Wednesday, January 22, 2020

And you were so beautiful, you were so very special, I wish I was with you now, I wish I could save you somehow.

I am broken.
My friend Ian died. It hurts my fingers to type those words.
For the past month, I have been consumed by his death- I was his emergency contact and connected many of the dots.
None of his family came down, so it fell to me and his friend's to clean out his apartment.
Man oh man, that really sucked but luckily for me, I have a strong chosen family team. I was able to ask them to do tasks: talk to people, order food, pickups from the airport and the like. 
When his mom requested that we put together a service, I knew immediately what I wanted to say, but was afraid that I wasn't going to be able to convey it in words.
How do you sum up a person in 250 words who left suddenly and who had been one of the most important people in your life for 30 years?
You don't...
You listen to others who say amazing things about this person and try to absorb everything.

A friend put a beautiful blog post together of what she said at his service.
https://hulainthesunset.blogspot.com/2020/01/laughing-without-smiling.html?fbclid=IwAR1ItERSv_RGuMxRed_tGCTCFWPZ075b567EHA4Nof_GbqNrfbBWQtHh3L8

And below is what I said-


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Ian was a love of my life- completely platonic and unconditional.
He never did anything wrong to me.
I found his inappropriate comments charming, his super dramatic responses to everyday things hilarious and that fact that he thought it was funny to give really bad advice adorable.  He would insist on paying for everything when I knew he was broke and was relentless in trying to get me to watch horrible tv shows.
I met Ian when he was 17 years old. He had just moved to California; he was wearing a Sid Vicious shirt and we instantly bonded over music. During his stint in Southern California, he was staying with me at my parent’s house and it unnerved my grandmother Nanny that Ian slept with his shoes on.  Ian and I decided around Christmas time to move to San Francisco. We left in February and for the next 11 years lived together.
We often would go grocery shopping together; he would berate me for buying food that was not on sale. He had a pretty strict policy then that he only purchased items that were on sale – his preference actually that it was a buy one and get one free- we came home, and I asked him if he had ever eaten, I Can’t Believe It’s Butter before. Ian grabbed it out of my hand started yelling “I can’t believe it’s not butter,” over and over again and then threw the container against the wall. It was buy one, get one free so not all was lost.
When we moved into the second Haight Street apartment, he lived in the living room. So in the morning, I would have to knock on his doorway to make sure it was okay to go through to the kitchen. In the mornings, he would greet me with “it is a good day for the apocalypse.” When we were really broke, he and I would put our change together and buy Taco Bell or cigarettes. In passing he asked me to attend his college graduation, he was going to be a speaker. Of course, I would attend. He wasn’t a speaker- he was the main speaker. He got an award for his excellence and was the equivalent to the valedictorian of his class. The speech was so good, I was all teary and he just rolled his eyes at me.
When me and my now husband were getting serious, Ian and I made a pack that regardless of our relationship status that we would always be there for each other. It wasn’t until I was married did I change my emergency contact. After Heather died, Ian told me he was changing it back to me.
When I introduced Ian to Heather, it was no set up or anything. Just my new friend, meeting my old friend. It was crazy town to watch them hit it off. Ian was charming and he insisted on showering before going out to do stuff with her. One of the many conversations I had about Ian to Heather, I remember telling her that moving to SF was a good idea, that I had never seen Ian so smitten with anyone before and she should go for it. So them getting married was a no brainer. He called me on the phone and told me -after talking to me for 15 minutes about why I should watch some vampire show- that he and Heather were gonna wrap things up and get married. I was so excited for him and started getting teary on the phone and he got annoyed that I was getting so emotional.
After Heather died, I checked in with Ian once a week and if he didn’t respond, I would be relentless until he got back to me.
His sadness over losing her was something that I couldn’t understand until now.
Since Ian was not remotely religious, I wanted to say to all of you-
The force of Ian will be with you- always.

I will miss you so much.
I wish I was still your emergency contact.



2 comments:

Suze Loeffler said...

Erica you & your very dear precious family of friends are in my heart tonight. Life can be generous in rewarding us with those special forever people placed in our universe (as you in mine) and yet so needlessly selfish when we are robbed of those same people at times that make no fucking sense! I can reference all the text book or rather cheesy wall art sentiments about this bullshit journey and rainbows after storms blah blah blah or I can just say the truth... as senseless as it is, it’s not... and what blossoms within you is because of the Ian’s & Heather’s. Be strong and live on with all the bits your precious friends left with you that make you YOU today. ❤️ Warm Hugs & Smiles my friend.

Tiffany said...

Erica I’m so sad reading this and knowing this pain you’re going through. I’m tearing up writing this. I’m sure Ian would roll his eyes at that. You are lucky that you had someone so special to you, I’m sorry it couldn’t have been forever. I know this will change you, losing him. There are no good words to say in this kind of tragedy. I’m just sorry you have to feel this much pain. I’m really sorry.