27 Responses

  1. Anita Genua
    Anita Genua at |

    Our earth mama beautiful Kathleen is on her journey fast. Hugs to you – you have been her great friend for a long time..remember the flames of the soul will always flicker, perhaps soon in a different place.

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  2. Laurie
    Laurie at |

    I wish I had read this earlier. Of course I knew a dear – the dearest kind of – friend was dying. But I didn’t connect the concepts of kathleen, many friends (some new) and NOW to know it was this friend to whom everyone referred.

    I was thinking this afternoon in the heart of a still forest with a raven croaking overhead that I am at an age where this happens more and more frequently, this winnowing and attrition and lightning strikes elsewhere, even if only a mere whisper away. Even when I wish I could step into the bolt and push someone else out of harm’s way.

    I’ve watched my parents and many older friends emerging like lonesome trees from a falling forest, suddenly exposed to winds where there used to be shelter, and emptying sky where there used to be birds on branches, all the conversations still left to be had, the hugs, the lovely silences in togetherness, and thought, ah, well life does go on, doesn’t it? I see them pick themselves back up, a bit more soul-wearied and a bit longer to get ‘game’ again, but they always do.

    And then it begins to happen to my friends, like a fire cresting a hill, just a lick here and there, and I look out at it in the horizon of those who are my beloved, and think: I’ve still got plenty of time.

    Your story of Kathleen brings me up short.

    Your heartbreak is my heartbreak, because you are MY friend. The veil is lifted away, a whisper of smoke, and I can feel the burning of you all there together, and I know that while you will reappear, not all of you will, for we are all both living and dying at the same time, deep embers and skyborne sparks, and we don’t get to see what’s been left to carry on until the carrying on begins.

    So all of us who love you, in all the ways we love you, (near and far, because you are so divine at friend-making) will shelter you while you shelter Kathleen, and bring birds to sing to you, and skies full of rain, and a place to scream and cry, and a place to rest.

    Thinking of you and Kathleen so much

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  3. Jane
    Jane at |

    Thank you for sharing this. Grace, love, eloquence, sadness, despair, gratitude. It’s all there.

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  4. sarah
    sarah at |

    Thanks for sharing this story Colleen, it makes me feel as though I knew her a little and I am sad that she is gone from this earth. You’ve had a year of losses I know and I’m sorry for that. Sending hugs your way.

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  5. Elinor Warkentin, CTA (Cosmic Travel Agent)
    Elinor Warkentin, CTA (Cosmic Travel Agent) at |

    I don’t know your friend Kathleen, we have never met. But I know how much you love her. That I’ve seen and heard often, in conversations, in your writing. I don’t know who is luckier, you to have had her as a friend, she to have a friend like you who loves her so fiercely. Maybe neither is ‘lucky’, maybe you were both on a trajectory of love that collided into and melded into a love that has burned brightly all these years.

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  6. Martha
    Martha at |

    So sorry for your loss Colleen.

    I, too, have a non-Mennonite best friend who I’ve known since Grade 1. After graduation, we were roommies in Kits for 3 years and moved together several times after gaining or losing in numbers. At one time, there were four at 4th & Alma, then five at 8th & Alma, and at another there were nine of us renting a house at 12th & Arbutus, but the two of us always stuck together. On more than one occasion, we were asked to leave after a really great party.

    Now that she lives on the Island I don’t see her often, but we keep in touch with regular emails. For the past 6 years we’ve both become Snowbirds — us in Phoenix, them in Yuma. Last year we celebrated our 70th together in Phoenix and I’m looking forward to our time together next February.

    I might have grown up dirt poor on a farm, but damn, I had an Easy Bake oven!

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  7. gwen
    gwen at |

    Thank you for sharing this, Colleen. So much truth in it. So grounding. My advice is to take yourself out to the middle of nowhere and howl! (And I totally get your attraction to Kathleen! I so wanted an Easy-Bake oven!) Sending you big hugs.

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  8. Dee Dee
    Dee Dee at |

    Big Hug my friend.

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  9. Michele Peterson
    Michele Peterson at |

    Truly heartbreaking…I’m so sorry to hear this news. Kathleen’s life trajectory was much much too short. Your memories are something to treasure…thanks for sharing. I remember those Sen-Sens, Easy Bake ovens and pom pom hats. Fun times.

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  10. AnneLise
    AnneLise at |

    I am jealous of the photo, and that I could not share that special time with the three of you. I did, however, have the faux fur pompom hat and I truly loved it. Not as much as I love my friends though. That we survived our youth is truly amazing. Thanks for the memories.

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  11. Sophie Berner
    Sophie Berner at |

    Your post brought me to laughter and tears. I remember the Cherry Hill store, but didn’t know your friend. Death trajectories are a breath away from “tragic”. I’m so sorry that you are going through this simply awful “life experience”, or is it “death experience”. Thank you for sharing your feelings.

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  12. Henry | @fotoeins
    Henry | @fotoeins at |

    I came back, and I had one more year with my dad. Truth is he’d kept his condition secret from his entire family until it was too late. Bravely soldiering into the night, then. If elderly Asian men could go with the stiff upper lip, my dad could do it too. The trajectory was relatively long, I suppose, but by the end of 2013, I said to mum: “I don’t think he’s going to last the entire 2014 year.” By summer, it looked week to week, but by July leading into August, it was day to day. When his mind left and his body hung on, I mourned, quietly alone. When his body surrendered, collective mourning could begin. He may have left, but we carry on with his life’s memory and the continuing trajectory of his life story.

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