submerged am I in daily busy-ness.
Hence, the initial hard learnt lesson has transformed into a fundamentally changed perspective which has enriched my life no end. So, yes, mourn your friend, but also as a memorial to her, don't get stuck in the regret (which I presume she would not wish you to feel) but use it proactively to propel yourself to connect with others at key points in the future.
My condolences to you. Your friend had a beautiful face, such a wonderful smile.
Alexandra
Sending you much love, R.
You gave your friend a great tribute by writing this post and reminding us to slow down and show our love.
Alexandra: Yes, it has firmed my resolve to be more present and respond to such opportunities.