Skip to main content

Friendship's End -- Writer's Poke #107

For Writers:

Jeff and I were friends for our year together in graduate school. I always thought he had a need to be loved, and as we were both aspiring writers, it made sense that we would be friends. I have a tendency to be sarcastic and mean-spirited, so I always liked to rub salt into his overly-sensitive wounds.

For the most part, though, I think we were pretty good friends for that year. When he moved back to his home state a few hundred miles away, I found a way to attend his wedding even though I was without a driver's licence, muddling through one of the lowest points of my life.

It would be another decade before I saw him again. In that time, he had started teaching, published a few books, and had his own life. Similarly, over that decade, I got married, started teaching, and had my own life; yet, we were friends once, so why not still? My closest friends go back to high school, and while we don't interact with each other much, there's always the sense that we're still connected.

This wasn't the case with Jeff, for whatever reason. There was a conference at his school, and I thought it would be a good opportunity to meet up. While he carved out a couple of hours so that we could reminisce about old times, once two hours was up, he kicked me out before I could overstay my welcome. Of course I understood. He had plans for the morning, and he couldn't be staying up all night with someone who had decided to check back into his life after a decade. Nevertheless, this hurt me. Over the next two years, I attempted to keep in semi-regular touch with Jeff, but he never reciprocated the effort.

So finally I had to admit it to myself. Whatever friendship we once had with each other had died in graduate school.

Think about a time you lost a friendship. What happened? How did it affect you? Have you ever purposely killed a friendship? If so, why?

"The only danger in Friendship is that it will end." -- Henry David Thoreau

Comments

  1. "someone THAT had decided..."? Surely you know, Doc, that WHO is the correct relative pronoun to be used with actual living beings. Leave THAT for everything else!! Best, Goober.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Goober,

    Thanks for the catch. Maybe I used "that" because Jeff had made me feel dead inside?? :)

    Glad to have you as a member of the Writer's Poke editing squad!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Jesus and the Inconvenience of His Word to American Christians

I'm not a preacher, but if you follow the teachings of Jesus, it was he who said: Do to others as you would have them do to you. That's from Luke 6:31 , and reading all of Luke 6 isn't a bad way to spend five minutes of your time.  https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=luke%206&version=NIV I guess a lot of Christians understand the Golden Rule and practice it in their daily lives. Others, however, especially political Christians (and specifically those promoting Christian Nationalism) seem to ignore the Golden Rule. They don't care about humanitarian issues. They claim they either don't exist, aren't the problem of the United States, or are the fault of the victims. They counter with distractions like, "Why do you care so much about THEM when you should be caring about the REAL people who matter?" Sorry, but I don't recall Jesus ever dividing people into those who matter more and those who matter less. Of course, Jesus also said not to j...

Microblogging? The Future of Writing with ADHD

Bill Bennett is a very common name. Right now, I'm reading a book by the Australian film maker Bill Bennett. He hiked the Camino in 2013 and then wrote a book (and made an Australian movie, not available in the U.S.) about it.  Seems he kept a blog about that hike, too. I went to look for his Camino blog, and found he started one years after the hike, but he didn't post regularly... His last post from 2022 announced his had Parkinson's and had kept the diagnosis secret for 4 years.  Now that almost three years have passed from that post, I wonder what's happened to him.  Blogs are weird. They just sit there. Anyone can stumble upon them, and read them. So I decided to keep looking for his Camino blog.  https://billbennett.blog/home/ *** And I found another Bill Bennett, this one from New Zealand, who keeps a microblog. It's current and updated. "What's a microblog?" My wife asked. Well, I said, it's a small blog. Just a sentence or two for a post. ...