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Life is more of a river than a lake

July 22, 2007

Yes, there is a possibility that I have just been allowed to have it too good lately. Though I’ve been working hard enough to come home at the end of the day and tell myself “you’ve worked hard, you need a break” I also think I’ve been pretty lucky with the breaks so far.

If nothing else, I’ve at least been lucky to have spent them with really wonderful people. Although the places and the weather have all been beautiful, I can’t help but think the people you spend your time with, if they’re really awesome people that you love, would be people you’d be with anywhere.

I found myself thinking that a lot over the weekend. Around the campfire or on the lake shore, I just sat back and took it all in. I’m always in fear a little of bringing up the good. I don’t want to brag anyone to death or, heaven forbid, make it all go away by talking about it. At the same time, though, that is what the good is about, isn’t it? It’s there to enjoy- to celebrate as if this feeling, this moment itself might be what we always use to define good.

Earlier in life, at times when I didn’t know what awful really was, I wasn’t great at recognizing life’s truly good moments. I didn’t really know the stark, meaningful contrast between love and hate or peace and fighting. Hate was the girl that purposely kicked sand on me, war was a yellow button I wore on my jacket.

Growing up, growing old, is such a bittersweet contrast in itself. The nostalgia, the lust for those days gone by is only overshadowed by the appreciation that develops over time. Over the weekend, as is often when friends get together, the question came up of would you ever go back in time?

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My first instinct is to say yes, knowing what I know now, of course. But then I think about it, and realize nothing I remember would have been remotely as grand had I not had the privilege of innocence. I wouldn’t have cared deeply about getting a perm or missing an episode of Beverly Hills 90210. I wouldn’t have gotten butterflies at the thought of a boy sitting next to me on the bus or have been surprised by Halloween haunted houses. So no, today I’d say going back would just not work. Mostly, it would prevent moving forward. It would prevent weekends at the lake, to be with friends and reminisce.


And what are good weekends with empty margarita glasses and clear blue skies worth if you can’t reminisce about being seventeen again? I certainly wouldn’t be able to tell the story of the last time I was at this here lake, when the girls met up with the boys, likely all having stretched the truth with the parents. Where we walked shoulder to shoulder, wondering if he was going to take our hand. The boathouse where the girls would go to tell one another which boy liked them and which was a “loser.” The hill where, in the late night hours, you might sneak off and, you know, read.

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I don’t need to go back to that. Remembering it is part of the magic. And life, in it’s sneaky, quiet way just keeps getting better and better.

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