We have led rather peripatetic lives, have lived for periods
of years in five different countries and for shorter periods in several others.
So we have been to a great many interesting places and met lots of interesting
people. Which may sound exciting, and it has been – it certainly hasn’t been
boring – but there is a downside: we have left good friends all over the world,
many of whom we hardly ever see, and some of whom we will undoubtedly never see
again. I’ve written about friends before (blog of Nov. 2010); this piece has a
different slant on the subject.
Brian, here with our daughter Sue, goes back to university days |
We moved from Scotland to England and were there for ten
years, covering the main period of the kids’ schooling. The patterns of social
contacts changed as everyone got older, but we still made some good friends. Then
we went to Australia and had to start again: new schools for the kids, a new
social milieu, new activities and professional friends. We were many years in
Canberra, long enough to put down quite strong roots – we felt we belonged and
there was time for friends to become ‘old friends’. We hadn’t intended to move
when it was retirement time, but we did. There were good reasons for it, but
that’s another story and the move had all the usual consequences: try to keep
in touch with the friends you left behind; make new friends, adapt to a new
social environment.
Looking back on all this it’s inevitable that I think about what
constitutes good friends; what’s the difference between them and the countless
acquaintances who have come and gone over the years. A great deal has been
written about what friendship means, and its importance. Without getting too
involved in psychology and philosophising, I would say that the basic criteria
of real friendship are interest in the other person, enjoying their company,
being prepared to accept inconvenience - or even make significant sacrifices - for them, if
necessary. The list could obviously be expanded, discussed and elaborated. At
its best friendship is a kind of love, and has many faces.
Where we live now, we're in an era of acquaintances, of friendly
people but few real friends, a time of polite social interaction at dinner
parties where conversation is often banal and we start watching the time half
way through the evening, wondering when we can politely leave; of community
activities and gatherings of various sorts where we go through the motions,
share food and a few drinks and go home. Friends at the golf club really don’t
matter in any basic, visceral sense – they’re just acquaintances. We meet some
good, generous and public spirited people who would not hesitate to help anyone
who needed it, but whether we really connect with them in a way that matters
emotionally is another matter. That gets harder as the years go by.
Sune, from Sweden, and Dick, from Oregon; our friends across 30 years |
Probably. Those who have lived all (or most) of their lives
in one place have a much better sense of place and of belonging. They know the
community they belong to; in fact they probably seldom if ever think about it.
Life goes along in its accustomed rhythms, with the well-known faces around.
Strangers can be ignored – in old and conservative communities strangers may be
treated with suspicion: they don’t fit in. One of the disadvantages of the
peripatetic lifestyle is the feeling of rootlessness, of not really belonging
anywhere. We have met hundreds – possibly thousands – of interesting people
over the years, in various places, and have made many good and interesting
friends but (as I said earlier), we’ve left most of them behind. If we travel
to see them, or they come here, their company is as good as ever, but the
opportunities are limited. We have also met many people who are amiable and
pleasant, whose company we have enjoyed, but who have never come to mean a
great deal to us.
Diana with Auro, who came from Brazil, a friend of 20 years |
Bu the question that keeps coming up, for those who have
lived in various places, is: “where do we belong?” The answer depends on more
than friends, although they are very important. Do we ‘belong’ where we live
now, or is this another temporary stop? Few of our important friends live here
– or near here. I think it’s fairly general, in fact fundamental to most
people, that their sense of where they belong is anchored in the place they
grew up, in childhood friends and neighbours who knew them, and so on. In our
case going back to where we originally came from, to live the rest of our lives
there, is not an option. The communities we grew up with are gone, those we
knew are dead or scattered across the world. The countries we grew up in – Rhodesia
(now Zimbabwe) and South Africa – have changed beyond recognition.
There's no point in whingeing about it, or feeling sorry for
ourselves. A reality check is provided by thinking about the way refugees feel:
we had options, none of which were bad, but, according to the UNHCR, there are
currently about 16 million people in the world who are classed as refugees,
fleeing violence, war and oppression, not to mention another 25 million
so-called displaced persons. For most of them all the options were unpleasant. Every
one of them would like to live in a safe and stable place, never mind where
they grew up. For millions of children the growing up place is a squalid,
crowded, camp. The implications are obvious and I could get seriously
side-tracked here, but will leave it at that, just adding that the world’s exploding
global human population is a significant factor among those causing all that
misery.
And those who matter most - family. |