We met in the middle of 9th grade. If Jeanne ever had a thought about what was ‘cool’, it was immediately dismissed as unimportant. She made her own ‘cool’ and she stuck to it. She knew everyone and what they were up to. She knew the lay of the land and had her own compass. There was just no arguing. A more confident 9th grader, there has never been.
I was the child of a very public and acrimonious divorce who had been literally plucked from downtown Toronto and deposited at Bigfork High School in Bigfork, Montana one snowy Monday morning in the middle of the term. Of course, my clothes were all wrong, my hair was all wrong, my attitude was all wrong and I talked funny. What a sad and sorry figure I must have cut, shivering in my city snow boots. Still, she swooped down and tucked me under her wing as if we’d known each other since childhood, and I went, in a heartbeat, from a woefully lonely (and in hindsight, traumatized) child to a teenager with girl friends and sleep-overs, make-up experiments and secrets.
Jeanne came from a ‘real’ family with a Mom and a Dad, a sister and a Grandpa. They did exotic things at Jeanne’s house, like planning practical meals and sitting down together around the big kitchen table. They talked and argued amicably. They did things like homework and chores. The best part was that Jeanne lived on a farm. In fact, her family had lived on a farm so long that they named the road after them. She therefore possessed all sorts of arcane knowledge and could answer questions like “What’s alfalfa?”, “Why are we picking rocks out of this field?” and “Why do you have a gas pump in your yard?”
So, due to her willfulness, we grew up together. We learned to drive on her mom’s blue chevy. We got our first corsages, had our first dates and first boyfriends together. We got into a little trouble together too, but not much. I don’t remember watching TV with Jeanne one single time. We had too many important things to do.
She’s done everything right. Her personal compass is, as it has always been, true. She married the right guy and had ridiculously beautiful and talented children. To quote my New Year’s Eve post: “…Jeanne and Jeff and their amazing brood (now that they’re potty-trained, grown-up, college-educated and have their own apartments, I really wish they were mine)”.
Jeanne was ‘the practical one’. Though she has admired and generously nurtured creativity in others, she has always claimed to be singularly uncreative. Imagine my surprise when, a week or two before Christmas, I received a series of confusing and cryptic Facebook messages from Jeanne concerning, of all things, crochet. Oh, the moaning and gnashing of teeth, and the threats to crochet a noose and hang herself! I quote, “I THOUGHT IT WAS GOING TO BE FUN. THIS IS NOT FUN. THIS IS THE OPPOSITE OF FUN.” I was encouraging but non-commital, not wanting to upset her time/crochet continuum, but then during Christmas week, I spied this:
Then this:
Then THIS!
Delighted, yet stymied, I messaged her, suggesting we do a Crochet-Along project. Her answer: “Gee, I’d love to but I have too many projects going.” Well, how do you like that? She still swears it’s no fun, that she doesn’t enjoy it, that it’s merely some sort of weird obsession but I know the truth. She’s “hooked”.
Cindy
I love to hear how best friends meet! Both your sides to it are amazing and show just how much your universes brought you together. I love that you’re still deep in your friendship!
But Jeanne, it does sound like your hooked no matter how much you deny!
🙂
garretw
She sounds like such a good friend. She’ll be blogging by this time next year, I bet. This sort of things infectious, as you well know. It starts with a quick google search, and before you know it, you’re saying words like “URL” and “Upload”. As someone who shares a house with a baby, and some would say two or three, I must say, kids are better when they have their own apartment.
Jeanne
My dear and darling friend, oh how you mislead your faithful followers! I cannot let it stand! Confident teen? I think not! You, a forsaken waif? Hardly! In that small town you were exotic, exciting, talented, vivacious and my “coolness” rating went up considerably when you allowed me to associate myself with you.
And I am so glad you have fond memories of the farm. But I learned so much from you and your family. Formal dining? With a fork on the LEFT and crystal goblets? Plated service? Homemade english muffins! These were new and wonderful experiences for me. And mostly I learned that putting yourself out there, taking risks, and being embracing the unexpected were okay.
Pearl
Well, there’s something to be said for perspective. But try as you might, you can not diminish your inherent fabulousness 😀