Write Soon…Love, Krissie

Today, I checked my mail for the first time in six days.

For some folks, this is probably par for the course.  For me, it’s unheard of.

As much as I love e-mail and the internet and understand how it has revolutionized the world, I still love getting physical mail.  I will freely admit that the USPS discussion about abolishing Saturday service makes me weep.  Okay, perhaps that’s an exaggeration, but it does make me a little sad.

When I was 12, I started writing to a pen pal on the Isle of Wight for a school project.  Like every proud pre-teen girl growing up in the 1980s, I loved stickers.  With my allowance, I picked up a copy of Lisa Frank’s magazine.  In the back of the issue, there were pen pal ads for sticker traders.  I picked one out and started writing to her, as well.  It was the start of an obsession.

By the time I was in eighth grade, I had over 80 pen pals.  I literally spent most of my free time writing letters to people around the world.  I had pen pals in Singapore, Canada, Costa Rica, Australia, and all over the U.S.   Just like with friends, some were more “acquaintances” who just liked to trade stickers or friendship books, but others I actually got fairly close with and met.  I would literally run home after school almost every day to check the mail.  On Saturdays, I would sit on the front porch and wait for the mailman to show up.  I would get six, seven and eight letters in the mail some days.

Tell me, when you know you’re getting something fun in the mail, don’t you still get a little excited about it?

I can’t tell you today that I remember many of my pen pals.  A handful that I wrote a lot with, really, that’s about it.  I am actually friends with a few of them on Facebook and have connected with others.  But one…one in particular remains very special to me.

Steph and I started writing in 1988.  From the very first letter, our pen pal friendship was different.  We started out with full page letters, but within a few months, were writing 8, 9 and 10 page letters to each other.  By the time we hit tenth grade, we would literally fill notebooks.  We’d start a notebook and write in it for two or three weeks and then send it off.  What did we write about for 70 pages?  You name it.  School.  Boys.  New Kids on the Block.  Our families.  The stresses of being the oldest kid in the family.  Roller skating.  Shopping. Our topics were endless.

I lived for Stephanie’s letters – and she for mine.  To this day, I can say that no friend has ever had a bigger impact on my life.  She was my very best friend in the world – we told each other everything.  She lived in Wisconsin and I lived in New Jersey, which, when you’re 15 years old, seems so far away.  We plotted and planned the day we would finally get to meet each other in person.  We saved our allowances to call each other once every few months.  And all the while, we wrote letter upon letter – sometimes three and four a week.  The letters always ended with the plea, “Write soon, I can’t wait for your next letter.”

We finally did get to meet the summer after sophomore year when she flew to New Jersey for my birthday for a week.  The scene at the airport was as you can imagine it would have been – two sixteen year olds freaking out.  Lots of hugging and giggling!  We spent that week doing things that typical best friends would do.  We went to the beach and walked on the boardwalk.  We ran in the rain.  We went to baseball games and movies.  We hung out with my friends.  We had a birthday party.  We sat and read old letters and laughed and laughed and laughed.  It was the best week ever.

Me & Steph - Summer 1990

The letter frequency increased after that visit, if at all possible.  Over the next few summers, we saved and scrimped to visit each other – hard when you are earning your money babysitting.  She came back to New Jersey the next summer, and I flew out to Wisconsin the summer after our senior year, and then in a surprise visit, Steph flew out and spent the week before I went off to college with me.

It would be the last visit for a number of years.  Her mom got very sick and eventually passed away, and Steph’s life changed drastically as she became the legal guardian of her younger sisters at eighteen.  I was at college, trying to figure out my world, and our lives went to very separate ways.  We eventually reconnected, and although the letters were never as long or as frequent as they once had been, we have managed to continue writing to this day.  Sometimes, we go months without letters, but we still write.  And although we vowed never to do it, we’ve finally caved to keeping in touch via computer, sending Facebook notes, etc.

Over the years, I’ve saved every one of Steph’s letters.  They sit in the top of my closet in a big blue Rubbermaid tub.  Every once in awhile, I pull it down and read a few.  They always bring back a flood of emotions – it seems like just yesterday, but in reality, a lot of those letters were written 20 years ago.  I remember the stories, the heartbreaks, the confusion, and the laughter we shared at our lives.  And while today, our worlds are completely different, Steph will always be one of my best and most treasured friends, no matter the time that passes between letters…And every time I go to my mailbox, there will always be a little piece of me that opens it up and hopes to see a colorful envelope with Steph’s familiar handwriting waiting for me.

The bin of Steph's letters

In today’s everything electronic world, it’s easy to dash off a 10-word e-mail to say hi to a friend.  “Hey, sorry, been busy.  Let’s catch up soon, k?”  But a letter…a letter takes time and thought and love.  You have to ponder what you’ll say before you say it.  It takes time, so you are more careful with your words.   But most importantly, a letter says to the receiver, “This person cares about me enough to sit down and take time out of their day to write me a letter.”

I try to be good about sending cards and the like to friends, but this year, in honor of my now nearly 22-year friendship with Stephanie, I’m vowing to write at least one real letter to someone once a month.  Even if it’s just to say hi.  And maybe, I can make someone’s day with a brightly colored envelope waiting in their mailbox.

Write soon!

Love,

Krissie

My friends get me…

There’s so much that I love about each of my closest friends…they all bring color to my life in their own unique ways. But the one thing they all have in common is that they truly understand me and what makes me tick. I’m so lucky in that regard. A few things have happened in the past couple of weeks that both make me laugh and remind me of how lucky I am to have these people in my life.

Brad and Annie got married a week ago. These two people are so amazingly special to me. In addition to being some of my first “music friends” in Charlotte, they are also two of the most wonderful people that you will ever meet. Annie is full of boundless positivity, has a kind word for everyone, and the most infectious laugh you’ll ever hear. Brad and I connected over music first, then became friends. He and I share a bit of the same outlook in life, he’s always willing to be an enthusiastic cohort for concerts, will never turn down meeting up for a beer, and gives great hugs! And the fact that they have found happiness together makes my heart all warm and fuzzy. There are few weddings I’ve ever been more excited to be a part of…so when they asked me if I’d address their wedding invites for them, I was more than happy to help out.

Out of the kindness of their hearts, they also invited me to attend their rehearsal dinner. They gave out little gifts to a lot of folks, including me, which was a real surprise. But the best part was yet to come. I looked at Annie and said, “Do you want me to open it now?” She said yes, then looked at the rest of the table and said, “The rest of you won’t understand why this is so fabulous, but she’ll get it.”

I opened the bag, and found one of the best presents EVER…

The way to my heart! on Twitpic

I LOVE Sharpies. I mean, really and truly love them. There are literally dozens laying around my house, in every color you can imagine, and I carry them with me all the time. On any given day, I usually have three or four floating around in my purse. The fact that Annie and Brad know this and knew how delighted I would be just tells you how extraordinary my friends are…

And then, this morning, another reminder of how my cup runneth over…My good friend Shelia sent me an e-mail with the subject line “This Quote Made Me Think Of You.” Shelia and I met because we were the only two people in Charlotte who were Gareth Asher fans early on…and along the way, we discovered we share a love of music, cocktails, and our home away from home – The Gin Mill. She’s introduced me to her first love of hockey, and I’ve made her suffer through Springsteen videos. She is an endless source of positive energy and laughter for me, and I’m so glad that we’ve become closer friends over the past year.

Anyway, her note this morning brightened my day…here’s what it said:

Minus the physicist part of course…

““If I were not a physicist, I would probably be a musician. I often think in music. I live my daydreams in music. I see my life in terms of music. … I get most joy in life out of music.”

~ Albert Einstein

Just the fact that she took the time to send it makes me feel special…but the fact that she truly gets me and what makes me tick (and what doesn’t – the physicist thing made me laugh out loud because numbers make me cry) is really important to me.

I could go on and on about my friends and how enormously fabulous they are. But that would take days and days and pages and pages. However, today, these are the little things that are sitting in the cockle of my little heart…I’m just so lucky to have friends that love me for all of my little quirks and oddities, and encourage me to be who I am.

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again. I have the best friends. Love you guys.

Sisters

I just had the best surprise! Yesterday afternoon, a sorority sister from college e-mailed me saying she was going to be stuck in Charlotte for the night due to flight snafus. “Can I crash with you?” So late last night, I picked up Denise at the airport and we went and grabbed a few beers, listened to music and caught up on everything that’s been happening since I saw her last summer. We might have only had nine hours, but it was an awesome visit. It ended with late night flipping through old photo albums and laughing hysterically.

And just like every time we get together, Denise said, “K, we’re so lucky, you know that? We’ve really got the best friends. It doesn’t matter how long passes – it’s like we never left. I know that no matter what, you girls will always be there for me.”

I love that about us. I love that we know that about each other. And I love that we’re not afraid to say it. And it’s all because of ZTA.

I consider myself extremely lucky to have picked the right college for me. Nearly fifteen years later, there are not many places that I love more than Washington College or Chestertown, Maryland.

The thing about WC was that it was small. When I started, the total enrollment was somewhere around 850. FOR THE ENTIRE SCHOOL. By the time I graduated, it was up to a little over 1,100. Even at that size, it was still smaller than a lot of high schools. Some people would have suffocated in that environment, but it was perfect for me.

Like many other schools, we had sororities and fraternities on campus. Just a handful of each. And because the school was so small, it didn’t have Greek “houses,” but there was preferential housing on certain areas of campus. Basically, what that meant was that a fraternity might have most of the rooms in one dorm, but they were required to leave a certain number of rooms open for freshman, transfers and non-fraternity members. Each of the three sororities had a “hall” in one dormitory.

My freshman year, I was placed on the ZTA hall.

From the very moment I met some of the girls, I knew they were going to be my friends. But I never imagined I would join a sorority. I was not the sorority joining type of person.

Unlike other schools, WC had deferred rush. That meant that freshmen couldn’t rush their first semester of school. Kind of a wise decision, if you ask me. You’re so overwhelmed by being in college, you’re not ready to make those kinds of decisions. Plus, deferring rush for a semester meant you had time to get to know the organizations.

By the time spring semester rolled around, I wanted nothing more than to be in ZTA.

Now, I know what some people think of fraternities and sororities. But for me, it was never a popularity contest. It was never about “paying for my friends.” I wanted to be part of what the girls I had come to call my friends over the past five months shared. I adored them – they were kind, intelligent, fun and hilarious – and each of them was their own person. No “group think” mentality – the girls I met that fall changed my mind forever about sororities.

Luckily, the girls felt the same way about me and extended a bid to me that spring. I was initiated a few months later.

Of course, ZTA means something different to me now than it did in the Spring of ’93 when I accepted that bid card. Now, the Creed is something that I understand and believe in.

As with all friends, you lose touch with some of your sisters. But there are a group of us that have stayed really close. They are friendships like no other; there’s something about those bonds you have with people that were there as you figured out who you are going to be. ZTA and my sisters were such a huge part of that for me. I love all of them unconditionally for that, for the women they are, for the way we accept each other for our gifts and our flaws, support one another no matter what our decisions, and for always knowing how and when to be there for the others – almost intuitively.

Love you, ladies. I am so lucky to have you in my life.

Denise & Me - February 2010

Christy

As I’ve mentioned before, music has brought a lot of amazing people into my world. While they are all very special to me, one in particular has had a huge impact on my life.

Tomorrow is Valentine’s Day, and one of my best friends is worried that she won’t get a Valentine from anyone. So, I decided to write her a big Valentine on my blog so she (and the rest of the world) will know how thankful I am for her friendship. 🙂

I met Christy in May 2004. After my first Rock Boat, I became a TRB Message Board junkie. One day, some person called “MemphisQueen” posted a message about coming to Charlotte for a music festival we were having, wanting to know if any other Rock Boaters would be there and would want to meet up. I responded. We met. And a friendship was born.

Megan, Christy, Me & Andrea – May 2004

After that, we traded e-mails regularly, ran into each other on road trips, and started trading notes on artists we liked and didn’t like. Then, Christy sent me her “Best Songs You’ve Never Heard” mix. A tradition was born – for which a lot of you reading this blog should thank her. Christy was the person who inspired me to start making the seasonal mixes!

Along the way, we found out that we had more in common than we knew. Musically, other than sharing a love of a lot of artists in our “circle,” we both loved the Stereophonics – a popular Welsh band that no one in the States really knows and had once upon a time (and okay, still maybe did) loved New Kids on the Block. Non-music wise, we found that we had a lot of same beliefs, and took similar (and sometimes cynical, but hilarious) views of the world.

I often call Christy my “music dealer” to other friends. Because of her, I (and a lot of other people who don’t give her credit for having an insanely good ear) have come to love countless musicians, and one in particular who you all know I adore – Gareth Asher. From his first appearance on a Christy Mix in Summer 2005, I have loved that man’s voice, and because of her, went to see him that fall when he was still with Illbreak. Like me, Christy appreciates music for music. She listens to instruments, dissects lyrics, and studies the way musicians play. When she sends me music and says, “You’ll love this,” I know instantly that I will. When I hear something new that I instantly like, I always buy two copies – one for me, one for Christy.

And because of her, I’ve traveled places and done things that I may not have…I’m not really the adventurous sort. In 2007, for my birthday, Christy convinced me to come down to Atlanta to visit her…and then we promptly got in a car and drove to Birmingham to see Eliot Morris…where she had arranged for another friend of ours to be waiting with a birthday cake for me – and a signed birthday card from her, Katey & Eliot. In 2008, Christy twisted my arm to go with her to Hawaii – her 50th state visit. That same year, for her birthday, I ventured to Boston – and got to see the Stereophonics live from the front row of an itty bitty little club.

Kualoa Ranch

Christy & Me in Hawaii, May 2008

Sometimes, I’ll come home from a tough day at work to find little presents in my mailbox from Christy. A random CD. The Flight of the Conchords Season 1. A postcard that says, “We are total fucking badasses.” A memento from some foreign land that she’s visited. Or, I’ll get texts message in the middle of the day (or night, sometimes!) that say the most irreverent and hilarious things…Not suitable for public broadcast on the blog, but jokes that we’ve shared, or snarky comments about something that neither of us might ever say out loud to someone else. Or, she’ll leave me a voicemail. Christy voicemails are unlike voicemails from any other person. They go on for minutes…like you’re on the other end of the line talking back to her. I love it. She will have an entire conversation with herself – and sometimes, you can actually hear her thinking out loud in the middle of the message. It’s priceless and endearing and one of the things I adore about her! I’m sure she has no idea how these little things she does make her friends smile.

Christy understands me more than most people in my life. More often than not, I don’t even have to explain why I feel the way I do. I can, in one sentence, sum up a situation to her and she completely gets what I’m saying. Part of that is that she’s wicked smart, but the other part is that she’s very insightful and intuitive. Our viewpoints aren’t always the same, and sometimes we disagree on things (somewhere along the line, we somehow managed to make an unspoken decision never to talk politics, because we are at opposite ends of the spectrum). But, she always seems to know when I need someone to be on my side and when I need to hear that I’m maybe being a bit bullheaded and that I need to stop being a jerk. It’s hard to find friends like that, especially as you get older.

And so, on this Singles Awareness Day Eve, dearest Christy – I hope you know how special you are to me, and how lucky I am to call you one of my best friends. You are one of a kind and I love ya to bits. Thank you for being such an amazing person and friend. (And for the rest of you, I wish that you all have someone like Christy in your life.)

Pre-Hawaii Sunburns

Snow inspires blogging? Perhaps.

It’s snowing outside in Charlotte…again. I’m convinced that there is some greater power that is really trying to challenge me. I have yet to start training for the half marathon…and it’s under two months away! Either way, I’m feeling in a writing mood, so here I sit, waiting for the Olympics to start, snow falling outside, and feeling content. The weekend is here…

Actually, I was thinking earlier this morning about how I just need to make a point of writing more. Once upon a time, eight or nine years ago, my friend Rosalie gave me jrzygyrl.com as a gift. I blogged every day back then, steadily for about two years. It was a really happy time in my life, not just because of the writing, but I was inspired to write a lot more than I am now. For me, at least, the more I write, the more I want to write. I miss writing. I want to do more of it. So, I will. Maybe not every day, but I will be better than once every three or four weeks.

I’ve also been moved by my dear friend Erinn, who started a blog called “Counting My Blessings” at the start of the new year. Erinn had been having a bit of a tough time and decided that maybe, instead of looking at things through cracked glass, she’d take stock of everything that she is blessed to have in her life. And so, each day, she’s picking something in her world – sometimes big and life altering things, sometimes inspiring things, and sometimes just life’s little every day trivialities – and putting a spotlight on why she’s thankful for it. It’s a great reminder of how sometimes, we just take things for granted in our lives.

And so, today…I am inspired. To write. To be happy. To enjoy this quiet snowfall on a Friday night. Join me?

Happy weekend.

Snow!