Friday, June 27, 2025

Oughtta, don't wanna

 A long-time but not intimate friend (K) died a couple of years ago.  She had been a best friend in junior high, but once I moved from where she lived, our friendship became more desultory.  We liked one another, but our paths seldom crossed.

I knew her husband, although not very well.  I liked him fine but I don't think he and I ever had a one-on-one conversation while K was alive.  After her death, I called him just to express my sympathy and concern.  The call seemed to mean a lot to him; they had moved not long before K died, and he hadn't made friends in their new town.

After that, I called a few more times, but every call was the same.  He would talk for more than an hour and I would listen and murmur "uh huh" in the right places.  He was never grim nor complaining; he had a dry wit and made a lot of puns, told jokes, just talked and talked.  He never asked me about myself, and didn't introduce topics of wider interest. I got absolutely nothing out of those calls except the thinly rewarding feeling that I was doing something kind.  My calls became less frequent and eventually I stopped calling altogether.

I have a friend (N) here in Seattle who is part of a gang I hang out with sometimes, most of us actors, all of us aging.  N has aged the most drastically.  He now lives in senior housing, and although his mind is still pretty good, his body is terribly, terribly fragile, and to have a meal with him means spending 2 hours watching him try to get food into his mouth.  I am one of only two of the gang who has ever visited him, and now the other one doesn't drive any more so it's just me.  N lives about 40 minutes north of me, so when the gang gets together, I'm expected to pick N up and bring him, which turns what would be a 2 hour outing into about 5 1/2 hours, what with getting to N's, getting him and his walker into the car, the drive, the gathering, the drive back.

So here is where I'm torn.  On the one hand, I have many, many blessings in my life, and can certainly afford to be generous with my friendship.  Being a friend to people who don't have friends is the right thing, the kind thing to do.  On the other hand, I'm older myself now, and more aware of how precious my time is.  I want to spend it doing things that are rewarding and interesting and stimulating.  I don't really want to spend an hour on the phone listening to the maundering of someone I didn't know all that well to begin with, and it's a pain in my ass to be N's driver and only friend.  I didn't have a friendship with N separate from the gang gatherings.  I like him well enough, but I just don't feel I like him well enough to give so much of myself for his sake.

I think I have the right to say "I want to do this, I don't want to do that."  I think we all do, at any stage in life, but certainly by our 70's, when there is so much more past than future for us.  For close friends, for family, for Bill, I would do anything and everything.  But for these peripheral acquaintances, I just don't know how much of myself I want to spend.  And yet I feel as though I must be awfully selfish not to be willing to make a boring phone call now and then, or clear my schedule so I can be a taxi.

I just don't want to.  Why do I feel I have to?  Why don't these men have other people showing up for them?  Why does it fall to me to make up for the fact that they didn't make friends?  I'm sure I could be more generous, but, sadly, I sometimes end up feeling impatient and resentful, although I do my best to stay attentive and kind.  I don't feel good about giving these men my shoulder, but I also don't feel good about denying it to them.  As I said - torn.

1 comment:

  1. Who said you "oughta"? The folks who socialized women to put others first, ahead of themselves and their wishes and desires? We carry those early lessons with us forever. I think the ones who taught us that were really saying "be kind". And we have been and are.
    But I also remember my dad saying to us kids, and others, when we parted, "be kind to yourself."
    I believe in the kindness to ourselves of "No" when it comes to a choice about doing something that we really don't want to do. xoA <3

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