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Tuesday, June 28, 2011

My best friend

I met up with an OLD friend the other day.  Haha, old friend, as in long-time friend, 'cause she's the same age as me (ok, six months younger) and I'm not really old yet.  It was a great day.  I totally understand why a long-time childhood friend is one of the six friends every woman needs.  Can I say it again, it was a great day.  What did we do?  We talked.  And talked.  And talked.  Oh, and we drank.  So we could talk some more.  We walked a lot while we talked.  Can we say this was aerobic exercise?  It was wonderful to catch up on her sisters, my brothers, her parents, my parents, old high school friends, reunions that there is NO WAY we will be going to, hopes for the future and, of course husbands and children.

It is true when they say the childhood friend just "gets you."  She told me such nice things about myself.  She reminded me of the girl I was with all the hopes and dreams and promise for the future.  We remembered the days we were seriously carefree.  The biggest issue was ditching school or staying out after curfew.  I could barely remember those days, but while I was with my friend all these memories came rushing back.  Isn't it funny how we can remember the words to the songs we sang in the car while we were in high school.  We can remember crazy escapades we took when we should have been in algebra or English.  We can remember old boyfriends that dumped us or those we dumped.  But, we can't remember the difficult days with our children, now grown, or the arguments with a husband when we were frazzled by toddlers or teachers.  The memory is a selective place to visit.  It lets you travel back through some of the back passages, but blocks you from others.  I'm glad this time spent with a childhood friend opened the gates to the cherished memories of youth.

My memories of her were always the best.  She was the sweetest friend.  EVERYONE liked her.  But, I was her bestie and we always hung out together.  She always wanted to have fun and go anywhere.  She was brave enough to knock on a door of a house of people we didn't know, but had heard had a bathroom with a toilet shaped like (or hidden in) a flower pot.  We did it.  We knocked on the door.  We asked to use the bathroom AND... indeed the flower pot toilet existed.  I had the balls, she had the sweet smile that got us in the house.  So funny.

I can only hope I was as good a tonic for her as she was for me.  She told me she remembered me as smart and self assured.  I loved this.  Ever since my son became a teenager I've been told I'm not too smart.  Hee hee.  I've become a woman in my 50's and the wonderful generation of those young people in their 30's have reminded me I'm "past my prime" and really not too sharp anymore.  I work at a college, so I'm used to being around kids and being invisible because I'm irrelevant to them.  It's amazing how we see ourselves as time passes.  It was so good to hear a positive word about me.  (I'm not saying my husband doesn't compliment me, but from him, I know it's foreplay.  :))

Oh, and for anyone who read the post I wrote about my dream a couple weeks ago I have to share this little tidbit.  The valet at the hotel my friend was staying at offered to keep my car in the front driveway for me while we went out for dinner and before I would need it to drive home.  This, I hoped, would save me a little money (it didn't) and save me some time in retrieving my car when we returned (it did).  Paul from Nigeria, as his name tag read, told me I didn't need a valet ticket for my car.  He would remember me.  My car would be Just Fine.  Here's the thought bubble over my head, "What!?! No Ticket!?!  Should I give him my car keys and not have a ticket?  Am I NUTS?"  Yeah, I gave him the keys.  My car was Just Fine.  See, my dreams don't come true.


11 comments:

  1. Too bad you didn't take a photo of the flower pot potty. I guess you didn't have a camera phone. Sometimes I think about the encyclopedias I used to write reports (the ones my parents won't throw out b/c they spent so much on them) and all the papers I wrote out by hand so I could maximize my time in the computer lab (by typing, only, not thinking), and I can scarcely believe I graduated h.s., let alone college. I'm glad for your day w/ your friend, and you're right: "old" friends are so special.

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  2. i so enjoyed this post,  it's great you spent time with your BFF...and you are right, they "get" us, don't they?  i still have my BFF from high school in my life, she lives an hour away...in fact we are having lunch together this friday, can't wait!!!

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  3. smiles. glad the car was ok...and how coolon catching up with the friend...like taking a trip in a time machine...

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  4. "Old friends" are the best. They do get us! I'm very opinionated and speak my mind. My "old friends" know this about me and totally accept me. They actuallylike it. When I'm with new people I always say to myself "Mariza, keep your mouth shut! they are not ready for you, yet" and sometimes I do, and sometimes I don't. Not everyone likes opinionated people. My old friends like me.

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  5. I can't quite imagine what a flower pot toilet would look like, but I love that they let you in to use it.  And it gave you and your friend a good story.  :) 

    (I read this yesterday at work, and got interrupted before I could comment.)

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  6. Friends like that are priceless.

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  7. Sounds like a great friendship! 

    I was going to email you, but I don't see a contact email so I'll just answer here. 
    Nora holding up that number one finger is for the USC baseball team winning the College World Series.  Her mommy just graduated from there in May!  The catcher graduated with a BSN, too.

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  8. I just love faithful, old, never go away friends!!!  :)

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  9. Good to connect with an old friend. I do understand that as we get older we are irrelevant to those younger. It is a strange feeling.

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  10. I met my bff when i was 12 and in sixth grade.her family had just moved to our town and she was new in school and i befriended her and we became fast friends and almost inseparable.she belonged to the same parish as me and we often went to mas together.our birthdays were three weeks apart and it seemed as if god had made us almost alike.as i got to know her she had  a shyness about her that i couldnt quite figure out. i had invited her for sleep overs at my house and she always made up an excuse or said she didnt want to.then one night i was at her house and it was getting towards bed time and we were in her room and her mom came in and told her it was time to get ready foe bed.I was then that her mom told me that she is a bedwetter and wears a cloth diaper and rubber pants to bed every night.I now knew the reason behind her shyness and why she didnt want to sleep over.i told her that it was no big deal,that she and i would still be best friends and that i fully accepted her problem.after that night,she opened up more and became less shy.she invited me to a sleep over and at bed time i told her i would wear one of her diapers and rubber pants also and she was happy and releived.As we got older and into junior high we became even closer and shared many ups and downs together,and her bedwetting was our secret.we entered high school and became cheerleaders together and also were on the dance team.we thought so much alike that we would sometimes finish each others sentances.which amazed other kids.finially,her bed wetting stopped  7 months after her 16th berthday and we celebrated by having a bonfire and burning all of her diapers and rubberpants.we graduated together and then went our separate ways to different colleges,but we stayed in touch.after graduation from college,we both got jobs and met our future husbands and both of us got married on the same day at our parish and are now still bff's.

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  11. You were a wonderful, accepting friend.  I think friends like you and your bff are the most special relationship one can have and not everyone get to have it.  Thanks for sharing your story.  Thanks for reading.  :)

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