I like being old. At 80+, I think I am allowed to say so. Indeed, I like being old so much that I wrote a book about it.
But that doesn’t mean that everything about being old is wonderful.
Far from it.
And one of the things I like least is the loss of friends.
Roughly 20 years ago, I was chatting to a very reflective female friend of my parents, living in the same retirement community and aged 96.
My father had just died, and I noted that I had run up a large phone bill talking to his friends about the event, as well as phoning home to talk to my family.
She said anyone should consider themselves lucky to have a high phone bill. At her time of life, her phone bills were very low, because she had so few friends left to talk to.
Interestingly, that small detail brought home the point very vividly.
Clearly, one of the very sad aspects of growing older is the slowly mounting deaths among friends.
Each and every loss diminishes our lives a little bit more. These may be old friends we have known from childhood or someone who we just met, but had connected with and held high hopes for a lasting friendship.
I guess it is just down to luck as to whether you have lost a lot of friends over your life or just a few. I have been relatively lucky in this respect, but nonetheless, they do add up.
What somehow surprises me is how many varying circumstances there are.
You might think a death is a death is a death.
But that is not how it is. Indeed, each one seems surprisingly different.
There is the death of my friend who had been living with AIDS since I met him, about whom I have written before. He was very young and that made it especially poignant.
He would sit in my kitchen and talk about all manner of things, but more than once he just looked at me and said, “It’s not so much to ask, I just want my life.”
And he was right. At 30, you should have a life to look forward to.
Perhaps my greatest loss was of a friend from college, who I had known for over 50 years. We had seen each other through various early boyfriends, then marriage, then children and eventually grandchildren.
She was a very deep person, perhaps not surprisingly as she was a therapist, and rarely did ‘small talk’.
We once met for lunch when we had not seen each other for five years. I went to her office, she put on her coat and walking up the road, immediately launched into a discussion of her worries about one of her daughters.
None of the usual “How was your flight?” which I always find boring. Who cares about my flight!?
She died from lung cancer, having lived a long time in its wake.
People often feel a sense of kinship with the conductor of their choir (or orchestra). You see them frequently for rehearsals – often over many years – and music brings its own intimacy.
I had been singing with his choir for roughly 25 years. And he had a wonderful twinkle in his eye.
In addition, the man had been very helpful to my son, and we had become friends. We socialised together with our respective spouses. I had helped him out when his wife died of cancer.
He had TB, contracted when, as a young man, he helped a homeless man find a shelter for the night. As such, he would have undoubtedly been a likely candidate for Covid-19.
But he was already going downhill in his mid-70s and increasingly needed help with his breathing. He died before Covid was on the horizon.
Much of the choir could not sing certain music without tears in their eyes.
And there are the sudden unexpected deaths. I had a writer friend, to whom I wasn’t very close, but we enjoyed each other’s company.
He lived alone, had many friends and learned about a year or so ago that he had an inoperable brain tumour and would not live for more than a few weeks.
I can just envisage him wondering what to do. His solution – surprising at the time, but actually very sensitive and sensible – was to post a notice to this effect on his Facebook page.
He also said “thank you” to all his friends. This gave everyone an opportunity to write kind or thoughtful words to him while he was still alive, while I am sure his closest friends rallied around.
One by one, they drop out of your life.
You want to tell them something, but they are not there to hear. Or you want their advice, but they are not there to give it.
I want them all back.
Have you lost many friends over the years? Did you find every circumstance to be different?
My very old friend passed recently. We met first day of high school, her desk was right behind mine. We became good friends right away. We had our first apartment together. We were in each other’s weddings. We godparents each other’s children. She always had my back. And then 25 years ago it stopped. She and her husband were divorcing. We lost that closeness and didn’t have much if any contact. But managed to keep touch about our growing family thru mutual friends and Facebook. Her ex called me to tell me she had got and was gone a month later. I cried. I felt terrible. How could this be? No, this doesn’t happen to us yet, we’re too young. …no we’re not, 70 is in a couple of weeks. No we’re still young, I don’t feel “OLD”. But now I feel lonely. A big part of my history is gone. Parents, close family, and friends. Yeah retirement is great 👍lots of perks. But the changes, not for the weak. God bless my friend, see you later Sue😇
JMHO – I do not believe in “luck,” but I have full faith in God’s providence and plans for our lives. It is hard to lose loved ones . . . I lost two, very dear friends over a year ago, not more than five days’ apart. I recently found out that my best friend on earth – my beloved confidante, who lives across the country from me – has Stage 4 colon cancer. She is on hospice, and I am waiting for the weather to calm down, so that I can fly out to see her.
I feel extremely blessed with each and every friend I’ve ever had. However, life is full of loss . . . but we go forward in faith, trusting in the process and cycle of life.