It's Class Reunion Time

Do You Know Who Your Friends Are?



It's class reunion time, again. Excited? Anxious? Well, looking forward to it or not, it's about that time. And time, or more specifically, the swift passing of it, has a way of making you think. You think about the friends you haven't seen since graduation, or the end of the summer.
 Where are they now? Who are they now? How did we ever lose touch? You think about how many of those friendships were made, grown, strengthened or faded. 

When I started college, one of the first sayings I remember is, "Friends you make in college are friends for life". I used to think so much on the latter part of the phrase, "for life", that I neglected what turned out to be the operative portion, "Friends you make". When you really think about it, friends you make don't have to remain tight-knit, peas-in-a-pod type friends. They don't even have to be made in college. Some of my closest friends - I do not use the word loosely - have been made since college. Some before college. Some in some quite unlikely places. And in many places where I would have expected to make friends, I found none. As I commented to a recent college graduate, who found herself contemplating the validity of her college friendships, "Perhaps that will be your experience too." 

You never know - and that's about all I know for sure. But it has been my experience that depending on people, places and circumstances, friends are not always easy to make, keep, or identify, but those are the ingredients of friends: People, places, and a heaping helping of circumstances. Once you have them, it's okay not to talk to them 10 times a day, like you did in high school or college, because life going on does not afford us that luxury, thank God. God knows that some friends, we can only take in small doses; myself included, I'm sure. Once in a while is plenty. I try to remember, as I suggested, to love my friends with the changing times and lifestyles, as I expect they love me. "The same way people evolve, so do friendships." That's what I told her, anyway. Friends are great. I know mine are. 

Related information
  • People and friendships evolve.
  • Friends are made of many situations and circumstances, some in unlikely places.
  • Once in a while, like reunion time, is plenty enough, depending on you and your friends.
 
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...and maybe just maybe you choice NOT to go can be a bad decision. I went to my 20 year high school reunion 2 years ago and one friend who was not where she wanted to be in life was not going to attend. I told her, no one cares what you are doing, people just want to see you...and you never know this may be the last time you see some of your classmates because life is not short. She decided to go and had a blast. A week later one of our fellow classmates was killed in a car accident. Who knew? But at least God lent us an extra week to see him before calling him home. Regardless of what you look like, what you are doing, and where you happen to be in your life doing class reunion time, those people who shared 4, 8 and sometimes 12 years of your life would simple like to see YOU.

Posted on 04/09/2006 at 6:04:00 PM

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