***Of This And That
In The Old North Adamsville Neighborhood-In
Search Of….. Good Friends
Hey, I have just confirmed my 158th “friend” on Facebook today. Well not exactly a friend but a woman who knows a woman I “know” whom I “friended” (by the way when did friend become a verb). That latter woman had been added to my “circle” after I confirmed for a man, somebody who actually is a friend of mine. Or rather a person that I do some political work with who has a huge network of “friends” and I now am part of that network.
By the way many of those 158 friends I don’t know, have never ever met. Many are Brazilian who write in Portuguese and I don’t (I remember a little Spanish so I can roughly translate), and a number are somehow “friends” that are always pestering me to play some foolish on-line game that they participate in. All of this by way of introducing a rather strange idea these days- the idea of real in-person friends. A story about a group of friends, seven women from the Class of 1964 at North Adamsville High (listed in the dedication), who have actually gotten together regularly and done stuff, and who have been doing that stuff together for at least forty-five years. Yes, 45 years.
From The Pen Of Frank
Jackman
Recently I have avidly been
perusing the personal profiles of various members of the North Adamsville Class
of 1964 website as fellow classmates have come onto the site and lost their
shyness about telling their life stories (or increased their computer
technology capacities, not an unimportant consideration for the generation of
’68, a generation on the cusp of the computer revolution and so not necessarily
as savvy as the average eight year old today). While on the site I came across
a series of comments concerning a group of women, seven in all as far as I can
gather, from the class who have by hook or by crook have held together as friends
since high school days. I found that fact simply amazing and worthy of further
comment.
Of course I have spent not a
little time lately touting the virtues of the Internet in allowing me and the
members of the North Adamsville Class of 1964, or what is left of it, the
remnant that has survived and is findable with the new technologies to
communicate with each other some fifty years and many miles later on a class
website recently set up to gather in classmates for our 50th
anniversary reunion. (Some will never be
found by choice or as mentioned above by being excluded from the “information
super-highway” that they have not been able to navigate.)
Like I have said before some stuff
is interesting to a point, you know, those endless tales about the doings and
not doings of the grandchildren, odd hobbies and other ventures taken up in
retirement and so on although not worthy of me making a little off-hand
commentary on. Some stuff is either too sensitive or too risqué to publish on a
family-friendly site. Some stuff, some stuff about the old days and what did,
or did not, happened to, or between, fellow classmates, you know the boy-girl
thing (other now acceptable relationships were below the radar then) has naturally
perked my interest.
There are other stories as well
like the story of “the seven” that are also worthy of interest, although
telling the story, or rather my telling the story has been greatly hampered by
some code of omerta that the group has imposed on itself. Or so it seemed. After first striking out when I sent a
private e-mail to the one member of the group I slightly knew back in school,
Theresa, who informed me that someone in the group would probably get around to
telling the story sometime I did an end around and contacted group member
Pauline who I knew not at all but who at least directed me to a central source,
Delores, who did fill me in somewhat. Here is the e-mail I sent to Pauline:
“Pauline- Pardon me for the bother but I
have been told that you were one of “the seven.” One of the women in our class
who have stayed in touch all these years. I know that Theresa who told me that somebody
from the group would eventually write something up, Paula, our super wizard
website person Delores, and our class memory Joan from the reunion committee are
members but I would be very interested in knowing how it all started who
started it- it seems to have gone back to elementary school-which one?-Did you
all hang together in high school?-what triggered you all getting together each
month?-What do you do on those occasions?
Also I think you, actually all of you,
should be filling up the Message Forum or the Memories page when Delores sets
it up with your versions of this story. Tell us about your joys (kids,
grandkids, achievements, funny things in school or life), places that you went
together since I know you have taken trips together, your differences (I am
sure not everything has gone well among you for that length of time), sorrows
(deaths, especially in our generation-parents, things that went awry)- high
school dreams that did or did not pan out. Not Oprah stuff although if that’
what you want to write about that is fine too.
I find the fact that seven women from
one fairly large high school class have stuck together through thick and thin
extraordinary. The closest that I have even come to that with anybody is my on
and off friendship with Brad Badger the great runner from our class who I have
known since Snug Harbor Elementary days. This story needs to be told in this
age of Internet-directed “friendships” on FB, etc. Of course I have an ulterior
motive on all this since I intent to write something about the “seven” from the
outside perspective. The more I know the better sketch I can write about this
grand group-Later Frank Jackman.”
Here is what I wound up writing, a sketch not everybody in the
group was happy about:
“On Friendship-“The Seven”-For Delores,
Millie, Pauline, Paula, Karen, Joan, and Theresa-NAHS Class of 1964
The story of the continuing active
friendships of seven of our fellow Class
of 1964 classmates at NAHS has intrigued me since I first heard about it back
in December. Personally I can think of only one relationship of my own that
goes back to high school days. Forget about seven. I have asked around about
this phenomenon as well and nobody else can come close to that number either.
Amazing.
I am a little light on details of how
it all started, how it continued, and the specifics of what this group has done
and is doing. Fortunately I can make up a story (use some literary
license, okay) and maybe they will grace this piece with some real details of
their long- standing friendships. Thanks to Delores for some of the information
below and see Paula profile page for recent photos of the honorees. Here
is a little bouquet… Hey, I have just confirmed my 158th “friend” on Facebook today. Well not exactly a friend but a woman who knows a woman I “know” whom I “friended” (by the way when did friend become a verb). That latter woman had been added to my “circle” after I confirmed for a man, somebody who actually is a friend of mine. Or rather a person that I do some political work with who has a huge network of “friends” and I now am part of that network.
By the way many of those 158 friends I don’t know, have never ever met. Many are Brazilian who write in Portuguese and I don’t (I remember a little Spanish so I can roughly translate), and a number are somehow “friends” that are always pestering me to play some foolish on-line game that they participate in. All of this by way of introducing a rather strange idea these days- the idea of real in-person friends. A story about a group of friends, seven women from the Class of 1964 at North Adamsville High (listed in the dedication), who have actually gotten together regularly and done stuff, and who have been doing that stuff together for at least forty-five years. Yes, 45 years.
Here’s how it started. One young girl,
Pauline, met another, Karen, in elementary school, the old Wollaston
School, on the playground playing jacks, one won, the loser cried, the
winner came over to console the loser and they thereafter were fast friends for
life (no one can remember who won or who lost such are the vagaries of time but
no matter). Then came dreaded hormonally-driven junior high days at Adamsville
Central Junior High and those two formed a friendship with Joan to gain
added shelter against the raging hormones, bothersome boys, and what
to do about that “crush” two of them had on one of those same bothersome boys.
At North the group snowballed, picking
up the remaining four through attendance in the same classes (some business
classes) and this or that school club or event. At North this enlarged
grouping came together to try to survive those still raging hormones, figure
out what to do about those now not so bothersome boys, and, most importantly,
what to do about that “crush” two of them had on one of those now not so
bothersome boys. On the whole the group was on friendly terms at North. Maybe
not every day in every way girls’ “lav” Monday morning talk- friendly but more
than some passing “Hi.” (Or some such equivalent term used to acknowledge
another’s girl-ness. Guys gave the ubiquitous nod.)
Then came graduation and the seven were
swept away with the winds of change. Swept away to go their separate ways and look
forward to more school, work, romances, and marriages. Or so they thought. Later,
the year after graduation, 1965, the group came together again
at a Christmas party hosted by Millie and that original mist of time
from elementary school on thereafter extended itself to the
present. There you have it.
Now was what the group met over
lunch or some other occasion about some world-historic event, discussing
matters of great national and international import. Well, maybe in passing, as
those events impinged on their lives and they worried about their love ones
going off to war, losing jobs, trying to get home loans, stuff like that. But
what drove them was the stuff of ordinary human clay-at first school hassles,
going to the Cape on summer weekends, new jobs, trying to move up the ladder, dates,
finding some "Mr. Right."
Then came marriages, marriages
hopefully made in heaven, but as was the ethos then made hopefully to
last forever. (There is now a famous, class famous, photograph of one of
their number's wedding, Paula in 2005, so hope springs eternal.)
Unfortunately the group was not exempt from the modern societal norms and not
every marriage lasted as long as the friendships. The coming of children (I will not even hazard a guess at
the collective number nor will I grace this sketch with all their names and
those of grandchildren for fear of running out of cyberspace) who were a
joy (mainly) and animated many a luncheon table hour. Thereafter the
telephone wires burned constantly with glad tidings, mainly kid-centered, and
sometimes sorrows as parents passed on.
Later as the kids went out on their own
and had their own sets of children for grandmas to fret over, they had an
excuse to shop away the hours again and to make Oshkosh By Gosh and the like very profitable. More ominously
they talked of new pressing issues such as that tell-tale faraway look on a
middle-aged husband’s face which caused alarms to ring. (It is okay to mention
this male genetic defect I have had that faraway look myself, three times).
That is where the bonds of friendship held firm as they gathered around to
protect their own. But that vagrant look on his face passed.
A little later more mundane alarms took
center stage as the first signs of that raging illness that catches us all
reared its ugly head. The medical appointments schedule replaced the
kids' activities schedule in holding the place of honor on the
refrigerator door. The group too began to speak more often of how husbands had
become less attentive, more interested in Sunday television sports or strange
desires to hit the golf links, although still pledging eternal love.
By then though with time on their hands
and some unused dough now that the kids were no longer a constant drain on
the household economy they traveled, travelled by boat, by air, maybe took an
automobile trip and investigated those places that they had really meant to see
when they were younger but, well, his job got in the way, the kids cried for
Disneyland (and in their turn the grandkids), and the time just flew. They
travelled to the now obligatory Florida to catch some sun for frozen Northern
bones and when they hit fifty four of them for some unfathomable reason
(unfathomable to me who gets nervous and expects civilization to expire when a
streetlight goes out or when I am more than ten miles from the ocean) went
to the Canadian Rockies together.
Those are the ways the group spent its
time together, hanging tough, as one of their number said "through thick
and thin" and without a recorded argument if you can believe that. And
here they, the “seven ,” stand as a monument to some pretty old-time values on
a globalized earth gone berserk with “interconnecting,” interconnecting for
some purpose, some purpose that I have not quite caught on to, and they
probably have not either.
They meet still, to share the latest
gossip, to show endless photos of grandkids and trips taken (photo-taking
the one blessed thing made easier in the world these days), to plan the
next trip to the islands and to occasionally look wistfully at the calendar and
wonder where the time went. Know this though in about one hundred years from
now when future generations are “connecting” on VirtualRealityBook or
some such “social networking” system if they look up the old-time meaning of
the word “friend” on some stratospheric cloud archives they will find this
very important example of what it was like when real friendships mattered. Hats
off to the “seven.”
Excuse me, my 158th “friend”
just sent a message.
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