Dear Q,
How is it possible that this picture, at the best 21st birthday party ever (sunflowers + live music + beer + magic light = heaven) was taken sixteen years ago? No, no, no. Impossible. Also impossible: that bleached jeans and huge nubby sweaters ever seemed like good sartorial choices to me!
I wrote to and about you last year and I’m not sure I can say it better than I did there:
Birthday girl, fellow proud redhead, a godmother to my first child, short-short wearer, Doctor Pepper drinker, occasional roommate at the Regency Hotel when traveling for our first jobs, tour-guide in Assissi, fellow secret country music fan, counselor, entertainer, reminder of what it’s all about: thank you.
Yes … there are so many memories from the past that rise up like clouds when I pat our college years even gently – the fact that your thesis ended with Kate Chopin’s The Awakening and mine began with it … driving through the night singing “good friends we’ve had, good friends we’ve lost along the way” … artichokes and mermaids … In anticipation … walking in the P-Rade, tear-streaked and tipsy, arms flung around the necks of each other and a long line of friends, traversing the line both virtual and literal between students to alumni, between children and adults. To call this the tip of the iceberg is a massive understatement.
I look forward to celebrating soon, with white wine (I’ve joined your ranks of white-only) and children crawling all over us. It seems like a lifetime ago and also yesterday that we met, and it still stuns me that we both have children, husbands, houses, MBAs. The data suggests we are adults – and yet somehow with you I am perpetually eighteen, in the best possible way.
This photograph hangs at eye level (right next to one of my wedding day where you are laughing with me in the momentary break from downpour) on the board in front of my desk. I look at you many times every single day. I think of what a lifetime friend is, and of the deep comfort it is to trust that even in times of less contact our bond endures. There are so many years behind us, filled to bursting with memories, and I look forward to all the ones that lie ahead.
I love you, Q. Thank you, thank you, thank you.




Suddenly, this morning, I understood. I’m hurrying into the future and hiding in the past to avoid staring into the sun of my life. To escape the reality that every minute is gone as I live it. To pretend that it’s not true that I can never have any of those moments back, ever. My life’s single most painful truth is the slow turning forward of my time on earth and the inherent loss that that represents.




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