Love might mean never having to say you're sorry, but friendship means never having to say anything at all if you don't want to but being able to say anything at all at any time if you are so inclined. With true friendship, a person can come and go, be herself, just as she would be at home alone, but better, with more options. This is how I felt staying with Joan and Renate in their home - like being in my own home, but better. I felt able to come and go at will, hang out with them if time permitted, and not have to worry about 'being polite' or other social niceties. It was a very freeing experience. The two of them made their home completely available to me, replete with a room, that little blue car, and office supplies when I needed them. We were always happy to see each other.
At times, friendships are taken for granted. Especially when we know people well, we might not always acknowledge how lucky we are to have good friends in our lives. I know there have been times when I have not paid as much attention to my relationships with people as was needed in order to preserve the friendship. I try not to do that anymore. Friends and family (and my dog of course, but then she is my family) are the single most important thing in my life. Without them, my life would not be what it is. I feel loved and understood and am able to do things that otherwise might not be possible. For all of that, I am extremely blessed and never want to forget the important role that friendship plays in my life and the lives of others.
To that end, when I left Calgary, I flew back to Winnipeg for just a few days to celebrate fifty years of friendship with Charlotte and Helen. The three of us had all met at the University of Manitoba in 1960, and have remained friends over the years. Helen is a retired anaesthesiologist now living in Santa Monica and Charlotte is a retired microbiologist currently living in Ottawa. Although I see each friend individually throughout the year, the three of us have not been in the same place at the same time for well over six years, and even then it was in a crowd of people. My wonderful cousin Simon offered us his cabin at Falcon Lake where we could have some quiet time together and catch up on our lives and just be friends. And of course, we absolutely had to do a jigsaw puzzle - what would going to the lake be without a jigsaw puzzle on the table?
I used to spend my summers at Falcon Lake when I was a teenager and when Simon took us for a boat ride covering the six miles or so of lake, once again the memories came flooding back.
"Oh, this is where I used to water ski all the time."
"I remember we broke a shear pin in front of this island and I had to hop in the water and fix the motor."
"I used to dive off the big platform that was over there."
"I broke my ribs on that dock while slalom skiing ."
The leaves are just beginning to turn, and on the almost October Monday there was no one around. The sun was bright, the wind was down, the water fairly calm. Loons were diving, and a large beaver (or muskrat) home was being erected. It was a very renewing and beautiful day. And that jigsaw puzzle was the best way to spend an evening with my friends after a delicious BBQ meal with plenty of liquid lubrication.
Helen: "I need a mottled with one poker and two holes."
Charlotte: "Here's two pokers that might go over there."
Ruth: "I am looking for one poker, one hole and a straight edge."
Medicine? Microbiology? Nope - just three friends putting together a jigsaw puzzle. It was a great evening, even though we never did finish George, Paul, Ringo and John walking on Abbey Road.
It's one thing to talk about friendship and another thing entirely to nurture the relationships with the people in ones life that we love. I have decided to take my friends for granted no longer - if people are going to be in my life, I am going to act as though it means something.







