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Today’s essay originally ran in March 2022, a couple days after one of my closest friends passed away. The first few hours after I found out were a huge test of my sobriety: The question wasn’t about whether I would drink but whether I could still be counted upon to do the service work? I was scheduled to speak at a meeting at 4 p.m. that evening. However, as I mentioned in this piece, showing up for it with an anchor of sadness tied around my neck seemed impossible. But we all have our anchors—and for 20 minutes, I set aside the grief about my friend and gave my experience, strength, and hope to strangers instead. I miss him every second, but I’m glad I can rerun this essay as a tribute.
TFLMS1.
— AJD
And Here We Are
Since I have been an employable adult, I have had some steady, well-meaning people close to me who’ve offered unsolicited advice about what I should do with my life, usually during a vulnerable, not-very-successful time for me–a rough patch, so to speak–and they would always tell me, in not so uncertain terms, that I might want to consider a back-up plan. Maybe a degree in something specialized–or perhaps I should become a teacher? Stay home. Stay close. You’re not ready to go. You can’t afford it—all that.
And when I left for New York the first time to try writing, they said move home, move back to Philly why don’t you, all your friends are here. What else is out there for you? I had many of these friends, as I’m sure you do.
But then maybe you got lucky, and there was an unexpected new friend who grabbed you by the arm and flung you into a rocket ship. “Where should we go?” this new friend asked.
These are, in my opinion, the most important friends. And on March 18, 2022, one of my most important friends died. He was only one year older than me, with a wife and kids, parents and friends, and all the awful rest. I’m still processing it, but here we go.
*****
Most people I know spent their first year of sobriety either crying uncontrollably at the most inconsequential, ridiculous things or were unable to cry at all, even when it was appropriate and probably necessary. I fell into this category. And honestly, I hadn’t cried in earnest for years. Most of my crying was theatrical and desperate. Like, for example, if I was caught in a lie. Or, if I wanted to appear sensitive, I could turn on the faucet and temporarily show tenderness. (I believe this is called “being manipulative.”)
Actually, the first time I saw Up, I got very teary. That was legit.
But during all of my First Year, I had nothing. Dry as welder’s skin. Dry as an August haystack. Dry as a busted skull in an ancient desert—you get the idea.
Since then, I’ve had several wet-eyed moments. The first time I my son called me “Papa,” it got me good. Then, about a year later, he had to have some minor surgery, so they had him all zonked out on baby Ativan before taking him to the operating room. When the anesthesiologist took him away, I had to look up and find a spot on the ceiling to stare at, or else I would have been a complete mess.
Also, my wedding day. It was a small ceremony presided over by a justice of the peace in a Beverly Hills rancher on a halfway sunny late afternoon in December. I held Julieanne’s hand on our couch as some of our friends huddled around a fancy-looking homemade cake while we bounced TWO babies on our laps. Filled up then.
Then, our youngest son, our third, had a couple of scary medical emergencies in his young life. Actually, I held it together both of those times. I didn’t think any tears would help those situations. Maybe I'm forgetting a couple more wet-eyed moments, but nothing substantial.
Anyway, none of that is important anymore.
*****
Last April, I received the first “Family Update” email from my most important friend, Jim. I was cc’d on it with a select group of his other friends and faraway family, and he told us about his aggressive, menacing cancer and the exotic locales of his many tumors. He told us that he initially felt very low and hopeless after receiving such grim news, but he had since shifted into the angry defiance of a man loved by many who wanted to stay around a long, long time. He wished us all the best and said he’d send another update after his initial surgery.
When I got the email, I immediately became overly emotional and nostalgic. I quickly fired off a heavy-handed response, reminiscing about a vacation we’d taken together to Cat Island in 2001. We drank all day and took ecstasy on the beach. We tossed a football in the ocean and outswam the barracudas. We even jumped off a cliff together. First, we climbed up some craggy mountain in cheap flip-flops. It was about a 40-foot jump into sparkling blue water above an underwater cave. He hesitated slightly. “It’s high,” he said. But I jumped right off.
This is not like me. I’ve walked down black diamond ski slopes and stepped out of lines on amusement park rides and water slides. But I jumped off this cliff and kept my eyes open the whole time. I did it twice. Bruised my ribs the second time down but I had cold beers on the boat ride back and I was pulsating with aliveness. It was just an amazing day.
Then I went even further in the email and told him how much he’d meant to me–his importance to my life. I may have even said something like, “You made my life what it is today,” and I wanted him to hear it. It could not wait, I thought.
Jim said it was nice to relive that memory, but he also informed me that my response was “really wild,” which was a polite way of saying that it was “a little inappropriate given the circumstances.” It was not about you, dude, basically.
But he’d recently thought of that trip, actually. The coconut-cracking. Those barracudas. That jump.
“I’ve always admired you for leaping. I think I worry too much about nailing the landing instead of enjoying the trip.”
That’s not entirely true. He took many leaps before me, and I always followed.
So much time had passed since then, but that trip was sensational. I knew every moment we spent there under our palapas, eating fresh fish and drinking daiquiris like that it would be the best vacation of my life.
He started the next paragraph with, “And here we are.” That rattled me. We were back in the present, this terrible present, and his surgery was scheduled for the next day. “Talk to you soon,” I wrote.
*****
I’ve mentioned this poet named George Bilgere several times in this newsletter. He’s probably my favorite poet, even though he’s a very ordinary 60-ish white guy from Cleveland. Please bear with me.
Sometimes his poems tackle the exact subjects you’d expect from someone like him: painful childhood memories of his scotch-drinking father, teenage lust and the Vietnam War, mewling for baseball heroes long-dead, baristas at the coffee shop with nose rings. Dumpy late-middle-aged Dad stuff.
I’ve read almost all of his compilations, and his misses are pretty embarrassing, but he’s also cracked me open like no other poet has before. Like this poem called “Letter to the Dying” about his own most important friend.
Writing to the dying is difficult
Because I don’t want to say anything true.
Saying something like, You’ve had such a great life
will make it sound like he’s dying.
And you can’t say that! It’s OK
For him to say it, but my role, as I see it,
Is to be evasive. I can’t even say
I love you, because I would never say that
unless he were dying, and if I say it
he’ll know he’s dying.
I kept this poem humming in my heart, and I didn’t respond to any more of those Family Update emails after that. Not even a supportive “Hooray!” when Jim informed us of a successful surgery or a good round of chemo. I said nothing because I knew I was incapable of evasiveness.
Then, one night, he emailed me directly. He was up late on the East Coast. “I need to think about something else today. Tell me everything.”
And I quickly wrote him thousands of words about my happy life, my beautiful life, the one he helped me build, I could think of. I aimed to give him the best, most uplifting stuff I’d had in me to help him forget his awful day, shrink the tumors, or stop time.
I expected him to write back within the hour—“That’s exactly what I needed!” But that did not happen. Days passed, and he didn’t write back. I was itching with failure, wondering if I'd once again said too much.
He sent out another Family Update right before the holidays, and things were looking up. A corner had been turned. He had some time away from the hospital. He hiked with his family near the Wissahickon. Thanksgiving was fun and special. He even ran a half marathon—the slowest one he ever ran, he said.
“Yes!” I responded. I was happy. I shut my laptop. He was gonna be okay.
After that amazing news, nothing came for a while, so I broke the silence in late February and sent him an email requesting the latest Family Update if he had time. It took a couple of weeks for him to respond. The latest news wasn’t great, he said—a major setback. Specialists were needed. He still had hope, though. I responded evasively: “Stay positive and let us know if there’s anything we can do.”
*****
When I think about unalloyed grief, I think of Roger Angell’s 2014 New Yorker essay, “This Old Man,” written when he was a 94-year-old semi-retired “blogger,” and it quickly became the most popular story on the website—in history. It’s this lovely but grueling meditation on life and death, and in one section, he rattled off a list of names of important people and beloved pets he’s watched pass on—“the battalion of the dead” is what he called them. One of them was his daughter, Callie, who died by suicide in her 60s. Soon after she died, his eight-year-old fox terrier, Harry, went. Harry was startled by a summer storm and lept out a very high Upper Westside apartment window. Angell and his wife, Carol, were crushed.
“When Harry died, Carol and I couldn’t stop weeping; we sat in the bathroom with his retrieved body on a mat between us, the light-brown patches on his back and the near-black of his ears still darkened by the rain, and passed a Kleenex box back and forth between us. Not all the tears were for him. Two months earlier, a beautiful daughter of mine, my oldest child, had ended her life, and the oceanic force and mystery of that event had not left full space for tears. Now we could cry without reserve, weep together for Harry and Callie and ourselves. Harry cut us loose.”
When I imagined what Roger Angell meant by “cut us loose,” I pictured a fishing line tangled up and weighed down by messy kelp and other sea junk. It didn’t make much sense metaphorically—who is the fisherman?
But that’s what I pictured.
*****
Julieanne took me to Malibu this past weekend–my birthday weekend–for a day at one of those sublime beaches and a night away from our kids at a nice hotel. We have three, and they’re all very young and dependent. We are as sleep-deprived and crazed as every parent of toddlers, but both of us miss them terribly when we’re away from them, even for a night.
When I woke up on the usual 6 a.m. parent time, ready to tackle Wordle half-asleep, but the latest Family Update was sitting in my inbox. Unlike the previous emails, this one came from Jim’s wife, Maura, who is also a friend of mine. Her message was brief and broken-hearted: The love of her life had died the day before.
The expectedness of that moment did not protect me from its velocity. And as I lay there in bed, I began to cry. The tears were silver-heavy and sharp. Julieanne rubbed my back and tried to hold me because noises were coming out of me–these strange, unstoppable gasps. I realized I hadn’t cried this way in a long time, not since I was very young, maybe never, honestly.
Jim had cut me loose.
*****
When I finally got out of bed, I wasn’t sure what to do next. Should I wait for another email? Hop on a plane? Maybe I should do nothing at all. I was supposed to speak at a 5 p.m. AA meeting, but that seemed impossible.
We finally left the room and walked outside. I was surprised that the world had not stopped. The restaurant was open and brunch was still being served. A banana tree swayed softly thanks to this chilly, annoying wind.
We had some coffee and then walked down to the pier. There were fishing poles in rod holders, their lines slack with silly lures floating like lost feathers.
We went down to the beach and found a rock to sit on so I could stare off into the big nothing. “Look at us now,” I thought. This is where the rocket ship had landed.
The surfers rolled in on small foamy waves, taking turns being obvious metaphors. “Thank you for bringing me here,” I said quietly, a small prayer for my most important friend. And then, for maybe a second, the wind stopped.
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A POEM ON THE WAY OUT:
Impossible Friendships
by Adam Zagajewski
***********************
For example, with someone who no longer is,
who exists only in yellowed letters.
Or long walks beside a stream,
whose depths hold hidden
porcelain cups—and the talks about philosophy
with a timid student or the postman.
A passerby with proud eyes
whom you'll never know.
Friendship with this world, ever more perfect
(if not for the salty smell of blood).
The old man sipping coffee
in St.-Lazare, who reminds you of someone.
Faces flashing by
in local trains—
the happy faces of travelers headed perhaps
for a splendid ball, or a beheading.
And friendship with yourself
—since after all you don't know who you are.
ALL ILLUSTRATIONS BY EDITH ZIMMERMAN
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“Thanks for letting me share.”
One of my favorite Edith drawings ever. I have the one with the words “willingness” saved as my lock screen. This essay is so beautiful to read again!