To my college friend

I remember the moment we met. You sat next to me in one of our undergrad pre-req classes. You were so beautiful, the kind of beautiful most girls would be jealous of, but you were so sweet and I was in awe.  You were funny without trying to be and something about you made me feel as if I had always known you. We became instant friends. What I didn’t know in that moment, is you were going to be one of my forevers.

I don’t know how the years went so fast, but they did, just as everyone warned they would. Somehow that was twenty years ago. (How are we old enough to have adult memories “twenty years ago??”) 

We took a college graduation trip and made a lot of promises. We would take trips together for the rest of our days. We had no idea what life was about to be. We had no idea that life in your 40s is not quite the same as life in your 20s. 

The night before I left for grad school, you drove five hours to surprise me to say goodbye. Around Thanksgiving you sent a cheesecake to my third story apartment, and it got stolen, just like an episode of Friends. 

You were there for my weddings, both of them. You gave me unending grace when I told you I was leaving him, almost a year before I finally had the courage to actually leave. There was never an “I told you so,” even though you knew from the start, as you all did. But you loved me anyway. 

You came to their first birthdays. Your her Godmother and you love mine as if they are your own.

The week you had surgery, I drove to you. I could only stay a day, but I had to be there to know you were okay.  

Our friendship is twenty years, two divorces, and six kids deep. I don’t talk to you every day, but I wish I did. I wish I knew what was the best part of your kids’ day and I wish I got a chance to tell you an inside joke that only you would understand.  Our friendship now is voice text messages and a phone call maybe once a month.  You know I’ll never check my voicemails and that I’ll call you back eventually, even if it’s weeks away. That’s the reality of working moms that live states apart.   

So today I wanted to remind you that I miss you. I wanted to tell you that when we do get to talk, I laugh until I cry. We don’t take the trips we dreamed at 22 that we would take, because now we are moms. (And neither of us would trade that for anything.) The reality of 40s is a far cry from the dreams of our 20s.  

Friend, I love you even more than I did 20 years ago when you sat down next to me on our first day of the spring semester. You are one of my forevers. We are rarely in the same place at the same time, yet I know you’re somehow always here. Our limited weekends together now include zoo trips and a chaotic table for 10 at a restaurant, and by the end of the weekend we are more exhausted than when it started.  

Regardless of the miles and the months (sometimes the years), we pick up where we left off.

I just wanted to remind you, you’re one of my forevers.

The day we left Mayo

Tomorrow marks three weeks since surgery and tomorrow morning she returns to school. 

I cried hard when I wheeled her white marbled suitcase down the hall out the double doors on the peds unit, my daughter being wheeled out in a wheelchair by a staff member. Our lives would never be the same for many reasons. My child was returning with a new back that would change her quality of life. I felt so much gratitude but also so much absolute sadness and guilt as we wheeled past the others’ rooms. The sweet second grader was waiting on further tests, after inconclusive test results, so she could start treatment. The 14-year old’s parents were saying their final goodbyes to their handsome, athletic son. The 16-year old girl in the room next to us was supposed to get to go home the night before, for the first time since February, but her bloodwork indicated otherwise and she didn’t get to leave. All of these parents were living a nightmare as we just wheeled on out, my husband waiting in the suburban at the curb. I have cried every day since when I think about that moment. Many families are there off and on for years, but our stay wasn’t even a week. We would return home to school and jobs and laundry and chaotic schedules and things I hope to never again take for granted. 

We were surrounded in love and prayer our entire time there, I felt it every second. We always say a prayer every night that ends with, “Help us to help others in all of the ways that we can.” For some reason, it just feels a lot different after our time at Mayo.

So I write this for two reasons: 

I will never be able to thank everyone enough for every text, every prayer, every comment to remind us that they are in our corner. She almost didn’t get to have her surgery, but thanks to friends, prayers and guardian angels, she did. I saw firsthand the difference a person can make in the life of another.

Please keep the prayers coming to those we left behind at Mayo. They are working and they are felt there. I don’t know how to explain it.

I often hear people say “Hug your babies a little tighter,” when someone endures a terrifying experience. Yeah, we should, but we can do a lot more than that. We can cover them in prayers and add them to prayer chains. We can send care packages or $10 coffee cards. We can make meals to leave in the freezer. We can send a text that doesn’t say “I’m sorry,” but rather “Tell me something you need.” 

I’ve spent the past couple of weeks more appreciate of watching my healthy children play the sports they absolutely love. I have more patience and grace. I bought my middle child the specific bread she really loves for her school lunches, instead of just using what I had. I have been in awe of things I just didn’t notice before.  

Thank you for your endless support the past few weeks, from our neighbors who made us dinner and the friends who checked in daily, we are so grateful to each and every one of you. 

Please continue to wrap the peds floors at Mayo in prayers, too. 🩷