I look out my window at hundreds of tiny cars as my plane descends into Denver. There are so many people in the world. I get predictably overwhelmed by this thought whenever I am at a baseball stadium, a concert, or looking down at a city from the sky.
There are millions and billions of people, everywhere. I share personal histories with a few of them because we happened to be at the same place at the same time for one fleeting, overlapping moment in our lives. And yet somehow these histories with these people are unshakeable. Somehow they still matter, years later. They are still worth traveling great distances for.
Over the course of the weekend I will spend time with three different people from three different phases of my life: Anahitta from middle school, Scott from study abroad, and John from grad school. All three have, at one point, been my closest friend.
So it’s strange that anxiety and dread have outweighed my excitement leading up to this trip. I left work early yesterday with a crippling stomachache. I went to bed with a fever over one hundred. I had already made myself sick with my longing for what I feared might not still be there.
My curse has always been caring too much. I am nostalgic to a fault. I never get over anything. It has brought deep satisfaction to my relationships and rich color to my life, but it has also made me a selfish friend. My biggest fear is always that the people I love will move on into happy new lives without me. I haven’t always taken the natural ebbs and flows of relationships with grace.
I am so afraid of being the one who is left hanging on tighter. Of being rejected by those who once loved me. I don’t know where this fear comes from, but it is what caused me to hesitate in reaching out to these friends in the first place. It is why, with two of them, (the two who already live in Colorado), I suggested only that we meet for lunch.
Just for lunch. Because to ask for more than that would be to risk being a burden, or that they might say no. I understand, on some level, that this is illogical. These are people I used to do everything with. Scott and I traveled a continent together. John and I basically lived at each other’s apartments and at IHOP whenever we weren’t sleeping or in class.
But what if they no longer remember all those times and jokes and moments that transpired between us? What if they’ve moved on?
I am exhausted when Anahitta and I find each other at the airport. It is past midnight, but it is an amazing sixty degrees outside as we sit in our rental car trying to figure out how to start the damn thing. It’s a red Mini Cooper with white racing stripes. Not what we requested. The key isn’t really a key. How the hell do you start this piece of crap? It’s so late. We laugh until we can’t breathe. We always laugh until we can’t breathe. She is the only person who has ever been able to make me laugh like this. She moved away when we were sixteen.
^Anahitta and me in 2005, at the St. Louis airport the night a big storm caused all the power to go out. All the employees abandoned their posts. It was pure chaos. Of course we had to take advantage of this opportunity to photograph ourselves in all the normally-forbidden airport areas, such as the conveyer belt.
At the hotel, Anahitta and I reminisce about 7th grade and all those afternoons at Leah’s house spent waiting for Bye Bye Bye to come on TRL. We may have different ethnicities, skin colors, and religions, but we will both always know exactly what it was like to be thirteen in America in the year 2000. So we remember precisely how important Bye Bye Bye was. Is.
We pull up all the classic music videos on YouTube. Britney Spears, Destiny’s Child, O-Town. And we dance.
The next afternoon, Scott saves us from the ghetto in which I booked our hotel (oops) and shows us the real city. He is not buying this “meet for lunch” thing. He wants to see me, he wants to spend time, he insists. This makes me so happy.
Scott and I share a million memories about Australia over dinner the first night, memories of travel and friendship and adventures gone wrong that I suddenly realize I have been suppressing because they were so good. Because there was no tangible way to take them home with me without feeling alienated from everyone and everything in my other life. Things I was afraid to remember because I was afraid he’d forget and I didn’t want to be the only one left with the memory. But he remembers things I don’t even remember. Like how mad he got the day I hitchhiked down the mountain.
^Scott and me in my Australia dorm room in 2007. These are the types of things you routinely find yourself doing when you have a limited internet quota.
“I was so depressed when I came home from Australia,” I admit to Scott after the waitress sets down our bison burgers. Then I lean in and add, hopefully, “Did you get depressed too?”
“Of course I did,” he says, no hesitation. “I knew it would be a long time until we’d all get to be together again. We still haven’t been.”
He tells me that when he thinks about pure happiness and perfection, he thinks about Australia. He still keeps the photographs over his bed. I am so relieved he has felt the way I have, all this time. I make a mental note to put my photographs back up.
Later, Anahitta and I help Scott attempt a handstand on our hotel bed at the exact time of night his goofy side (his “little boy mode,” I used to call it) would always come out in Australia. I am amazed at how someone I knew for five months five years ago can still feel so familiar to me.
He spends most of the weekend with us.
On Sunday, Anahitta and I have lunch with John. John and I share so many good memories from grad school that I’m sure Anahitta must be bored out of her mind. But there are just so many. And they simply must be shared. My God we pulled a lot of pranks.
^John and me the day we helped orchestrate the great Brown Bag Prank of 2010, in which our whole cohort showed up to our department’s “brown bag meeting” dressed in costumes made entirely out of brown bags.
John is also up for more than lunch. He takes us through downtown Boulder. We go into a bookstore and, within minutes, John and I are sequestered at the corner of a book display, our eyes lit up, speaking rapidly about every thought we’ve had since we last spoke.
I think maybe the biggest thing John has done for me is given me permission to give voice to all my deepest, weirdest thoughts. He understands exactly what I mean when I say things like I get a perverse satisfaction from spending time with people I don’t like, or that being a therapist makes me feel disgusted with myself, or that I had an existential crisis buying a couch. And I know what he means when he says he has built secret rooms in his metaphorical house or that he is profoundly affected by the wind. At times the rest of the bookstore seems to grow silent. I don’t think anyone in the room, or the world, could possibly follow the pace and range of topics and darkness and lightness and humor and metaphors of this conversation. But to us, it makes perfect sense.
On Monday morning Anahitta and I return the red Mini Cooper with white racing stripes. We still hate this car.
I ask Anahitta what her favorite part of the weekend was as we ride the shuttle to our gates. She does not mention riding the gondola into the mountains. She says her favorite was the night we had dinner at the mall and bought sweaters. Because it felt like something we could do any day.
I can’t follow that answer. It’s the perfect answer.
Alone at my gate, I feel like I have been hit by a tidal wave. I have re-lived three major parts of my life in the past three days. It’s a lot to sort out.
These three friends have allowed me to be three past selves: the silly pre-teen whose successful day is one in which she has laughed until she can’t breathe, the easily-excitable twenty-year-old getting her first real taste of adventure, and the grad student trying to balance her hunger for knowledge and wisdom with her propensity for naïveté and pranks.
I think of two things as I board my plane.
First, I think of what my supervisor told me on the last day of grad school when I said I was sad to leave my friends. “Whenever I get to see the friends I went to school with,” she said, “I know that they still know me better than anyone.”
The other thing I think about is the line that has gone through my head whenever I have had to say my final goodbye to someone before one of us moves away. I always think, I will never have a friend like that again. I thought that ten years ago with Anahitta, five years ago with Scott, and two years ago with John. And a lot of times in between.
And now I know for sure that it’s true. It was true every time. It’s always true.
But now, for the first time, I understand that this is not a sad thing. It has never meant that I will spend the rest of my days mourning. It has meant that I have been opened up to new parts of life and myself. It means that I have been lucky.
It means that, out of all the millions and billions of people in the world below my airplane as it takes off into the sky, I get to call a few of them my friends. And that when I get to see them two years from now, five years from now, ten years from now, and fifty years from now—I will know that nothing has changed.
You can read more about my attachment anxiety here and here.




Although I haven’t started blogging yet but can proudly say that I have read a well scripted article of yours (a beautiful journey of your life) and it could only inspire me in days to come to write of my own. Thanks!
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Thanks so much! Good luck getting your blog started- it takes a lot of persistence, but it will be an enriching experience.
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Well said. You’ve described so clearly the conflicting emotions that come with looking back at old friendships. You’re very lucky to have those few that you can revisit and still enjoy!
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Thank you- Yes, I am lucky indeed. And I have even more than the ones mentioned in this post, so I am actually blessed beyond reason. Thanks for reading!
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Thanks yeah…i have just published my first blog…though bit small and simple i feel its a good start for me. Please find the link below –
http://wp.me/p36vOv-C
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Ohhhh I know exactly what you feel like. We’re five friends all in different countries. But if anything, we just hold on tighter! 🙂
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All in different countries- wow! You must have excellent stories to share when you all get to come together 🙂 And lots of fun places to visit!
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Yea! It’s a lot of fun, and facebook and whatsapp make it easier to keep updated too. 🙂
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Thank you for reminding me the affect “those people” have and how fear of letting go cripples and cheapens the experiences your have with those who have shaped you, loved you and know you inside and out, those who have had the privilege of seeing your vonerability, weakness, shortcoming, and yet loving you well anyway. I am always gauging what I would do without “my people” instead of truly embracing the time I have now. Timely and relevant to my journey in many ways.
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That’s an excellent revelation you have had- I hadn’t thought of it that way, that the worry actually cheapens the experience. You are absolutely right. Let’s try to both remember this from now on!
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Deal!
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BION I’m imrdsesep! Cool post!
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htttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt
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Oh J –
This installment on your blog (and the installment we had recently in Boulder) was sweet and poignant and made me cry (of course you know that’s not hard!)
Thanks for being my true friend.
J
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And you, mine, J!!
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For the life of me I cannot let go either. It is the most difficult thing for me to do – and, yes, a memory that cannot forget – makes the letting go so much worse.
I enjoyed reading your blog:) Thanks.
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Sometimes not letting go is the best thing we can do. Thanks for reading!
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Wow this really puts things into perspective. I’m new to blogging. Going through a divorce and learning how to move on. Reading this is really gets me thinking about the world and what it has to offer! Thank you!
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Great job. I wish people would pay more attention to friendship. It’s so important, especially when you travel and I feel the same way. Funny though – I always think it will be the last time I see someone and my friends have a way of coming back into my life.
Congrats on your freshly pressed status.
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Then they must be good friends! 🙂 Someone I said goodbye to in another country once said, “In life, we meet twice.” I always remember that. And I am happy when it usually ends up being more than twice. Thanks for reading!
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Lovely post! I left my home city of Toronto in 1986 (for Montreal, NH and then NY) but still return every 4 to 6 months to see old friends I still value tremendously, partly because they knew me “when” — when I was in my mid-20s and the world was shiny and new and I had not yet married or divorced or moved to the States or been slammed by multiple layoffs and three recessions. Old friends know you in the deepest sense and I love that. Thanks for sharing a bit of your three lovely friendships with all of us nosy strangers.
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This is very true. I’m only in my 20’s now, but I find it to be such a comfort to spend time with people who knew me when I was younger. That’s something no new friend could ever replace. You are lucky to still get to see them so often- those must be very strong friendships!
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Loved your post a lot. I was nodding while reading every line about how you felt before meeting your friends. I also try to guard my feelings and do not like to be the only one clinging to the past. You are lucky to have such wonderful friends and now to have such a mature realisation out of it.
Congratulations on being Freshly Pressed!
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Thank you! It has been so great to hear that so many others feel the same way. Makes me feel not so crazy! I guess it is human nature for us to feel this way.
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you had a lot of fun in your life, really great.
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I always try to make fun a priority 🙂
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J-Bo,
Thanks for this. It means a lot (which is weird because you don’t know me at all). You have given words to something I had no words for. Thank you.
-Soul Walker
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That makes me very happy to hear, Soul Walker. I love when other writers are able to do that for me, so I feel honored to have done that for somebody else. Thanks for reading!
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You are welcome.
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Great friends are a treasure. Three close friends in today’s world is a miracle. Great writing.
Kudos on Freshly Pressed.
Rob
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Yes. And, amazingly, I have even more than three. So I’m one lucky girl. Thanks for reading!
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Great writing, what a beautiful article. Thank you for sharing 🙂
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Thanks for reading!
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Hi J-Bo,
I’m a senior in high school. I really want to start blogging all my (interesting) thoughts, but like you I have a tough time putting myself out there. Though I really long for some connection, the kind that seems absent in my public high school. I worry that no one will want to read what I have to say or that once I see my own writing it will look like the uniformed ramblings of a kid. Inevitably my ramblings will be on some level uniformed, but I still feel like I have something to contribute. I guess what I’m trying to ask is, with all the anxiety you deal with, how did you find the courage to start writing a blog?
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Hi!
Very good and interesting question. I was actually a senior in high school when I first started blogging. It has taken me years to get comfortable with sharing personal things on the level that I do now. I didn’t even open my blog up to the public until a few months ago. Start out light if that will make you more comfortable at first- you don’t need to dive right in to writing the harder things. Get comfortable with your voice first and see where it takes you.
I have found, in the world of blogging, that people are generally very supportive. In fact, I don’t think I’ve gotten a single negative comment. It seems that the more honest and personal you get, the more people relate to you and write in to say that something you wrote has reached them. It has actually been by reading the things that other bloggers share that I have gained the courage to share in return.
Go to the library and check out some memoirs. To be a writer means to expose yourself. This can be terrifying at first, but so many writers have found a way to do it. And you will need to do your part as well. Some people will like it, and some people won’t. But the majority of readers tend to be thoughtful, introverted, and sensitive people- so maybe remembering that can make you more courageous.
Your writing will evolve a lot as you go. But you should write down as many thoughts as you can, right now, at this phase in your life. The most valuable thing I did in high school was keep journals. It is immensely valuable to go back and look at my old writing to remember what I was thinking and feeling when I was a teenager. You will be amazed at the things you would have otherwise forgotten. Start now, trust the process, and see where it goes.
Good luck! I’d love to follow your blog, but when I click on your name it says you do not have one…
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These pieces really set a standard in the inysrtud.
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“If you have one true friend you have more than your share.” -Thomas Fuller. Enjoy!!
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I have waaaay more than my share then 🙂
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Hello there I am so delighted I found your site, I relaly found you by accident, while I was searching on Askjeeve for something else, Anyways I am here now and would just like to say many thanks for a tremendous post and a all round thrilling blog (I also love the theme/design), I don’t have time to look over it all at the moment but I have bookmarked it and also added in your RSS feeds, so when I have time I will be back to read a great deal more, Please do keep up the great job.
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Your post captures the issue perfectly!
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Beautiful articulation of the significance and importance of those close friendships from different stages of our lives — so glad Freshly Pressed flagged this one! ~ Kat
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Thank you! 🙂
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this is very sweet, as well as being well written. Congrats on the FP!! and lucky you for having such solid connections. Good job maintaining/ cultivating them. They are dear. Lucky us (:
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Thank you- they are worth it!
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I enjoy, lead to I found exactly what I used to be taknig a look for. You have ended my 4 day long hunt! God Bless you man. Have a nice day. Bye
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That’s the perfect insight in a thread like this.
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Reblogged this on blue velvet. and commented:
This is beautiful, makes me wish I could hang onto friends.
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Thanks for re-blogging! You can hang onto friends- just requires mutual effort.
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This is a great post. Thanks for sharing
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Thank you for reading 🙂
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Your writing style is lovely. You’re able to put into words certain feelings that are hard to express through words alone, so major props to you! I can definitely relate to what you’re going through with nostalgia, holding on, and letting go. Your words “I am nostalgic to a fault. I never get over anything” hits home. I’m constantly worried that the people I meet and develop a connection with will suddenly disappear from my life, which mostly seems to be true for me even as much at I try to keep the friendship intact. But, I guess people evolve, as much as I’d like to keep everything in the equation EXACTLY THE SAME.
My latest blog is actually about capturing that moment of magic when you connect with someone. Somehow, even though less than two months has passed, I already feel my relationship with this girl waning. Your line, “I haven’t always taken the natural ebbs and flows of relationships with grace,” is exactly how I feel! Perhaps I really do not have as much control over some situations as I lead myself to believe. I”m learning to just go with the flow and let relationships take their course for better or for worse.
Anyways, thanks for posting this insightful blog entry. It’s refreshing to read posts yours that make me think deeply about life. Now I just have to wipe that tear from my eye due to being overly nostalgic and NEVER wanting some things to change:)
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Thanks so much for your thoughtful comment! I have found that, although we often feel relationships changing and shifting, it does not always mean that they are waning. I get very sensitive about these changes too, and I over-analyze them. But relationships go through phases, and I think we need to just learn to be patient and accept all stages. It’s very hard to do, I know.
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Oh my gosh! One of my favorite blogs is freshly pressed!!!!! Whoooot!
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Thanks! I was pretty stoked 🙂
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Reblogged this on KIIROAMARILLO and commented:
inspiring. I have always felt the same… but I do radical things like letting people go before they do what I fear they might – letting me go.
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Lovely blog, great read. Go travel! http://socalmistress.wordpress.com/
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Thank you for reading!
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Very well written. You’re great.
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Thanks so much! Glad you stopped by.
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i love this blog keep it up girl!!!
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Thanks! Glad you found me!
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i am too!!!!
how do you do soo much wish i could!!
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Some people go through life and never experienced one great friendship…..you have 3! How awesome is that? Thanks for the great read
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It’s pretty awesome. I even have more than three, so I am lucky, indeed. Thanks for reading!
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Such a great piece. Thanks for sharing!
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Glad you enjoyed it- thanks!
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Thkniing like that shows an expert’s touch
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This post is perfect. I can relate to being very attached, extremely nostalgic, caring too much, and not wanting to be a burden to the people you care about the most. You explained everything so well.. really enjoyed reading this.
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It’s been so nice to hear from people like you who can relate. So glad I’m not the only one. Thanks for reading!
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Took the words out of my mouth. Sometimes I think I’m the only one that’s afraid to let go.
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I’ve got at least 100 commenters here that prove you are not the only one 🙂
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Yes, I love and relate to your attachment thing. I’m so glad to hear that your friends were all secretly feeling the same way and missing you and wanting to hang out. How wonderful!
I have tried to forgive myself for this over-eagerness (cat or dog friend… I think I would clearly be a dog friend) and wanting to maintain these friendships… and hopefully this experience will help you see that you’re not alone either.
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Yes, I have DEFINITELY seen that I am not alone, through all of these comments. Thanks!
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This post really spoke to me. Especially about the part of being depressed after leaving somewhere so special, and more importantly the really special people you meet in a place like that. I just moved back to the US 7 months ago from Bangkok and I’m still dealing with this pain. It’s really great to know I’m not alone and what it’s like when you see those people again! 🙂
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Ah- leaving countries is the worst, because you never know how long it will be when/if you get to see those friends again. The good news is that you can and will see them again, if you both put the effort into it 🙂 I have a feeling you will. Thanks for reading!
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Soooo, let me get this straight! The Dr only reoevmd the top half of it?! What was the point? In my experience, keloids always grow back and usually even bigger than the original
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It’s a pleasure to find someone who can think so clearly
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This is precious. I get the feeling…I am very fortunate to have my very best friends, all eight of them since we were 5 live within a 30 mile radius from me. I am lucky but even though our miles are close, our lives are busy. We do the best we can to see each other but life happens and things like career, family and kids get in the way. Then a friend has a baby or adopts one or someone’s parent retires and suddenly we are back in elementary school. It comes and goes but we always know, we have each other for life. My lifers I call them! Thanks for sharing and congrats on FP!
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Wow- 8 of you since you were 5, and all still nearby? That’s truly incredible. Reminds me of the book “The Girls from Ames.” You could write your own book!
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I hear you. I read it and passed it on to a few of them. Great book. We think alike.
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This was a really resonant and well-written glimpse into your own life that I could really relate to (and needed to relate to at this time in my life). Thanks for this! You’re an incredibly wise person and gifted writer 🙂
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Well thank you very much!
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That was truly touching. Thank You for that. I often wonder when it will be that I wil see people that were once so close to me again. Great post.
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Maybe sooner than you think 🙂
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What a great post and great way of looking at friendships. It use to burn me out when a friendship sort of fizzled out, due to varying factors. But in retrospect they each added a little something as I kept chugging along on the life journey. And I totally agree with your supervisor’s quote, they do know you better than anyone else. Congrats on being Freshly Pressed.
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Yes, very true. Even the friendships we cannot hold onto, we are happy to have had as they spiced up our lives in that moment and taught us something important. Thanks for reading!
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Excellent excellent post. I really needed this one because I’m going to be separated from a dear friend this coming Saturday. I certainly hope we will stay in touch but then again, you never really know. I don’t think we can recapture the “magic” as you have done but it certainly would be wonderful if there were the case. Again, great post.
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So sorry to hear about your friend. My wish is that you will stay in touch and have many stories to share with each other at your next reunion 🙂
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I loved this post! I got to thinking about my own best friends from different times of my life and now I have an urge to go reconnect with them all. Thanks for this!
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You should definitely do it!
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I hear ya! I used to say that all of my happiest moments were laced with the inevitability of loss. I have gotten over it somewhat, but I still cling too hard at times. Meditation has helped me so much! But I would always rather feel too much than too little. As Jewel says, I’m sensitive, and I’d like to stay that way!
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I totally hear ya on preferring to feel too much than too little. I know people who fall more into the “too little” category and I don’t envy them at all! Beautiful quote about your happiest moments being laced with the inevitability of loss- that is probably what made you realize they were so beautiful.
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You’ve been Freshly Pressed again, J-Bo! How awesome is that?!
I love this post. Totally relatable. Congratulations!
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It’s pretty awesome- I was very surprised/excited.
Thanks for being a loyal reader!
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Cute blog. Love your story. Looking forward to hearing more from you in the future!
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Thanks- I look forward to sharing more!
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Can’t wait. http://www.segmation.com
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That’s a skillful answer to a diiffcult question
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We’ve arrived at the end of the line and I have what I need!
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Great writing coul really relate to it.Congrats on being Freshly Pressed!
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Thank you!
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There should have been a “like” button here!! ..loved your article! 🙂
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Thanks!
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Reblogged this on Oyia Brown.
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This is wonderful, and actually extremely topical for me. I’m moving out of state in the next few months, and have been petrified that I’m going to lose those same sorts of people.
No guarantees, but this gives me a lot of hope. Thanks!
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I know how hard that can be. I’ve lived in 4 states in the past 8 years. The hard part is saying goodbye. The great part is making new friends 🙂
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This is one of the best articles I’ve ever read here on WordPress. I am in awe of the kind of friendship you have with those people and you also made me reminisce how it was like when I was with my friends back then. Sadly, although social networking sites are everywhere, and sometimes, even we are ‘friends’, I am too shy to even say hi because I feel also that maybe they have forgotten me or don’t like me anymore. I’m happy you managed to stay in touch with all of them.
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Thanks so much for reading! I would strongly encourage you to reach out and say hi to a few of those friends- maybe they’ve been wanting to talk with you, too 🙂 You don’t know until you try.
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You keep it up now, unndrstade? Really good to know.
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Beautifully expressed. Saying goodbye to friends is never easy. Funnily enough I recently said goodbye to two good friends of mine who went to live in Colorado, so your post really spoke to me.
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Goodbyes suck, but at least you get to go live in Colorado! I love it out there.
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Great hammer of Thor, that is polrlfuwey helpful!
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Good points all around. Truly appreciated.
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A large chunk of this article perfectly reflects my own relationships with my best friends, especially the part about reminiscing about 7th grade and the early 2000s!
It truly feels rewarding to be able to find people with whom I can connect in such a big world with so many different kinds of people.
It’s important to dedicate a moment of our busy lives to thinking about how lucky we are to have the people in our lives that we do.
Thank you for this great piece!
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Gotta love the early 2000’s. And you’re right- it’s easy to take it for granted and not stop to think about how lucky we are. Thanks for reading!
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