Cat and I have a shared history of rough surfaces.
We’ve picked our way across the black basalt of the Spiral
Jetty, dusty shoes in hands that are flung out for balance while our bare feet
wriggle and grasp the irregular surfaces, slipping every other step into the
shallow Salt Lake. Eyes squinting against the glare of the August sun and the
gusts of hot, dry wind that work to push us off our precarious perches, we
still felt welcomed by the hostile landscape after driving through two hours of
desolation to get there. Cat was already married and moved away, I was consumed
with my own life changes, but that day as we made silly poses with Rosemary we
were giants, explorers, elemental pilgrims responding to the simple geometry of
the site with equal reverence and humor.
We’ve been crammed into the back of an economy car, limbs tangled and wedged into corners, heads thrown back and eyes closed as the third hour of us singing along with the radio came to a close. Chests heaved and muscles strained as we wailed along to “Oh, Darlin’,” and “She’s So Heavy.” Pitch is abandoned in favor of raw, ragged emotion. Swimsuits already on, our skin stickily adhered to the door jam, to the upholstery, to each other with warm familiarity as we turned the final bend to Bear Lake, parked, and then leaned back for one more howling chorus. We were dying for the soft sand, we had fantasized all week about thick, melty raspberry shakes after a long swim, but we clung to the journey with equal fervor. We sank into the comfort of shared skin and space, the smell of sunscreen and sound of Ringo's indefatigable beat enough for now.
We’ve sat on threadbare, fraying, greying carpet and
silently passed a 2-liter of Diet Coke between us while we soaked in every drop
of SLC Punk on an old VHS. The carpet
did nothing to belie the floorboards beneath, but with only one chair in the
room we unanimously decided that our sore tailbones made the experience more
“authentic.” Our faces may have reflected the carpet’s same greyness from the
dim, slightly warped images on the screen, but flat Diet Coke and
antitotalitarian angst has never been so vividly consumed than in that living
room.
We’ve lounged on metal bleachers that looked over an
abandoned high school parking lot, swigging from chilly glass Coke bottles
while the ridges of the seats dug into our thin jackets and jeans late on a
March evening. High on the lingering scent of fireworks, we belted out Depeche
Mode and Green Day lyrics between dirty jokes about what Cat would be up to the
next day. Overly aware that we were creating a picturesque memory on the last
night of Cat’s single life, we aggressively policed our mood and conversation.
We were determined to crystallize every misty streetlight and tragically faulty
cigarette lighter into multifaceted symbols that could be proudly dangled for display
in the future. The three of us were, in that moment, in a perfect friendship,
and we sipped on that singularity with the same relish we gave the almost-empty
bottles.
We’ve lain for two straight sleepless nights in a bare,
echoing New York City apartment, windows open to the sweltering July air. All
the contents of my two suitcases had been desperately molded into a mattress
for us on the bare parquet floors, and we pretended that such efforts were
sufficient; we stayed up talking until 4 and woke up at 7 out of desire, not
necessity. Cat had spent five hours on a bus from Boston and another hour on
the subway to be with me on my first weekend in my new home. If she was
nonplussed by my lack of furniture and broken ankle, she hid it well. She gushed about my new space and theorized
on my coming adventures while I nervously leaned against the dirty walls and
avoided eye contact with the cockroaches. She pounced on the opportunity to
help me set up when the first of my furniture arrived. They were two entirely
useless Tiffany lamps, sans lightbulbs, resented for the lack of cushioning
they would bring that night. But the packaging that disintegrated into
fragments of white Styrofoam so light and small they didn’t actually land on
the floor exasperated and amused us, skating all weekend just above the
surface, evading all efforts to be swept up, gracefully looping around and over
the path of the pests that skittered by.
Our rough surfaces aren’t just environmental, they’re the
landscape of our temperament and relationship. There have been pitfalls and
landslides, blocked passages and gaping canyons in our almost seven years of
friendship. I stand in awe of how Cat has made herself within and around her
landscape. She wins and gives love to people and subjects in a way that looks
effortless, but actually takes care and passion directly from her in an exhausting
way. My acts of friendship, my presence, my attention, my patience have been
imperfect throughout, but Cat has shone through despite all of the personal
debris I’ve thrown about. She is a remarkable woman who is going to populate
everyone around her with epic and sweet memories without ever growing trite or
tired. Happy Birthday, Cat.
1 comment:
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