Social media wasn’t something I bothered
with before I got married. “Facebook?” I remember asking my (then) fiancĂ©.
“What’s the draw?”
Well, for good or ill, he showed me. I’m
really not sure whether to give him the stink-eye for the immense amount of
time-suckage that’s followed, or thank him for helping me build a bridge to
friends and family I wouldn’t otherwise see.
I remember the excitement I felt each time
I reconnected with a family member on the other side of the continent, or with a
dear friend I’d made in New York, or a classmate I hadn’t seen since high
school graduation.
But something else happened in the years that
followed. It happened slowly, it happened ever so slyly… and it took a
shamefully long time before I noticed:
Some of my dearest friends, the ones I’d
loved for decades, the ones I used to hang out with on a Saturday night or call
on a random Thursday (without fear of disturbing them because I knew exactly
what they had planned that day), well, we lost touch. I mean, real touch. I see the little bits of
airbrushed information they choose to share on Facebook. But their day to day
triumphs and struggles … I’m missing those.
Did we all get so busy with our marriages
and children and careers that we lost each other? Or did I allow social media to
feed my inner recluse? Did I just stop calling, even though I never stopped
caring?
I have a birthday coming up, and it’s a big
one. Maybe it’s the nature of the birthday beast that one becomes
introspective. Birthdays are always a sensitive time for me. They’re a time of
gratitude for living another year, a time of life evaluation, and a time I’m
likely to weep for no apparent reason.
It’s a beautiful life. I have my family, I
have a writing career that’s taking off, I have a roof over my head and food on
my table and my children’s laughter to keep me sane. But right now I’m missing
some old friends. If you’re reading this, you know who you are. And if you’re
reading this, I hope you know I still care.
xo S.M. Freedman