Tuesday, March 21, 2006

friends (what We good for?)

*This began as a response to Muse's insight on my previous post, but I just kept going on and on so...

For the first 18 years of my life, I never lived anywhere for more than 3 years. I never had the opportunity to make lasting friendships. By the age of 10, I could readily recognize the stages of loss where best friends first promised to visit, then vowed to write until, finally, they disappeared altogether. I don't begrudge them- they had lives and friends and... well, we were all just kids. Eventually, I came to accept that friendships were short-term and I found other things to motivate and entertain me. I loved to read comic books and play computer games- particularly roleplaying games. I created dynamic characters, then helped them to develop and grow as they undertook these great adventures. Movies were critical. They took me far away and, although our relationship was a bit one-sided, they filled some big, emotional holes in my life.

I don't think it's mushy or corny to want friends around you. After retiring from the military, my dad has spent years trying to find small town diners or church communities where he might find meaningful friendships. People were friendly, yet they already had their good friends and weren't interested (or needed) to call on him whenever they felt like having friends for dinner or see a movie. The only people that my parents can do things with are sisters and brothers so, after years of resisting, they're moving closer to family.

It's a fundamental need. I've deeply craved it all my life- in my work and personal life. I didn't want to repeat the same stories over and over and re-introduce myself to strangers with the fervent hope that I won't blow it and they'll like me and think to call me when they need to talk to somebody. I'm not afraid to meet new people. Kat and I have tried for years to make new friends in the City. It grows tiring to go to parties and re-explaining yourself to others. I can't tell you the number of times that poor Kat has had to endure my "Theory of Porn" speech or hear another defense of why I think Michael Bay is an assmonkey who should never be allowed to direct another film.

I love having friends who know me well enough that they know my passions so we can have a conversation that comes from the end of my last thought rather than an explanation from the start. I love being able to sit in a room and just enjoy being there with a person instead of filling the empty moment. I love it when a friend introduces me to something new and interesting because they are excited about seeing my excitement. I even love a good tweak to my ego when a friend pokes a hole in an attitude that I've got all figured out. I love my fiancé and there are tons of moments that we share, but it's ennobling to also have friends with different rhythms and ideas who want to hang you with you just because you're You.

It's the same thing in my professional life. When I discuss movies, I want to be able to talk about how Woody Allen's new movie "Match Point" is an interesting return to his directing style in "Crimes and Misdemeanors" instead of explaining to someone who Woody Allen is. I want to work with contemporaries who challenge me as much as I challenge them. I want competition that makes me want to be better rather than frustrate me. I want to hear about other people's choices and discoveries, and root for them to succeed.

I read a story one time about how, back in the 1960's, Francis Ford Coppola and George Lucas talked about buying a big Victorian house outside of San Francisco. They wanted to start a production company, buy some 16mm cameras and create a communal space where artists could mingle and make movies. I don't know whether the story was true but I always loved that idea of having a space where artists could hang out, exchange ideas and work near each other. Painters could inspire filmmakers who inspire musicians and everyone would believe in creating great things.

All great movements got their start in places where various people from various disciplines ate, drank, and partied together. I still hold onto dreams like that and I don't believe they're sappy or unrealistic. It's a quick and slippery beast to catch, though. I've spent years chasing it- moving to one city, then another, hoping to find an open, vibrant community. People don't know their power and can easily get fixated on the idea that they should do it alone. I've found myself in spaces and times where I have glanced the tremendous power of a group of people believing in one another.

My friends are scattered all over the world, now. They all have such vibrant, creative fires but I worry that they are in danger of going out or drifting out of my life altogether. I often get this intense, Catcher-in-the-Rye feeling and I think of that quote-

Anyway, I keep picturing these little kids playing some game in this big field of rye and all. Thousands of little kids, and nobody's around - nobody big, I mean- except me. And I'm standing on the edge of some crazy cliff. What I have to do, I have to catch everybody if they start to go over the cliff - I mean if they're running and they don't look where they're going I have to come out from somewhere and catch them. That's all I'd do all day. I'd just be the catcher in the rye and all. I know it's crazy, but that's the only thing I'd really like to be. I know it's crazy.

I want to gather my friends before we all completely lose sight of our dreams- before we fall off the cliff.

8 comments:

muse said...

Ever since I've read this, I've been like "Oh my gods I understand so totally! I have so much to reply to this!" but I've been lacking the time and/or the energy to write something coherent. Anyway, this is just to say: reply coming up eventually, as soon as I can! I get the feeling that this would make such a great conversation! :)

John Deckard said...

Cool.

Anonymous said...

If you'll allow me to be lazy (or short on time...), I'll adapt an email which I just sent to a someone. It was inspired by your post, actually, so if you read between the lines some, you'll see what I mean when I say "how I know what you mean!":

I was too geeky for my high school friends, and we never "clicked" on any deep and meaningful level (didn't keep in touch with any of them), and I was to shy to meet new ones.

Cegep (college) was one big loud beery party/philosophy & French litterature-induced angst-filled time... LOL I actually had one amazing friend who changed my life, but as she started a lucrative career right out of cegep and I went on to being an incredibly poor university student, we eventually lost touch (long story... I wish I could get back in touch with her, actually).

University was all about juggling various part-time jobs and trying to study full-time too (and have enough to eat and pay the rent - which often wasn't the case)...

The problem with me is that I've got so many interests (many of which might seem at odds with one another) that I've got a hard time finding a partner for some of them.

I've got movie friends, bookstore friends, girly/women's stuff friends, just discovered that my geekette pal is willing to come clothes shopping with me (shudders... how I hate to do that when I actually need something, as opposed to just noticing something I like in passing), I got my pagan friends (though not the "let's have an intellectual discussion about it" type)...

Actually, I've got a good roster of pals for lots of other interests too. I'm really rich in that way (and extremely appreciative of it too!). Best of all, they are actual _true_ friends, and I am amazed at my good fortune in that regards. Seriously. (mushy as it may sound)

The selfish me still would like:

- a vegetarian and/or environmentalist friend

- a souvereignist friend or at least an "interested in discovering the Québécois culture to some extent - movies, shows, humorists, history, whatever" friend...

I feel like I'm losing half of myself... most of my friends are English-speaking and federalist (or French and only interested in American culture), which is a-ok (the different political views, I mean), I'm not anti-Canadian one bit, just pro-Quebec and don't feel that I have anything in common with the rest of Canada, but never being able to talk about the French and/or Québécois culture or go to lectures or concerts or anything like that is... just hard sometimes. My ex is/was English-speaking - though sovereignist, for socialist reasons - and I wasn't able to share that with him either, though we got along famously for everything else... actually I'm rather dreadfully afraid that I'll never be able to share that many similar interests with anyone ever again... but anyway, that's another story)

- a "loves to walk around and explore junk stores/the city" friends

- a politically aware and/or active or "likes to volunteer for various charitable orgs/causes once in a while" friend

- a "would like to go to music shows of diverse cultures/musical styles - classical, punk, ska, chansonniers, hard rock, alternative, Sinatra/Martin/Darin tributes, tango, and so on and so forth -" friend

- a Tibetan Buddhist friend. No, I'm not, but I love this philosophy so much, I'd love to be able to go to lectures or that "Mystical Arts of Tibet" http://www.mysticalartsoftibet.org with someone who's actually interested/knowledgeable instead of just dragging a friend with me when they're in Montreal (the last time that I went it was in the St.Patrick church, very lovely!), and I had to go to the Thich Nhat Hanh "Peace in oneself, Peace in the world" conference by myself last summer (even the lure of a free ticket didn't tempt anyone) (yeah, yeah, so he's not a _Tibetan_ Buddhist...) ;)

- a culturally curious friend (interested in going to cultural events of various types to discover other peoples/traditions/countries)

- an "actually willing to pay to see a play once in a while" friend (actually, just make that a "not permanently broke" friend...LOL though I'm unfair, some of them aren't, but they just don't share the above interests so it's a moot point)

Same goes for discussions in general. I mean, my friends are happy to talk about anything with me, and on many topics oh my gods how we have fabulous chats, but in other cases... it's not the same talking with someone who doesn't know the first thing about some topic that you're passionate about, you know? No shared vocabulary = limited conversation.

Greedy, moi? LOL

Nah, if I ever _really_ wanted new "special interests pals", I could find some (friendster.com, meetup.org, craiglist.org, various volunteer groups, etc.). In the last while I've just been happy deepening my old friendships, strengthening the village, so to speak, and grateful to have those great people in my life.

But still, part of me yearns for an "erudite pagan", a "Québécois", an "activist", a "culturally curious" - and so on and so forth - friend. I feel like there are these huge parts of me that are left to wither in the dark, for lack of being shared with a like-minded fellow.

Yet, simultaneously, I look at the truly wonderful, surprising, loving, fun, dependable people whom I am lucky to count as friends, and I find myself filling up with gratitude, love and amazement.

So go figure.

John Deckard said...

That's interesting. I used to be more specific about what my friend needs were, but nowadays I'm just looking for someone who surprises me and maybe pushes me a little to be more.

I like the idea of having friends that have the same interests but when I'm honest with myself, I've gotta admit that my best friends are the ones that got to me in places I never knew existed.

In the early 1970s, George Lucas was trying to get a science fiction movie made. Studio execs told him that the public wasn't interested in science fiction movies. Sci-fi movies hadn't performed well at the box office in years. What the studios, and the audience, didn't know was that science fiction didn't have to mean War of the Worlds or The Day the Earth Stood Still. Science fiction could be Star Wars. Later, it was re-defined as Alien and Blade Runner and The Matrix.

That's how I look at good friends- you never know what that word can mean and what gaps you need filled until there's someone there that's suddenly filling it. I have things I love to do and I love the company of others who are equally enthusiastic. Still, it's exciting to have a friend who shares my Ideals yet pursues it from a different perspective. When Eliot visited NYC, we went to a comic book store and he introduced me to all these amazing, underground comics that I would have never known had he only travelled in the same circles of knowledge as myself.

The hardest, and most rewarding, friends are those who live utterly out of your comfort zone. Kat is a very self-conscious woman. She doesn't like having attention drawn to herself. She had a high school/college friend, however, who was outgoing and loved to be at the center of attention. She loved to dance and socialize. Her charm and enthusiasm got Kat to go out and do things she never would have done otherwise... and she Loved it. Such friends are volatile and very difficult to maintain- if we're not open enough to try it and they push to hard, the friendship can strain or break, but these are the new friendships I relish and long for the most.

muse said...

Wow, the last paragraph sounds like an email I sent to someone! I too was extremely self-conscious, got a fabulously outgoing friend when I was in cegep, etc. etc. It's my story too!

I'd _love_ to have passionate friends (about anything!) but I find that those are very hard to find (or maybe I'm not looking well enough). I'm endlessly curious about just about everything, and I _love_ to discover things with someone who is passionate about it.

It seems that passion is a rare commodity these days, though. Most people are just happy drawing a paycheque, watching tv, eating out once in a while (nothing too exotic). Alas, I can't handle superficial conversations (I really suck at surface small talk, I want to go straight to the marrow).

Where have all the intellectually/artistically/socially/politically passionate people gone? (not just the ones full of empty rhetoric, either, those that actually incorporate their interest into their lives - like pursuing obscure comics, actually volunteering, trying out new music groups, etc.)

muse said...

and while I'm at it: where are the ones who, though currently not exactly passionate about anything in particular, are willing to explore, to try to find out about someone else's passions?

Is no one curious anymore either? Agh!

(I speak from experience = 2/3 of the time when I offer free tickets to anything/suggest an outing to all my friends, no one wants to try - and let's not even suggest having someone actually being interested enough to pay for their ticket... yet my friends are all pretty diverse people in terms of age, personality, interests, gender/orientation, etc., so it's not like I just hang out with bores - they are fascinating in their own right, just not super interested in venturing in unknown territory - whereas if anyone suggested just about anything to me, I'd jump on this chance to a) spend time with my friend an b) discover something new)

Like there are going to be concerts by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Clap Your Hands Say Yeah soon, and I've never heard either but I seem to remember you mentioning one or the other, and I'm curious... yet no one will want to come. Bleh. And going alone to a bar just seems too loser-like for me.

Ack, I'm in a frustrated (translation: bitchyyyyy) mood today! ;) Sorry, it will pass. More caffeine will even me out! LOL

(got issues with the "ex/whatever he is currently" this week, will post about how it turns out this weekend)

John Deckard said...

First off, you should ABSOLUTELY go see both of those bands. You can drag practically anyone to see Clap Your Hands Say Yeah and they'll have a good time. It's very fun, catchy music. Karen O (from the Yeah Yeah Yeahs), however is a strange(fun) and quirky(interesting) performer to see live. Both of these bands have performed multiple dates at my favorite venue (the Bowery Ballroom) recently and I couldn't go because the tickets sold out almost immediately. I did talk about Clap Your Hands Say Yeah for my New Year's Eve blog.

It's fun to go with someone, but you're not a loser if you go alone to see them. Besides, who knows who you'll end up talking to?

********************************
Okay, back to our regularly-scheduled program...

I don't know where the adventurous people have gone. With the interconnectivity of the internet, maybe they find their niches and never swim outside of the them. There is so much catering to giving us exactly what we want, it can be hard to find the unexpected.

It's harder to find dynamic people as you get older, too. Many people of my age group have stopped being curious and settled into Comfort Foods. They have all the friends they want. They listen to mainstream stuff (or their older stuff) and only see the Big movies. Older people tend to be suspicious, too. They can quickly make assumptions about you before you even have a chance to get a foot in the door. Younger people, by and large, have more curiosity, but they're also Single and in search of other singles so if you're not...

Maybe more people are unadventurous because people are (by and large) swimming under so much debt. They can't afford to take a break from their responsibilities. It's a hefty burden to bear. The more Stuff you get to make yourself feel better, the more Time you have to spend paying for it.

Passion is a flaw in today's capitalist world, unless it's to make money or collect things. You are only supposed to take chances and commit if it's towards a Goal- never the journey. Otherwise, we label it and medicate in the name of Stability and Normalcy. I love how the word Normal is thrown around like by people but how many of us really would ever agree on what that is? For me, Normal is finding the mental focus to settle my brain long enough to complete a project. Normal for my mother is having a steady job, health insurance, a home and children.

The danger of this slippery definition has arisen when people talk about Normal as an excuse to stop caring. To stop feeling uncomfortable with the status quo. To become Ambivalent to anything except one's own, immediate needs.

I love having those intense conversations about art or society's Habits and assumptions or what turns me On and what turns me Off. I had a funny incident with one of Kat's workmates. We all went out for a drink at a local bar. I was going on about something I'd been pondering for a few days. I was eager to hear other opinions on the subject. After I had finally articulated this extended thought, there was a long pause, then the workmate said, "You REALLY need to stop thinking so much."

What are ya gonna do?

muse said...

More on this tomorrow, I'm exhausted now, but boy this is an interesting conversation! :)