
“Your friend is dead.” The clear voice of Death was at my door.
Again comes the knock, this time louder, “Your friend is dead.”
Go away! What is so urgent you must call at this hour?
YOUR
What do you mean dead? She’s only in her 50s. She can’t be…
FRIEND
If she’s dead then I can die, too. What is the meaning of life? Why are we even…
IS
How must he be? How sad I am for him; he has lost her. Oh, I hurt so much for him…
DEAD
Go away now. I am angry. I want to be alone. I hurt so much for all of us…
There were five couples in our group. I nicknamed us the “Shirt Friends” because we had dinner parties to celebrate our birthdays and we always gave shirts for presents. Our mutual friend pieced our little band together: childless or with children, right-winged or left-winged, gourmet chefs (them) down-home cooks (us). Somehow the price for admission was just the ability to drink red wine and to laugh. I mean the kind of laughter that made tears stream down your face and that you felt in your cheeks and stomach muscles the next day.
My friend is dead.
She was a few years older than I. She went to the same high school and I can vividly remember looking at my older sister’s yearbook and admiring her. Before she was my friend she was homecoming queen; famous for her ability to drink shots of liquor and stay standing as, one by one, the football players would tumble. Before she was my friend she was a gymnast. And once she mud wrestled, a story she used to tell just to get a reaction from the crowd.
The Shirt Friends were once wildly happy together. Cancer, other illnesses, children’s addictions, deaths: we could imagine those things away—”spit in their general direction” we would say to each other—and get on with drinking our wine and eating our tasty grub. More laughter more wine and then the birthday cards would be circulated. How many times did we sit around the table for four, five, six hours and just laugh?
Eventually our little band dismantled due mostly to a divorce among us but also because our mutual friend was in failing health. It has been many years since we all sat and laughed together. Too many years.
How fragile is this life that just a blink ago my friend was cooking bolognese and crème brûlée and now she is gone from us forever?
I want to tell Death to leave me alone but I know that won’t happen. I will see him over and over in my lifetime and then he will come for me. Without death we would not often contemplate how much a person has meant to us in our lifetime. If they are not gone from us forever, we perhaps will forget to miss them.
Goodbye my beautiful friend. I have missed you. I will miss you.


We had joy, we had fun, We had seasons in the sun, But the wine and the song, like the seasons have all gone. —Terry Jacks
Beautiful and thoughtful tribute to our friend Jamie. It was an amazing time together but then life seemed to get in the way and forced us all to be grown-ups. Like you I will never forget the many 5-6 hour dinners spent drinking wine, eating wonderful dinners, and the laughter. How lucky we were to have been her friend.
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I didn’t know your friend but I feel your pain. Lovely tribute.
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Great hommage RIP your friend
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From the soul xx
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I am so sorry for your loss. My most sincere condolences.
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Sorry for your loss.
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A moving tribute to your friend and passing times.
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Oh, Alison, I am so sorry about the death of your friend. You’ve written a lovely remembrance of her.
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A wonderful remembrance. Saddened for your loss. Your post captured so well how one feels when death brushes close.
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Thoughts and prayers for her and for you. May you hold your beautiful memories forever.
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So sorry for your loss Alison
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So sorry for your loss. It is inevitable unfortunately. You will always have your memories.
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Yours is the second post I’ve read since yesterday about losing someone dear and cherished. I wish there was something different I could say to make you feel better, make the hurting less. But as I’ve learned, I’ve no power over the course grief must take.
There is one thing I can do and I will: I will pray for you, for her and for every heart that loves her.
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I am forever grateful that our paths crossed & a connection was solidified. All those dinner parties where time stood still, while we broke bread, shared our lives and laughed all night. Hours seemed like minutes. Life happened in our midst; divorce, aging parents, becoming grandparents, geographical distance & health contrived to slow our gathering schedule. Such bittersweet memories now. So. Much. Laughter. She touched my soul. We will always remember her!❤️ Née
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A little bit of laughter last Saturday when some of us were back together was a good reminder of how much fun we used to have. You, by the way, make me laugh more than most. I love the way you tell a story. I miss you! Let’s not wait so long to get together again.
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I’m sorry, Alison. 50 is so terribly young. I am sure she felt blessed having you as a friend, then and from now on.
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Thank you for the sentiments. It was way too young. Funeral was yesterday and I am gutted.
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Sorry for your loss. HUGS! ❤
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Beautiful words precious memories it’s the small things we miss the most
Talk to her often ♥️🍷
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What a beautiful tribute to your friend! I am so sorry…the loss must feel overwhelming. You’re right; we see far too much of death, and we lose all the wrong people.
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