“Friends
who I can talk to and hang out and have fun with, just like I’ve always
dreamed, we could talk about books and politics and vandalize at night, want
to? Love me, me, me, we could go on a trial basis, please I don’t care if it’s
the out-of-the-crowd, I just need a crowd, a gang, a reason to smile.” –Kurt
Cobain
We sit down, and their macaroni and cheese is almost gone. A
full plate is in front of me and I scarf it down in five minutes, trying to
talk and chew and swallow at the same time. They ask me how work is, how I like
living in New York, and I tell them it’s fine, it’s great, I love my job and
the city. It’s so different from Waco. We used to live together in a concrete
apartment with twenty-foot floor to ceiling windows and a shower that never
worked and a cat that was always ruining the furniture. Now I live here, alone,
in the city where people only go when there’s nothing left for them at home.
Only the dreamers move to New York. Starry-eyed, fragile people dragging
suitcases full of high heels and a passport or maybe a driver’s license as a
constant reminder to everyone that they are still just tourists. Slowly, their
promises turn to compromises, and they shuffle into place with everyone else.
We talk for awhile until it’s quiet, and I ask John how he’s
been and he starts talking about some really heavy, serious stuff. The kind of
things that you wait until you really know somebody to tell them. I don’t mind.
I listen and I care and I empathize and I tell them that I’ve got some pretty
serious shit going on with me too.
“Like what?” he says. And I tell them. How I’m barely making
grades in my night classes and trying as hard as I can to rise above the pack
of fifteen other hungry interns vying for the same exact jobs as me at work.
How I’ve tried, really, really tried, to find friends and get to know people
out here. But it hasn’t been working. There’s easily six million people on this
small island called Manhattan, but they’re all strangers. I work ten hours a
day and when I come home at night I do homework and then I drink Sailor Jerry’s
and eat chocolate cake until I fall asleep. And the people I knew from the life
I had before are starting to become strangers too. That’s how it always is when
I move. We try to hold on and we promise each other that we’ll write, that
we’ll visit, but all of that falls to the wayside in a matter of weeks. Hell, I
hadn’t heard anything about John and Abby since May, besides the occasional
text message or phone call. But even then we were always trying to make each
other laugh. You don’t want to weigh someone down with the bad stuff when you
only have three hours to see them.
And yet, that’s what we’re doing. Instead of spending those
moments trying to fluff up all the good things, we’ve been talking about the
real parts of our lives that are reserved only for your best friends to know. Abby
is telling me about how she doesn’t know if she wants to study music education
anymore, even though that’s been her life for three whole years. And I’m
telling them that I don’t even know who I am anymore, because who I was in
California was different from who I was in Texas, and who I was in Texas is
nowhere near who I am in New York. And pretty soon John is covering my hands
with his and Abby is telling me she loves me and we’re outside the restaurant
shivering beneath the window lights of the Flat Iron District.
I tell them what I’ve been doing for the past three years;
picking a location on the map and moving to that spot without hesitation. I had
never even been to Waco before it became my home during college. I had never
seen the Statue of Liberty or the Chrysler Building before I started applying
for jobs in New York. Because that’s what I do. I just go. Even if it means
living out of a suitcase on a stranger’s blow up mattress, I will always just
move somewhere and see how it goes.
But the first six months in a new place are always the
hardest. There’s still little pieces of you left over in the place where you
lived before. And your heart knows it. Your soul knows when pieces of it are
missing, scattered all over Los Angeles and Madrid and London and Austin. And
when you try to move on and be something else, you can’t. Not when you aren’t
fully there, when you aren’t fully committed to the thing or the idea or the
person or the moment.
“You’re just not finished being Whitney yet,” John says
simply. And Abby agrees. They tell me that I’m not all put together right now.
That I’ll find it, eventually, but until I do, there’s a spot on their futon if
I need to come back.
They climb into a taxi outside of the subway and disappear,
and I realize that this is what my life has been missing. I haven’t been
lacking in funny stories or good times or outrageous adventures. I’ve been
completely devoid of sharing my life with other people. It’s great to have
co-workers that you can laugh with over lunch, and it’s nice to have school
friends to complain about studying for midterms with, but it’s absolutely
necessary for my existence to have real friends.
Friends that will buy me macaroni and cheese and tell me
that I’m not an awful person.
Friends that make me feel included in their everyday lives even though
I’m half a continent away. Friends that think I’m cool because I have a Timber
Wolf sweatshirt and don’t make fun of me when I talk to strangers’ puppies as
though they belong to me. Friends that I can laugh with in the middle of a
really serious moment. Friends who stuck by me even when I was at my most
un-cool, like Abby did freshman year when these other girls told me that they
didn’t want to hang out with me anymore because I talked too much.
Friends who lived with me for a year and never got mad at me
for forgetting to take out the trash or for interrupting their Breaking Bad
marathons by yelling the lines I knew through the wall separating our bedrooms.
Friends who would stay up all night until I got home because they couldn’t
sleep if I wasn’t there. Friends who would come home early if they knew I
couldn’t sleep because they weren’t there. Friends who would go to my book
readings and clap the loudest when I got up to the mic. Friends who would
scream and cry with me after we accidentally drove the wrong way down 18th
street. Friends who would get in the car and drive two hours to a ska concert
with me on a school night. Friends who would write me letters at my fake
funeral to tell me that they wished they had gotten to know me better. Friends
who would call me up and tell me, “I’m sad with you,” when I needed it.
I need friends like these two, because without them, I’m
just another gypsy, another broken-hearted dreamer, another failed comedian,
another wannabe New Yorker susceptible to compromise. And I don’t want to be
those things. I want to be the kind of friend to them that they have been to
me. Even if I never move back to Waco. Even if I never get famous. Even if they
move to Costa Rica or Oklahoma or California or wherever. I want to be there so
that they’ll always know that there’s someone out there in the universe who
loves them as much as I do.
Dear Whitney,
ReplyDeleteThis actually made me cry. I feel the exact same way that you do: alone and trying to figure out who I am and who I'm supposed to be. I sometimes wonder if this feeling of displacement is just a phase, or a permanent thing in my life. I felt it in Waco, and I feel it here.
But the difference between my life here and my life at Baylor is that in college I had wonderful people in my life like you and Katie and Bryan. Here, there isn't any of that. I work twelve to fourteen hours every day six or seven days a week, and when I find myself with a minute or two to spare I don't see myself connecting with the people around me. Every time I think I'm getting close, some outside force stops me.
I know that I have never been the most open person in the world. Maybe I never will be, because what scares me worse than loneliness is letting people down. I just really want you to know how much I love you, and how special and important your friendship is to me.
The only thing that gets me through every day is the thought that maybe someday, I won't feel quite so lost. True, I think I will always have a gypsy spirit, but that internal wandering between the person I am, the person I think I am, and the person I will become will hopefully come to an end.
One day, I know I will look at you and smile because of all the insanity we went through to become who we are meant to be.
Long live Freebird,
Megan