Thursday, January 6, 2011
Letting Go
Impermanence is the one thing we can count on in life.
We are confronted with this fact every day of our lives, and yet we still cling to the idea that we can hold onto something, whether it's a family tradition, a feeling, a friendship, or even a person, forever.
We are conditioned to believe that this is how things are supposed to be.
Although I understood this in a left-brainy, smart-girl kind of way, last summer was a huge lesson, or lessons, in impermanence. Sometimes you can learn something from a book, read it, understand it, even know it a little, but until you're confronted with a trifecta of it, as I was (Punch! Kick! Wham!) it's pretty easy to forget that life itself is nothing but lessons in impermanance.
The person you think you've fallen in love with tells you "Even if I told you I was falling in love with you, well, too bad! I've changed my mind!"
The old pet you thought maybe had another two or three lives in him, well, you come home and find him stroked out on the kitchen floor in a puddle of his own pee and two hours later you're watching some anonymous doctor inject a drug into a catheter in his leg that stops his heart, while his last breath sounds to you like "thank you."
The morning phone call from your sister, the one that stops you in your tracks in the middle of Park Avenue, saying, "Mom died last night," leaving you with those bright spots in front of your eyes and breath that suddenly won't squeeze past the top of your sternum to get to your lungs.
Things like this will remind you of the impermanence of life.
I used to have a friend whom I called my best friend.
Her name was Juliet. We met when we were both young and beautiful and owned New York City. We were inseparable and did everything together -- movies and brunches and drinks and dinners, long heartfelt conversations on the phone and in bars and in parks and on aimless walks through our City that we both loved as passionately as lovers. We were "Sex and the City" before that show existed.
I spent so much time with her family that the extra bedroom in their Fire Island house was called "Weenie's Room."
Our birthdays were three days apart, and her mother would host a dinner party for Juliet every year at her Riverside Drive apartment. Then I would throw a giant birthday bash for myself (any excuse to throw a party, and my circle of aquaintances was massive back then, and my parties were kind of legendary) with a hundred people jammed into my duplex, and my friend the bar owner having to call in the reinforcement keg from his bar sometime around 2am, and at least one visit from the police. Hey, it was the 90's, we were young, and we were having fun.
In 2000, I went as usual to Gwyneth's to celebrate Juliet's birthday. It was an important dinner, because Juliet was going to introduce me to her new boyfriend, Mark. This was exciting. She had mentioned him a few times on the telephone, but only in passing, so I didn't know how serious it was.
Dinner was lovely, uneventful. I liked Juliet's new boyfriend a lot, mainly because they seemed so smitten with each other. She was clearly delighted with him, and he with her. They made a nice couple.
The next day, I called her to tell her that I liked her boyfriend.
"He really liked you, too," she said. "He called you fascinating and dangerous."
Me, dangerous, ha! As dangerous as a Beanie Baby, right? As for fascinating, I'll take it, but as a girl with a happy childhood and no tragic, dark past, I'd hardly call myself fascinating. Or, maybe, as a former boyfriend once told me, my very ordinariness made me fascinating.
I laughed, yeah, just like I do now, at that description.
Saturday, the night of my birthday party, I got a call from Juliet. She wasn't feeling well, and wouldn't be able to come to the party. Oh well, shit happens, right?
After that, many more phone calls to Juliet went unanswered. At first I shrugged it off -- we New Yorkers tend to leave each other alone when one of our own wants to crawl under the porch. We understand that the very essence of New York City is a surfeit of too-muchness, and sometimes you get a little overwhelmed with the too-muchness of it. You need to escape from it, in the only way that you can. You turn off your phone, and maybe hide out in your apartment for a few days, or take long solitary walks where you don't talk to anyone. If you're looking carefully, you can spot people doing this. They have an inward-turned quality to them. The dimmer switches on their auras are dialed way back. If you look really closely, you can see their doggy eyes peering out from behind the wooden steps of their souls.
When days turned into weeks, then months, the shrug turned into puzzlement turned into hurt. I played our conversations over in my head, again and again, trying to figure out what it was that I had said or done. And I kept coming up empty -- the last conversation I had with Juliet was nothing more than normal. Regular. Ordinary.
"See you Saturday," was probably the last thing I said.
When I decided to leave my one true love, New York City, a few months later, Juliet didn't come to my going-away party, and amongst the friends who had traveled from Connecticut and Philadelphia to see me sail off into a new life, there was an empty, silent, Juliet-shaped hole.
I don't know why Juliet walked away from me, and I never will. All I can do is wonder why she decided that I wasn't important in her life anymore, or how I went from utterly indispensable to completely dispensable in the space of a day or two. I can wonder at how such a seemingly cold-blooded decision could be made. I tried to write stories in my head, then discarded each one because I just couldn't know what had happened to make her say, "she's got to go."
To this day, I wonder.
Three days after 9/11, my phone rang. It was Juliet, sobbing.
"Oh, Aileen, what did they do to our city?" she asked.
I was planning a visit to New York for my birthday. We made plans to see each other.
Circumstances, in the form of Bill the firefighter laying his head in my lap, wrapping his arms around my legs, and crying out, "It should have been me! It should have been me!" intervened, and we didn't meet.
I haven't seen my once-best friend Juliet since 2000, and I can only think "I hope things turned out okay for her." I ran into her mother in a restaurant a couple years ago, and I know she got married, had a baby, lives on the Upper West Side. But I'll never know the rest, and I have to be okay with that. Otherwise the not-knowing would make me crazy.
Unlike made-up stories and books and movies, life doesn't always hand you finite endings. You don't always get, to use a term that I find loathesome and pat, closure. This is life, and sometimes it just sucks like that.
I wish Juliet only well, and hope that she has found happiness, no matter what happened. Just because we went around different bends in the river doesn't mean she's not there anymore -- I know she's still there, and she'll always be there.
I think that somehow, somewhere, she knows this.
4 comments:
It is a mystery, for sure. I think it just hasn't gotten yet to the end.
Some of your writing is wonderful. I especially like how you say, "If you look really closely, you can see their doggy eyes peering out from behind the wooden steps of their souls." This phenomenon is well-known at Burning Man, where an incapacitating over-stimulation can occur in just a couple days. I hadn't thought about how living in NYC can trigger it as well.
I love Aileen's writing, and yours too Don -- you guys don't do toss-away bloggery like I do. Gekko also writes for keepsies. Really good stuff.
When I lived in Chgo from ages 18-22 I made a point of walking around "shuttered" because I did not want strange men to talk to me and it worked really well. I wanted to meet people, but at my choosing, not unexpectedly on buses/trains. Maybe my life would have been more fun less planned, but whatever too late now!
Anyway, this is a great story, Aileen, sad and so real, maybe unfinished, maybe not. Letting go is so tough ... I've been working on this too last several years.
to use another phrase that might drive you crazy, "never say never." The very impermanence of life might change that ending to something other than where it sits now.
You never can tell.
I remember those times fondly. I did treasure those times hanging out with the you, Juliet and the rest of that crew. Only time I've been to Fire Island. Good times always. Fun personified.
Hell, you both braved the barren wastelands of Morristown, NJ to come to my first birthday bash after I left town. Of course, I know that was your doing.
It is tough to fall out of touch, but hey, you can always track her down if and when you're ready. Sounds like its only one subway transfer away.
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