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Wide Open Spaces


There's nothing quite so liberating as an open road with unspoiled nature surrounding us. This was my view from the passenger window last Wednesday early evening in the mountain west of the United States.

I spent the first 30-something years of my life in a very flat part of the Midwest surrounded by subdivisions, strip malls and stoplights. There was no adventure in going anywhere.  Just more of the same cluttered roadsides interrupted by houses that all seemed to be competing with each other over which could occupy more space on small lots. 

We were drinking in this vista on our way from my PT appointment to meet up with some friends who recently moved just a few miles up this road. My better half first became acquainted with them when we each lived elsewhere. The friendship took root after a series of basketball games. My guy's new friends would share some time post-exercise while I was enjoying a quiet Saturday morning, usually blogging. Those were the days when I guarded my time and waved off new friendships for fear that the conversation would inevitably turn to children and parenting. It was years before the four of us got together socially. 

By then, I'd learned that they had one son, but collectively their lives had been filled with equal amounts of torment and loss. For them, multiple miscarriages over years had scarred and tested not just themselves, but their marriage. Alcohol was his way of coping. Hers was losing herself in the day to day demands of working and raising a child. At one point when the drinking became too much, she issued an ultimatum: it's the booze or us. You choose. He chose wisely. He stopped drinking, lost weight, got healthy and started playing basketball with joy not anger. My guy witnessed the transformation and said his fellow 'baller' became a different person once he faced up to his grief.

They've since become dear friends. (When not hosting them at our house, we have to meet them in neutral places like restaurants because, yes, they have a dog). 

I love them for their honesty and willingness to gently give us space to open up about our own losses and once fragile dreams. Today we're all grateful for who we've become and marvel at the opportunity to meet up in nature when our schedules align.


Last summer we attended their son's wedding. It was a beautiful day in more ways than one. The most memorable part of the day was watching my guy, who witnessed their son and his friends as they grew up, and later joined the Saturday basketball pickup games. They've all become fine young men and are now taking turns getting engaged and married. We danced in celebration for hours to songs popular from our 20- and 30-something years on the radio to songs that now turn up on their music devices. 

(This is not a blog post I could not have foreseen 21 years or more ago, which makes it all the more satisfying to write.)

Comments

  1. This is beautifully written—such a powerful reminder of how life, friendship, and healing can unfold in ways we never expect. And - It’s so lovely to see photos of such breathtaking scenery.

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    Replies
    1. Thank you, Klara. You will enjoy more of this scenery when you come back to visit ;-)

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  2. Lovely mountains! :) Glad you have been able to maintain this longtime friendship, and enjoy yourself at this young man's wedding! I still have "ouch" moments now & then, but I often find myself enjoying things I never could have imagined 20+ years ago either!

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    Replies
    1. Since we're contemporaries, Loribeth, I'm sure you can relate to how an old adage, such as 'mellowing with age,' becomes more real with each passing year. So, too, with 'youth (or good health) is wasted on the young!'

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  3. That photo is absolutely gorgeous. And reminds me of the Mt Cook area of NZ. It makes me happy to think of you in that beauty. And yes, lovely to celebrate young ones, even with the occasional "ouch" as Loribeth said.

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  4. So lovely, the words and the pictures! At first I thought the pictures were from another country. The US is so interesting how there are just so many ecosystems (but I guess that's not surprising given the size). I'm glad you could enjoy the wedding, and that you can write about it now without as much oooof as earlier in life.

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