Monday, May 6, 2013

Remember the good times...

I lost another friend. Found out this morning. I can't act like I was his best friend, but I knew him and I knew him pretty well.

When I think of him, two words come to mind; charisma and talent.

He had a such a knack for life. Lived without fear. Which was funny considering he was a hemophiliac, we used to tell him to take it easy as he would crawl through a window surrounded by broken glass. He'd turn to us and give us that mischievous smile he had, almost saying, "What? Are you afraid?"

We were part of this youth group that ran a haunted house in a church. It wasn't necessarily a church youth group, it was a youth group that happened to be located in a church. After all the Halloween shenanigans passed, they'd have a sleep over and we'd watch movies all night. Each room had a different theme, with the biggest room running the Star Wars trilogy in surround sound. The advisors of the group, the "grown ups",  would lock the doors at like 9-10pm and we couldn't leave, or if we did leave, we couldn't get back in unless we had an inside source open the door for us. This was a coordinated effort considering that cell phones weren't the norm back then. Nowadays you could just text your partner in crime, "Hey, open the door for me...LULZ!!!" and you're home free.

Anyway...

Long after everyone would pass out to a galaxy far, far away... We'd sneak out to handle our business and be the rejects that our little town labeled us. It was a badge we all wore proudly, mostly because we mocked it. Even after others in our group passed out or moved on for other fun, him and I would still be trucking, passing the bottle (I took small sips because I'm a lightweight with booze, he would down a bottle of JD like water). It got to the point where we would crave food and raid the church fridge for breakfast. He was so eccentric in his speech, "Let's enjoy breakfast on the veranda". It's suburban New Jersey, at a church, there is no veranda, but that was him, making things better than what they were.

We turned the kitchen into a culinary disaster. Eggs, flour, milk, coffee grinds, juice, all over the place. I mean, we were making scrambled eggs with coffee, something simple, but if Gordon Ramsey witnessed this, he'd certainly fire both of us.

We watched the sun come up, eating terrible eggs, drinking terrible coffee. When the time came to retreat, we realized the fatal mistake: We locked ourselves out. My friend didn't hesitate. Knowing that everyone was asleep, he climbed onto the awning and began searching for unlocked windows. I watched nervously (and safely I might add) from the grass, thinking, "One wrong step and we're in a lot of trouble". All it would take is some nosey geriatric going on their morning walk, observing this spectacle of two teenagers outside a church, looking haggard, one of them scaling a building, trying to break-in, next thing you know the cops show up making all sorts of a ruckus and we both get detained. Thankfully, this didn't happen, and my friend found an unlocked window and opened the door.

The youth group also organized an annual ski trip. Which meant, "Go away for a weekend, sneak a lot of booze and whatnot, spend the entire weekend in your hotel room, never sleep, maybe ski/snowboard". The advisors were adement about finding paraphernalia. They searched luggage, toiletries, physical pat downs, but we still found a way to have a good time. I think out of the many years I was involved with the youth group, I hit the slopes once, the rest of the time we partied like we were in The Rolling Stones. Funny, considering he was THE Beatles fanatic.

We watched the demolition of a local avionics tower from his rooftop. We almost missed it because of pre-demolition rituals.

Then there was the music.

Growing up, music was an outlet. I wasn't a phenomenal musician as a kid and my tastes reflected that. My friend however, was a phenomenal musician. It's like the piano and him were made for each other. He could play anything and I mean ANYTHING on the piano. Watching his fingers on the keys was like witnessing God speak, it was amazing. They way he did it was effortless.

It's funny thinking about these times. I (we) did a lot of dumb shit as kids. I look at my nieces and nephew and try to imagine what they're going to be like when they reach that age. Will they make the same choices? How will I react when and if they make those choices? The only reason is because I know, at that age, you're invulnerable, you're immortal, nothing can kill you. But thinking about all the dumb shit as an adult, it's a miracle I made it out alive. But at the same time, it's nothing compared to what could've been. There are a million other childhoods that were worse.

My friend taught me to be fearless. Even with his condition. He never directly said it, but his actions spoke volumes. He never backed down from anything or anyone. I wish I was more like him in that retrospect.

All this makes me think of all the friends I've lost too soon. I wish I was a better friend to them, maybe they'd still be here. But at the same time, I know I can't save everyone. I hope my friends realize this too.

Rest easy Christian. Know that you are loved and dearly missed.