22 October, 2005

on unpacking dishes and a return to friendship

I saw a friend last night that I haven't seen in a year and a half. This was a purposeful year and a half that I had not seen her. We hit a crisis point in our friendship shortly after I returned to the States, and I stepped back for some serious evaluating. And I dug deeply into my cave of introverted, intuitive processing, and I did not see sunlight break on this particular issue for quite a while. I had a dream a few months before things reached the breaking point; I felt it was a warning not to allow small or petty things to become a point of contention, upon which something fragile might break.

This is my dearest friend from my university days and we have a decade and a half of true friendship together; it was not something I would throw away lightly, nor without regret. Jamie and I were both Spanish majors in college and we shared similar enthusiasm for the outdoors, languages, cultures, and literature, and travel. We worked together at our university bookstore for several years, and saw each other nearly every day during each semester. We made meals for one another at our respective apartments, did the occasional ski trip, studied Latin American poems together, and celebrated our small victories in our classes with bottles of nice beer or a bottle of French wine.

Jamie went to France and to Cote d'Ivoire; I went to Latin America and the UK. She married a wonderful man she met biking up Mount Evans and moved to the Colorado mountains. I stayed in Scotland and eventually made my passage back to Colorado, where I am now home for a while. Letters, post cards, small gifts and treasures have coursed between us for years. Coffee from Central America, a beautiful cafe bowl from France, Alfonsina Storni poems, our dreams, written out in longhand. Jamie is an organizer...definitely a J on the MBTI, and what she doesn't use or want, she throws away. My letters are some of the only things she has kept over the years. I saw them bound up in small packets in a large chest she kept, one time when she was moving, and I mused that my letters had made the final cut. And I have done the same with her correspondence. Certainly not in so organised a fashion, but her thoughts and expressions of friendship, all kept, because they are dear to me.

When I moved to my current flat, I had brought along boxes from my parents' home that had not been opened in over 7 years. Kitchen stuff, utensils, cutlery. As I went about this mundane task of pulling out these necessity items from a box marked Fragile, I unwrapped the newspaper from a small, porcelain bowl that bore the words, Pillivuyt, France on it's simple foot. Jamie's bowl. I held the bowl and felt it's smooth lines and thought how elegant yet uncomplicated it was. I wished for this in our relationship, now fraught with what I don't even know, just fraught, and unresolved. Perhaps it was time to be in contact again?

And so, I decided to return to her bearing "a plate of cookies" as she likes to say; a way back, a place to meet and reconvene, and begin afresh. We had dinner in Golden and went to a presentation by one of America's foremost mountaineers, Arlene Blum. She had written a book that inspired me in my late teens and early 20s called Annapurna. It documented the story of the first all-female team to climb one of the world's 8,000 meter peaks. It brought us back to what brought us together at the beginning of our friendship, our love of mountains and challenges, and our desire to live lives of passion.

I think this was a good place to start.

Bienvenida, Jamie.

8 comments:

Jan said...

Hey El,
This made me cry.I'm very happy for your heart. I know this was a sore spot.
Love you,
Jan

Anonymous said...

Ellen,

Very unexpected and cool. I'm happy for you. Talking about Annapurna reminded me immediately of our backpacking trip. Two days stuck in our tent, because of the rain reading by flashlight, that very book. Blast from the past.

Good on ya!

Love, Kate

Anonymous said...

Thank you so much, Ellen.

Love, Jamie

Anonymous said...

Ellen,
Just a friendly reminder that I'm still waiting for your next post. My husband is now blogging and Mike Musselman has started a blog as well. It's time for you to get with the program and write another post. Before I start really nagging. :-)
Phyllis

Anonymous said...

Ahem...
this is me, beginning to nag a bit.
"wait 'till I get going!!!"

Phyllis

Anonymous said...

It's been long enough now, Ellen. Get it out of your head and onto the post, y'hear!

Mike Musselman said...

I jsut stopped by your blog and noticed nothing new, so I thought I'd leave a comment, something to the effect of "
Ellen, I jsut stopped by your blog and als, there was no new post. Hoping to see one soon."

But I see Phyllis beat me to it, at least twice. So I won't add to the nagging. I'll just wait patiently.

Mike M.

But ... could you jsut hurry it up a little bit? OK? Huh?

Anonymous said...

...I'm waiting...
How's the interview process going?
Phyllis