Six years ago he wrote me an email: “We would if we were waves. . .(can you finish this thought with me?)”
I replied with:
”
We would if we were waves
travel away from eachother
to crash against opposite shores
you the northeast us coast
me the northwest european
and, bumping up the shore
we would run back down to the sea
and towards eachother again
to meet somewhere in the middle
of the deep and distant sea
my friend
”
Six years later and we are no longer friends, haven’t been in touch in years, don’t think we ever will again. Not through any falling out, but I suppose just a verge in our paths that have taken us in two completely separate directions.
Our waves, it seems, have disappeared somewhere in the depths of the Atlantic when we weren’t paying attention.
I never thought I would look back on the path and not see him there behind me, or just ahead, but there you have it, there it is: No longer friends.
It happens.
*
There is a lot of effort in keeping friends when you are physically separated from them by an ocean, I have since learned in these twelve years abroad. Even some friends that I left behind in Belgium, just one country over (no ocean) have faded into oblivion.
So it’s no surprise that high school friends would also fade into the past, especially since I don’t return to New Jersey often enough to cultivate these friendships, to feed them with new memories made and old memories remembered. The last time I was there (October of 2010) I came home to Amsterdam with a feeling of wanting to wash it all off of me, to jump into the shower and scrub away New Jersey and everyone that I knew there*, watching it twirl around and around the shower floor with the soap bubbles and get sucked down the drain.
Several things happened that made me feel this way, but the main thing was the awkwardness with which I was received there in my own home town. I was a stranger, no one seemed to know what to make of me. By that point I was ten years gone, and there was no way to account for those ten years in a way which would make sense to everyone. How can you explain in a five minute conversation at the local bar where you have gone and lived and what you have seen in ten years outside of New Jersey? Especially when (for the most part) the person you are speaking with has remained there the whole time?
I’m not calling myself better than anyone just for the fact of having lived elsewhere, of course that’s not what I mean. In fact it surprised me was how jealous I felt of everyone that was still there, cultivating these friendships that they had had for two sometimes three decades by that point, and here was me in Amsterdam, fighting time after time to make friends only to have them leave a year later (the plight of the expat).
It all left me so sad. So I got on the plane to Amsterdam, and I decided that I wouldn’t be back in New Jersey any time soon. I took that mental shower and watched everything and everyone I knew in New Jersey get washed away, and with it that friend from the email above, simply because he was from that life that I didn’t care to be reminded of anymore (and, it seemed, no longer had the choice of belonging to anyway).
*
* This doesn’t include the family that I have in New Jersey, the only people that I would gladly return to the state for.
*
The whole point of this post was to quote some of the funny email exchanges I had with this friend, because for a long time he was my cheerleader from afar, boosting my spirit when it sagged and pushing me onwards when I lagged behind or doubted myself.
But when I started digging for those emails, it got too overwhelming. I only realized then that we weren’t friends anymore, hadn’t been for awhile. The end of a friendship, however natural and organic, is never a nice place to revisit.
I have new cheerleaders now, and new people that I stand on the sidelines and cheer for. With these new friends (most made within the past 6 years), there is no need to explain where we have been for the past ten years. With no history to begin with, we can start in the Now, right here at this place where we are standing together.
And that, to me, feels like looking in the right direction.
***
Words Elsewhere:
Fiets Mania: BeDazzled Fiets













































