A friend can be someone with whom you are so close with that you share a bond, a bond you may expect to last lifetime. Friends can be trusted to speak the truth. With friends you can be your authentic, vulnerable self. But what if that if the bond of intimacy no longer exists? What if you feel yourself drawing apart from friends?
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Tag Archives: friendship
Blue Camas Love Affair
Many years ago my friend and I took a new bend in the road on our weekly woodland walk and happened upon a gorgeous sight — a sea of Blue Camas lilies in full bloom in a Garry Oak meadow. Enamored by the display before us we exchanged our associations with the color blue. She snapped numerours pictures which inspired us to include Blue Camas meadows in our paintings for years to come. She also shared some history about the flowers we were admiring and the ecosystem they grow in. Continue reading
Love is a Rose
It was an overcast, cool and breezy morning when MrT took me out walking today. I have been trying to further the time and distance I established in my spring conditioning program but I’m not making much progress. I haven’t been sleeping well. I’m experiencing severe joint pain, and spasms in my legs that ZING! me wide awake every couple of hours. Walking seems to help a little but not as much as I had hoped for, and I found myself sitting in the ditch and resting while the spasms passed.
While down at that level I had a chance to get in touch with the wild roses, wood violets and buttercups. That closeness to them evoked sweet memories, memories of my now departed friend and I singing and laughing and chatting as we collected the same species for our flower pressing just a year ago. Once the first memory appeared more followed like a slide show, and special moments from many years of collecting walks as well as hours spent making cards and bookmarks and decorating gift boxes with them appeared and departed.
I was in a sober and somber mood which was both a reflection of the weather and also of the state of mind I was in when I returned home. As I placed my tiny bright colored treasures between sheets of photographic blotter paper I suddenly realized that I was now the owner of two flower presses. The second press was my friend’s and it was one of the sentimental items I rescued from clutter in a cardboard box and placed in my wicker basket. I won’t be giving it away because I have strong feeling that some day soon I’ll meet someone else who I will share flower pressing experiences with.
And yet, perhaps this is one way to finally overcome our grief and sense of loss; that in the end, what will matter more is not their departure from our lives, but the impact, the difference, they’ve made to it. That’s not to say the pain would be any less or difficult; rather, that perhaps this may be that light at the end of the tunnel that allows us to make peace with this loss. –Saying goodbye to loved ones
Life is a precious gift and the legacy we leave behind is the gift that keeps on giving – memories.
Another thing my friend and I shared was the love of singing. The Rose by Bette Middler was a song we loved to sing in harmony.
♫ The Rose ♫ by Bianca Ryan
A time to mourn?

Last winter one of my male friends who suffered from depression committed suicide. It was a devastating loss and all around me I heard words uttered that indicated we have lost the wisdom of the ages and have replaced it with claptrap and cliches.
In times gone by grieving was expected and supported, but these days many think we must work to distract ourselves from pain and suffering. Well, that’s what my friend’s wife attempted to do. After her husband’s suicide, she took the advice of her family members and attempted to lose herself in her work .
To me hearing her relatives telling her to ‘ get on with her life’ and ‘ go back to work — it’ll be good for you,’ after such a profound loss was heartless, but they sincerely believed their advice was sound.
Why is this? Why are we advised to escape grief? Could it be fear?
All a grieving person needs is another person with a listening ear and an open heart and mind — a friend, who will encourage them to speak their truth and share what they are feeling. We are always uncomfortable when we witness pain and suffering. We fear that we won’t have what it takes to provide support to someone who is grieving. Also discussion of another person’s death is discomforting because it makes us re-examine our own lives and consider our own deaths, which we also fear.
Grief is itself a medicine. — William Cowper
So last winter when my friend was working as many hours as she could, I was online and grieving my friend’s death. I found other people who were suffering from losses too. Some were going through major life changes (relationship breakdowns and relocation), and others were suffering from grief associated with the death or disappearance of someone from their lives.
After I experienced the first waves of pain and sorrow I became emotionally paralyzed, which is to say that I shut down my feelings. I hurt too much so I chose unconsciously to become numb. Then time passed and I entered a period where I did want to share my misery, and I’m glad to say that I found others with the same need. I really don’t know what I would have done without them. I love them for the loving kindness they extended to me. We formed an unofficial ‘grief group’ and sharing there became a source of returning strength and rebirth.
I began to paint daily and spontaneously. I used art as a form of therapy throughout the grieving process. I also played my drum and chanted, and in the third month following my friend’s death I went to the Elders and undertook a vision quest. Months later I recognized that the grieving process had been completed.
I came to know the following were truths:
- You can postpone grief but you can’t avoid it;
- unresolved grief can evolve into physical ailments, pain, and stress;
- unresolved grief will re-emerge the next time someone you love dies;
- natural disasters that involve death can bring up feelings of grief;
- tapping into your creativity can help in your grief process;
- your conscious intentional approach to grief work will teach others to do the same;
- most grievers need help and support;
- grieving the loss of a loved one sometimes evokes concerns about our own deaths.
When we honestly ask ourselves which person in our lives means the most us, we often find that it is those who, instead of giving much advice, solutions, or cures, have chosen rather to share our pain and touch our wounds with a gentle and tender hand. The friend who can be silent with us in a moment of despair or confusion, who can stay with us in an hour of grief and bereavement, who can tolerate not knowing, not curing, not healing and face with us the reality of our powerlessness, that is a friend who cares. — Henri Nouwen
Time is the here and the now moment and it’s my experience that the passage of time does not heal all wounds. I know my girlfriend, who will be visiting me soon, is still angry at her husband for killing himself. I know his act left her feeling abandoned and depressed. I believe when she commemorates the anniversary of his death that bringing her hurt feelings into the open may provide a possibility of her forgiving him and ending her suffering. I want to ask my friend to share her feelings about her husband’s suicide with me. What do you think?
And yet, perhaps this is one way to finally overcome our grief and sense of loss; that in the end, what will matter more is not their departure from our lives, but the impact, the difference, they’ve made to it. That’s not to say the pain would be any less or difficult; rather, that perhaps this may be that light at the end of the tunnel that allows us to make peace with this loss. –Saying goodbye to loved ones