My parents
met at the University of Wisconsin at Madison in 1953. After my dad graduated,
they moved to Boston where he attended MIT. Finally, after getting his
doctorate, they moved to Texas. They lived in Dallas until their oldest kid, my
brother, was 16. In 1977, they moved to the Denver area for my dad to take a
job with the Colorado School of Mines and they have been living there ever
since.
Their third
and final cross-country move in a marriage of now 58 years was voluntary. They wanted to live in the Rockies and my dad
wanted to work in academia. After a few years of teaching, he founded a company
with a friend. That was his last major life change, and it was a wise move, since
later, the company was bought out by a much larger corporation in Houston. The
kind owners allowed my dad to work from Denver.
Conversely,
many of us now in the workforce, whether we are 22 or 62, feel rather like
feathers in the wind. I completed my undergraduate studies at UCSB in Santa
Barbara and then moved home to Colorado to save money for a year. Next up: Washington
DC for my graduate degree. Following completion of this milestone, I moved back
to Colorado and worked in Denver for four years, at two different companies.
The magazine I was working for was purchased and therefore required me to move
to Minneapolis. After not quite two years in that city, I began dating my
future husband and quickly found a job in San Francisco to live near him.
As the
economy began to sputter in 2000, life became quite chaotic for us. Over the
course of the next nine years, due to job losses and job gains, we moved from
San Francisco to Boulder, back to the Bay Area, to Seattle and then again back to
the Bay Area. Finally, we moved voluntarily back to Colorado to bring our two
young daughters closer to our extended family.
We've been
in the Denver area now for three and half years and I think we're here to stay, but who
knows? Meantime, all of these moves since the year I turned 18 have resulted in
friends scattered across the country and even the globe. My best friends do not
live in my current hometown. Like most people in my age bracket whom are working
with kids, I don't have the money to visit my besties on both coasts every
year.
The mobile
madness of our society means that having close, connected friendships living nearby is no
longer a given. We may have casual acquaintances from the kids’ school, the gym
or church, but these aren't the kind of friendships we had in college or when
we were first getting started on our careers. They aren't the ones you'll tell about your marriage or money troubles, your insecurities about the future or how your daughter is growing up too fast and it's killing you inside.
Nine months
ago we moved to a new neighborhood. We know very few of her neighbors, as nice
as they seem from afar. Wrapped up in our busy lives, socializing is rare
beyond the requisite wave from the car. I keep thinking that I will organize a
neighborhood party of some sort, but it hasn't happened. Maybe I worry about
being burned again.
In our last
neighborhood, my husband and I tried valiantly to befriend our neighbors. We
organized cookie parties for the kids and held wine tastings. The neighbors were
perfectly pleasant and mostly friendly, yet real friendships never developed. I
suppose they weren’t interested or simply didn't have time to expand their
circles beyond the occasional Friday night beer at the mailbox. We felt isolated
and frustrated, missing the close-knit group of friends from our former life in California when the kids were tiny and playgroups were the tonic for raising toddlers.
I can't help
but think that our highly mobile society is a bad sign for the notion of community
and the prospects of long-term, nurturing friendships. As my good college friend
Michelle says:
“It’s not
possible, as my grandparents did, to have all of your closest friends and
family swing by on a Sunday afternoon for pot roast, pasta and wine. It will
never happen. It’s really sad.”
So, we rely
on Skype, e-mail and texting to develop community. Somehow, it doesn't quite
compare to my memories of early childhood on Waldorf Drive in Dallas. Nearly
every single family living on that long street knew each other well. There were
frequent block parties and family dinners. Children ran free
between houses. Mothers knocked on each other’s back doors to exchange recipes
and talk about their kids.
True,
technology helps us stay in touch with our far-flung friends and family like
never before. But I miss the irreplaceable face time with my closest
pals, which Facebook will never replicate.
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