If I Died Today I'd Be The Happy Phantom

Tonight I was idling watching the show The Class.  It's a kooky show about a group of friends who went to the same grade school and have reconnected after years of not seeing each other.  The Class started its first season in September.


Over the summer, they played commercials promoting the show and in those commercial they would show the characters of the show as children frolicking in a playground and then show the characters as adults playing in the same playground.  The tagline was "The first friends you've ever made are the best friends you'll ever have."

I believe this.

It started me thinking about yesterday -- it was like old times.  Kimmy, Lauren and I were all hanging out in my Mom's kitchen laughing about stories that we've told each other 100s of times that will never get old for us, when all of a sudden Joe Clancey popped in.  And I began to think the nature of my friendships and what they mean to me.

I have a stigma and I'm not saying it's true, but it's how I feel: I care more about my friends then they do about me.  I have no proof to back this up, if it's even something that could be proven, but I know that I have done and am willing to do much more for them, if they needed me, then they are for me. 

I love them all.  I can't help it.  (Except Kimmy: I hate her.)

Yesterday, in my Mom's kitchen, we talked plenty about the shore trip of 2003, when we first were introduced to Steve Britt (who randomly showed up at Tiki Bob's on Friday), Ryan crashed a van into a flower shop and Kimmy and I were so entirely fucked up we thought Cap'n Crunch was trying to telepathically relay messages to us.

Then I started to think: if I died tomorrow what would my last memories of these people, my friends, be?  What would I think if all I had were images in my head to take me to the light? (This is what happens when I spend too much time by myself.  This bizarre thought pattern stems from a recent episode of Lost in which Eko dies and his final thoughts are focused on a moment shared between his brother and himself, but that's another blog entry).


In alphabetical order:

Danielle: If I died tomorrow and I thought of Danielle I would think not of one memory in particular, but of many.

An example: I was young, maybe 15 or so, and Lauren and I were temporarily made up after a huge fight.  It was the summer time and many of us had gathered at Lauren's house to hang out.  While everyone ran around like the immature teenagers we were, having water fights and making a mess out of the house do you want to know what Danielle and I were doing?  Sitting in front of the TV watching a marathon of The Real World and too eagerly waiting for the first episode of the new season to air (I'm almost certain it was the premiere of Seattle, but there is a tiny chance it may have been Boston -- or even Hawaii?).

My admiration and appreciation of Danielle runs very deep and this memory is something that has always been cemented in my mind.  This is sort of how I imagine Danielle and myself: everyone else is running around doing something that is supposed to be fun and the two of us turn our backs and do something completely dorky and uncool (this has manifested in our adulthood as ALCOHOL).

Along with Lauren and Kimmy, Danielle is somebody I couldn't imagine not having in my life and in my memories.

Jean:  Traveling to work on the R5 are my favorite memories of Jean and myself -- they would all hit me at once and the feeling of overwhelming companionship would wallop me and carry me away.

Those train trips were the foundation on which Jean and I have built our relationship as they were the first time that we connected with each other on a sober level.  They were sort of our rite of passage to see whether or not we had anything substantial to maintain a friendship on.

And we did.

Joei: She was the only person there for me, for three years, when nobody else was.  When her and Dante went out I felt like it was my first relationship too. 

I miss her so much sometimes.

And all the wonderful memories and secrets and beauty that comes off of her would will come to me in my final moments and I will know that I loved her and, maybe, I'll know she loved me as well.

Katie: This past summer, during the Wildwood vacation with the Delawares, Katie was *hammered*.  You know, her usual stealing massive amounts of food from WaWa hammered.  Walking back to our beach house was Jean, Katie, Kimmy, Matt and myself.  Katie kept complaining she couldn't walk and I told her that I would give her a piggy back ride.  Matt told her the same thing and she kept screaming at him that she wanted me to give her the piggy back ride.  It's totally stupid -- and I'm not proud of this -- but I felt so puffed up and giddy because she wanted me to give her the piggy back ride.  And I'll never forget that.  Granted, I know she was so, so drunk but that dumb, little incident of Katie picking me, her gay, over her boyfriend -- well, that was the moment she became, officially, my hag. 

Sometimes it's the smallest events and tiniest memories that have the largest impacts.

Also, we both agreed to stage dive in a stranger's front lawn bushes while seeking out a WaWa at one of Danielle's random parties.  We did jump into the bushes and knocked them over. 

Why wouldn't somebody want to recall that when they were going out?

And who else would do that besides Katie?  Nobody!  And that's why I love her.

Kimmy: Where to begin? 

Wandering around Times Square and Rockefeller Center in the wee morning hours, crashing in to each other, like idiots; that same vacation talking for hours and hours in the hotel lobby about boys, the future, our parents and each other.

Mardi Gras after Hurricane Katrina.  Knowing in my gut that everything that lead up to that moment was exactly the way it was planned and knowing that the person I was with has had affected me in ways nobody else could even possibly imagine.

Stumbling around her parents house after a night of heavy drinking, making out with her dog, Rusty, while telling her Mom I was going to Ireland because I am going to FLLLYY there -- all while Kimmy told her Dad she drank nothing but juice.

Trying to figure out how to put the full spoons of Cap'n Crunch in our mouths, while laughing so furiously that I struggled to breathe, while Ryan nodded in approval in the background, "Yeeeeah, I caused that." 

I guess the question isn't where do I begin; the question is where do I stop?

Lauren: My fondest memory of Lauren is on that shore trip of 2003.  I came in to wake her up from a nap and wound up rolling in bed with her.  I'll never forget as we cuddled and she leaned over and whispered into my ear, "I love you," and, in that moment, I loved her, too, in a way that I never had before and never have since.  I'll never forget the look on her face when she breathed out those words, like they were An Oath, a beautiful poem.

I'd recall days with her in 6th grade doing homework on my Mom's living floor, watching that stupid show "I'm Telling!", a game show in which siblings competed against each other. 

Very possibly the best day of my life was spent with Lauren and Kimmy on my 19th birthday at 3 a.m. somewhere on the shore of New Jersey, as my insane step-mother whizzed us around different shore towns, visiting beaches and the ocean and the salty, sea breeze air.  We started out in Point Pleasant Beach and God only knows where we wound up and with each stop on that spontaneous adventure I felt my heart was losing pieces of itself that were, and still are, owned by Kimmy and Lauren.  That night was so special to me for so many different reasons and the reason that matters the most is that I shared it with Lauren and Kimmy.  This was the night I realized I couldn't live without either one of them.

Lee Ann: It's small and insignificant, probably, but every time I see her I think of us deciding to be "pen pals" when I was in 7th grade, during the time that I was fighting with Lauren (our first of many, many, many, many, many fights to come).  I always had a special liking for Lee Ann and wanted to be her friend, despite the fact that Lauren and I revving up for war.  So Lee Ann agreed to be my pen-pal and we wrote letters back and forth to each other for a few months.  I still have them in my pen-pal collection somewhere buried in my Mom's house.

Every letter I received from her was amazing to my little 7th grade self.

And if I died I'd remember that...

Stacie: Stacie will always hold a special place in my heart for two reasons and if I did die tomorrow these would be the things I'd remember:

-- On the shore trip of 2003, she and I stuck away from the crowd of them for dinner one night and went to a pizza shop not far from our hotel.  It was my first real vacation without adult supervision so I felt free and independent, but still a little weirded out that I was stuck down the shore with those assholes.  While at the pizza shop, I can see in my mind the way the sun shone though the window, it was starting to set and the sky was glowing that beautiful yellow glow that only happens down the shore.  I remember so vividly Stacie and I talking about everything and nothing and dreams and tomorrow and yesterday and time and now.  I felt so connected to her in that moment.  She and I shared so much on that vacation, but that silly, little trip to the pizza shop is what means the most to me.

-- After I was rid of being sick in early 2004 and finally managed to get my voice back, up and running, Stacie was the ONLY person who went out with me and celebrated.  Again, it was another night of talking (I'm started to notice a pattern here of me really enjoying the quiet moments when I can curl up and share thoughts with people), but it was more than that: it was Stacie celebrating my recovery, it was us walking down 2nd Street with the group of serenading boys behind us. 

It was Stacie being my friend. 

It was something I'll never forget.

Wynia:  How could I ever possibly not think of Wynia living with me for a year? 

How could I forget her tearing down my kitchen wall "by accident," driving me crazy day and night, whispering into her phone at 3 a.m., "What's that, CrazyCutie?  What?  You want to come slice me open and murder me?  Oh, you are so crazy, Cutie!  You don't mean that, BoyCrazyCutieHoneyBunches.  Boy, shut up, Boy, you know you love me, BoyCutieCrazy.  I love you, Crazy!"

I moan and bitch a lot about when she was living with me, but there were a lot of really amazing times too.

I love her because she has a way of making me feel better about myself, mostly because she praises me, and also because her life is so, uh, unbalanced.

______________________________________________________

They say when you go out your life flashes before your eyes.  I hope that I get a flash of all these things, and many more.

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