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Sherri Rosen's avatar

What I once took for granted are some of the beautiful friendships I’ve made through the years with different, creative and vibrant people who truly contributing to the world to make it a better place, but then death took them all- Amy, a 56 year old complicated and brilliant human who was not only a loyal friend, but worked with me in my book publicity business for 20 years. She died the beginning of Covid. William, 60, am interfaith minister I worked closely with as a minister also for 7 years, and then I get a call that they found a rare disease, no cure, a handsome, tall, beautifully looking and speaking human, and Christa, a gorgeous and beautiful songbird, age 60, died in her sleep, finding out thru Facebook she had died. I was close to all of them and we added luscious beds to one another’ s lives. These friendships weren’t easy (is any kind of great relationship easy?) but boy oh boy did we add richness to one another’s life. Being older I’ve tried, with intention, to make new friends, but it hasn’t happened, people too busy with their lives, and I may not have these types of gorgeous friends as I had, but I don’t give up. There is this acceptance of reality, and patience and grace are now at my table. Now no expectations, but I realize., after they’ve gone, how blessed I’ve been to have known them. As I’m sharing this I’m missing and yearning for them , to pick up the phone, no texting with any of them, and having our long , wonderful conversations, which were sometimes painful, but who said blessed relationship s are easy. Now I have gratitude for each day., and feel so blessed they were in my life.

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Linda Hoenigsberg's avatar

I mothered three adorable humans, from infant to preteen in Los Angeles, and then preteen through adulthood on the Central Coast of California. We were a team, through school events, divorce, being a working single mom. One by one they launched...got married...had children...moved away. Now they are scattered across the country in every direction, grandchildren and great grandchildren in tow. And I no longer live in easy to access Los Angeles, but instead, and delightfully, in a rural, tourists in the summer town in Montana, where we are presently almost snowed in...and where there is no airport except through a canyon an hour away. I no longer take for granted that I can see my most loved people in life whenever I want. I do thank God for being alive in the age of Facetime and cheap cell phone service (when I grew up we paid $1 a minute to talk to my grandmother who lived 6 hours away). But oh...I miss them. I'll never take seeing them for granted again.

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