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My Dear Friend

Dear friend

By Yusuf BajjoPublished 3 years ago 8 min read
Success is usually comes to dose who are too busy looking for.

I. Spring

It was spring when we met.

I knew who you were, of course. You were the teaching fellow for my political philosophy class, and the most brilliant woman I'd ever seen. Like a great sorceress, you had a way of transforming complex ideas into simple words. Like a great teacher, you asked provocative questions which gave space for many answers. It was a challenging class for a lecture hall of undergrads looking to fulfill a credit, but I saw how deeply you cared, and realized I cared deeply too. More than that, I was good at this class. While a collective sigh of despair went up when exams were handed out, I was having fun. My papers were filled with your exclamation marks and encouragement. Walking down the street that spring afternoon after our final exam, I saw you, and I wanted to tell you all of this.

II. Summer

I was in Boston again for another summer, this year interning full time. Every day, I would walk from my apartment (by "apartment" I mean "room") next to Fenway Park about 45 minutes to my office, a sleek co-working space on Newbury St. One of several parallel streets that make up Boston's neat Back Bay neighborhood, Newbury St. is arguably the loveliest, definitely the liveliest. It begins at Massachusetts Ave. and ends at the Boston Public Gardens. Block by block, the brownstones, shops, and restaurants become more and more lavish until you hit Tiffany's and Burberry on the corner of the Gardens.

My office was closer to the Gardens end. It was a terrible job. One of my tasks was greeting clients in an offensive blue and white gingham button down. Another was roaming the Back Bay Amtrak platform and starting conversations about our start-up (yes, you guessed it) with that odd breed of businessman (yes, all men) who choose to take the Acela over a Delta flight. But the job paid, and I felt like an adult and that was good enough. The walk to and from work in the early mornings and the late afternoons of that long golden summer was the best part of my day. I would listen to music the whole way there and back. I would walk, watch, listen, and dream.

It was one of these afternoons, in early July, when I saw you again. You were sitting at one of Newbury's many restaurant patios, at a table for two closest to the sidewalk. It was a gorgeous, hazy evening. Tinkling silverware and bits conversation hung in the air. You were sitting with someone, a man, whose back was toward me. You hadn't seen me yet, and I was deciding what to do. If this was a date, I didn't want to interrupt. On the other hand, what a coincidence to see you sitting there! I pulled out one earbud and walked close the patio just in case our eyes met. If they did, I'd be quick: just a wave and a passing, "Hi! How are you?" But as you had before, you seemed to sense I was coming. You looked right up at me and smiled so brightly. You were on your feet immediately, hugging me over the railing, introducing me to one of your oldest friends (phew, not a date), questioning me about what I was doing and upon learning I was coming from work, why I was working so hard, I was only 20! We laughed. We hugged again. You took my face in your hands, looked me in the eyes, and said, "You can do whatever you want to do." I don't remember what I said, but I know I was glowing. We said goodbye, I put my music on, and walked home, due West, directly into the setting sun.

You died a week later.

III. Rain

I was standing in the ankle-deep wet grass looking at the rolling hills in their shimmering glow. It had just rained, and I had just wept through your celebration of life. Little diamonds clung to every surface. Teardrops gathered like garland on the evergreens. Your family held the celebration at a botanical garden in Western Massachusetts. I used the money from my job to rent a car and drive out there from the city. I wore a pink dress. Your mother took my hand and looking nowhere near me told me pink was your favorite color. I had no idea. I squeezed your mother's hand, her nails manicured bubblegum pink. I was a student of yours, someone said. She didn't look at me, but her eyes brightened for a moment, so much like yours. "She loved her students," she said.

A man stood nearby me in the grass. I looked over at him. He seemed about your age, maybe 30. I didn't know who he was, but he must have known you. We shared this same grief, but I didn't speak to him, or he to me. After a while, the sun fell behind the hills and the diamonds turned back to drops of water. The spectacle was over; the spell broken. He and I waded out of the grass and back to our cars. I looked over at him again before I drove away. I saw him sitting in the driver's seat with his arms by his sides, his eyes closed, his shoulders bobbing up and down.

How strange what we remember in these times. Driving away I remember how dark and slick the asphalt was with rain. How bright and pleasantly yellow the divider line was. I downloaded a bunch of songs to listen to before I left - no Spotify Premium or unlimited data for me in those days - but I can't remember if I played them. I think I drove home alone in silence. My head filled with memories of you.

I pulled into the assigned spot in a featureless parking garage downtown. I double checked the car for my things, locked it, and left the keys. I couldn't tell you which garage it was or where. It looked like any other. Like every other, it amplified the empty sound of my footsteps as I walked up and out into the night, cool from the earlier rain, and began my long route home with no chance of running into you.

IV. Winter

What does it mean when two ships pass so meaningfully but so briefly? To come together only to be swept away again, forever? It's cruel. Crueler than if we had passed each other unknowingly in the night and never met at all.

I often wonder about who I might've become if our paths were more than just a passing. The years of remembering you already outweigh the years I knew you. It was so short a time, so few memories, compared with the rest of my life. But these handful of memories are precious because what were the chances of running into you that spring afternoon? Or that summer afternoon, just days before you were gone? The unanswerable questions - if you had lived, if we had more time - are just as valid as the counterfactuals - if I left 2 minutes before, if I walked on the other side of the street, if it rained, if my mom called - but these are answerable. If any of these things were true, I may not have met you. I wouldn't have seen you one last time. But I did. But I did.

As the years go on, I've stopped thinking about what you might've given me in the time we didn't get and instead what I might've given you in the time we did have. After you passed, one memory took longer to surface than the others. I don't know why. Maybe because on the surface it seemed unremarkable. It was a quiet winter afternoon in your small office. I remember the radiator took up more space than your desk. It was that semester when we had two classes together and saw each other every week. I was passing the building on my way home and thought I'd stop by and say hello if you were in. You were. I don't remember what we talked about, but we spoke until the periwinkle twilight and the orange glow of the street lamps melted together. I didn't bother taking off my coat or backpack. Whatever you were working on was put to the side. I made you laugh. As I was standing up to go, you looked up at me and said, "I really needed this."

In the moment, I didn't suspect a thing. In retrospect, of all our meetings, I am most grateful for this one. When I saw this memory for what it was - now with the knowledge that you were suffering invisibly, silently - I understood how much remembering you, spending time with you, and making you laugh, meant to you. And I realized you'd been teaching me how to do this caring, courageous outreach all along, from the very first time we met.

I cherish this memory. This memory convinces me that if our brief time together was cruel, it's because it was important. If I was destined to meet you just to make you laugh and forget your troubles one winter afternoon while the twilight gathered around us, then I am fulfilled. I am happy. And wherever you are my dear friend, I hope you are too.

V. Spring Again

It's the spring of 2017 and everyone is asking me, "Have you listened to Hamilton yet?" And no, I haven't, because I simply cannot believe that anyone else could understand Alexander Hamilton or the American Founding like you and I could. And in the form of musical theatre rap? I dismiss it with an intellectually haughty huff.

And then one night not long before my graduation, I'm working on a capstone passion project: finishing your dissertation on The Federalist Papers. Spotify is open. I have some Broadway tunes playing in the background. I think, okay why not? Let's just see what this Hamilton hype is all about.

And over the next 2 hours and 22 minutes, I go through every emotion. I miss you acutely. I laugh with delight at something you would have loved. I pump my fist at The Federalist Papers shoutout. I'm humbled that indeed someone could understand Alexander Hamilton and the American Founding like you and me and with much more ingenuity, inclusivity, and grace. And, as the musical comes to a close and Eliza Hamilton takes center stage to lead the reprise of Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story, I simply fall apart. It seems every word was selected for just for you and me. I cry for everything we shared and everything we won't share - this stunning musical most of all.

It's 2023 and you've been gone for almost 8 years. It's spring in Boston again. I've had more terrible jobs. I've lost more people I loved. The world today is something 2015 you and me couldn't have imagined. Your last words to me, "You can do whatever you want to do", still rattle around in my head, a puzzle, a riddle I can't quite seem to solve. I still can't listen to Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story without crying, but for the most part, like Eliza, I've stopped "wasting time on tears". Because of you, I reach out to my friends and loved ones and say hello. I assume it always makes a difference just in case it does. I try to live up to every promising thing you saw in me. I try to have the courage to do, as you told me, whatever I want to do. Here I am, writing. Here I am, making art. Here I am, taking a chance on me, a chance I know you would've taken. Here I am, telling our story.

"Oh, I can't wait to see you again. It's only a matter of time."

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