Me – January 22
Hey.
So I just wrote a note. It’s really long, and I doubt it will tell you much you don’t already know, but it’s a sort of apology to my friends for the way I’ve lived most of my life, and you are key among that wronged group.
If you have a while to kill, there you are. If not, in summary, I’m sorry that I objectified you and tried to make you something you’re not.
This seems superfluous, I’m sure, but I feel better for having said it
Her – April 25
Hey.
So, I read your note. Wow. Thank you for sharing that…it must’ve taken a lot to write that, and more to post it…but then again, you’ve never been quite as closed off as me, so maybe not. =P
It’s been a really long time since we’ve communicated in any way, which is weird, but to be expected, I suppose.
I’m not sure if you hate me or not anymore…but even if you do, I want you to know that you really don’t need to apologize to me – for anything. If anything, I’m the one who owes you a lifetime of apology for jerking you around like I did.
What I have to say next you might not want to hear; who am I to have any opinion about your spiritual life? Anyway.
What happened to you at the retreat is so incredible…I’m completely overwhelmed, and over-full of joy that you’ve realized the love of Christ, realized part of all that He is to us, and realized that in Him you can find yourself…or rather, the absence of you and the presence of the Holy Spirit (Galatians!). I am so truly happy for you you have no idea; reading your note absolutely made my night, and I’m just thanking God that He’s moved you like that. Thank you.
uhm.
I’m now at a total loss…I suppose I’ll wish you a happy end of the semester and an amazing summer, if I don’t get the chance to talk to you.
God bless you and keep you, Griffin; I’m so happy you’re His.
Me – April 26
Maybe I just like writing long letters. = D In that vein, give this one a try.
I totally forgot I sent you that note. I’m glad you enjoyed it.
I don’t hate you. I never did. I didn’t the last time you thought that either. It’s just that sometimes you (that is, I) run out of things to say. Chuck Klosterman says that movies primarily lie about the connections between people because said characters are never silent, even at breakfast, “but unless one of you has had a particularly weird dream, there is absolutely nothing to talk about at breakfast.” Sometimes it becomes a little bit like that between friends, except it doesn’t end with breakfast. I think that’s what it’s like with us, honestly.
I didn’t delete you on here because of any enmity I felt (as if Facebook ever said anything real about people in the first place). I just felt I was leaning towards taking too much of an interest in some of the new places your life was going, and I refuse to become an internet stalker, so I removed the ability. It was probably best, given the circumstances.
No apologies either way. Life works that way sometimes. We feel things at different times, and stuff happens based on that, and it’s not like it’s a neo-fairy tale; it doesn’t always have to feel entirely great while it happens. In truth, there were a lot of good times, and one of these days, when I’m, like, totally old or something, I’ll look back on my high-school/quizzing/small Pittsburgh suburbs days, realizing that I don’t regret anything that happened in my life.
That said, I don’t know your world anymore and you don’t know mine either. We couldn’t really be in each other’s lives these days no matter how many emails we traded. To be honest, I don’t really want to hear all about Grove City (Nate’s going there; he told me yesterday. Evidently they’re giving him more money than Wheaton would have. I’m bitter as all hell presently, but you should totally say hi if you see him around next year), and I’m sure you wouldn’t love me gushing about some random spot in the Midwest (long story short, it snows until April, at which point it rains) — I mean, where do you go from there?
I still think about you sometimes. Actually, I still write songs about you sometimes, which is much more iffy, but hey, I take them as they come, and they’re still pretty awesome. (If you randomly get a CD in the mail someday, you should see what you think.) But I realized months ago that the real you — the person who has a life and a story, the person who is probably doing great things and making awesome friends — couldn’t help me with that. That’s the only person worth knowing, but I don’t have any real connection with that person anymore, which is a little sad, but, more importantly, which is fundamentally how life seems to work. And I’ve come to terms with that relatively well.
As for the fake person in my head now and then — well, I think that person was always more than a little imagined, and dealing with that is my problem.
This is textbook growing apart. Your letter doesn’t bother me because you’re expressing opinions on my spiritual life; I don’t think you’re any less spiritual than any of my friends here, for sure. It was comforting in a way. But it’s also painful and awkward to read because it’s written as though we had just had a long, in-depth conversation about where exactly we are these days, one that allowed us to know each other again, but in a new and better way. And we haven’t. I don’t think it’s possible for us to do so at this point. The problem with the plans we made to be friends forever wasn’t that it all goes to hell when the romance dies so much as that we changed worlds too much and thus changed who we are a little too much.
We’re both adults. We can handle this. I don’t blame you for anything. Let’s not make it a big deal.
Me – July 20
Sam,
There’s a prettier draft of the following in my travel journal, but at 2:40 in the morning following Katy Perry trashing my brain for about two hours, it doesn’t feel right.
I’m so sorry for everything I said in the last letter I wrote you. I’m sorry I tried to close myself off, that I pretended it was a natural end to everything so that I didn’t have to feel like I was obligated to keep this friendship alive. I’m so sorry for the lies. It wasn’t true when I said I didn’t want to know where your life was going; it still isn’t. I’ve regretted ever since passing up the opportunity to hear about where you are and what’s going on.
That the bridge between us was burned is no more than I deserved and no less than I was asking for, and I don’t have any brilliant excuses; it’s not like I couldn’t have guessed at some point I’d regret being an asshole. But all the same, I’m really, really sorry for all I wrote you, for ever saying that your life didn’t matter to me anymore. And if nothing else, I owe you that…I don’t know, on the off chance it will brighten your day to let you know that someone halfway across the world thinks you’re pretty cool and had a really special place in bringing my life to the point where it is now.
Griff


