Friendships, Families and Fractures
As you get older, your friendships and your family ties are supposed to strengthen and mold into some type of safety net for your life. At least that’s how it happens on the big screen and in many books. Mostly fiction.
Real life is not always so warm and fuzzy.
It’s more of a sticky, syrupy haphazard obstacle course laid out like some game on which I find myself the pawn lately.
I’m tired of it. I’m making cuts. Severing ties. Doing for me. Me. ME. Or of you like the interwebz slang, MEEEEEEEEEEEEEE !
If you’re not aware, there is the asshole uncle saga.
The ex-wife and evil step-daughter saga’s.
The other family drama I have yet to blog about for fear of the nuclear bomb it will unleash upon my barely hanging onto the definition of family.
And now, as it has been before, the frenemies saga.
The people in this picture were my friends. Two of them were what I would have called best and lifelong friends.
They were my friends before Gregory and I fell in love. They were mutual friends of ours. If not for them, there would be no Kim and Gregory. P was Gregory’s friend for 30 years. They went to school together, they lived together, they were like brother’s. C was a teenager when she and P started dating and knew Gregory for just as long. The have a lake house three houses down from ours. Their home is a 1/2 mile from mine, their subdivision borders ours. I worked with them, I cried with them, I played with them. Some of the best memories of my life happened at their home and at the many Auburn games we went to with them.We were as thick as thieves at one point. In the beginning of our relationship, they were less than thrilled with G and I being together. I’m still not totally sure why. There were things said, feelings hurt, but in the end, the friendship prevailed. After we got married, we still hung out, but not as much, what with jobs, the kids, etc. Gregory and P had a falling out, and we tried to repair the damages to save the friendship, but things were always different. One of the reasons we stopped hanging around so much was because of the atmosphere and some of the people in their circle. It just wasn’t good for us. So we retreated into suburbia, soccer practice, weekends at the lake, and us. When G went into the hospital, these people were on a cruise. They came to the funeral. They were “here” for me, to a degree. But really they were here for themselves. They are toxic. They are the kind of people that cannot stand for others to be happy, because they are not. Even though it took me awhile to see that about them, I mourned the death of our friendship as I mourned the death of my husband and slowly tried to put them out of my mind.
And then came the estate battle.
I hadn’t heard from them in months. I had heard about them, oh yes. About them hosting my ex-husband at their home. About their digging into mine and Gregory’s business. Then they showed up at my father’s funeral. It wasn’t the time or place to confront them.
Two weeks after we buried my father, I saw them again. Sitting on wooden benches in a Shelby County courtroom, with Gregory’s ex-wife and my step daughter. Neither would meet my eyes. They sat in that courtroom and listened to the testimony. For what? I don’t know. Neither were privy to our business decisions, personal or otherwise. At that moment they were dead to me. Gone. Ghosts in the machine. I deleted their numbers, threw out anything that physically had anything to do with either of them.
Today while I was mowing my grass, I missed a call. From C. She left a voice mail. I haven’t talked to her in so long, I almost couldn’t place the cadence of her voice. But then I did. I recognized the drunken slur. The “Hey girrrrrl” she always started off with when talking to me drunk. She wanted to know “how the hell I was doing” and why she hadn’t heard from me all summer. Really? REALLY.
At first I was MAD AS HELL. She has some damn set of balls to be calling me after all of this. Then I was sad. I was sad for the past, for the life that I had before, when everything seemed so perfect. Then I was mad again, mad that one call could send me into an emotional tailspin, questioning my emotions, my decisions, myself. Mostly mad at myself. I am in charge of me, no one else. And the me that’s in charge says the hell with her, the hell with them. All of them. All of the people who cause me anger, grief, and to question myself. I don’t need them in my life. Not right now. Maybe never.
They are going away. To some far off corner in my mind where they can stir the pot of crap they bring with them and make mayhem amongst themselves. I’m not dealing with them anymore.
From here on out, its all sunshine and rainbows and unicorns farting cupcakes.
Or as close as I can get.
















Oh Kim. I’m so sorry you have to deal with that on top of all the other shit. Hugs lady.
What a shitty thing. So sucky you have to deal with all this crap. Hugs lady. You rock. Hard.
what an ultra-sucky lesson to have to learn, but a very worthwhile one. I’ve had a handfull of toxic friendships over the past few years and it really is better once you cut ties. So sorry you had to go through all the B.S. to get to the unicorns. I”m right down the street if you need someone to eat cupcakes with you. Or we can skip the cake and just eat frosting out of the can. Yes, let’s do that.
Girl trust…sometimes you just have to ignore stuff like that and “do you”. If you ever need to talk, I am here and believe you me, I get it.
They are NOT worth YOUR friendship-NO WAY-so get them out of your life. I am SO sorry you have to deal with this crap on top of everything else ((HUGS))
Oh honey-I’m so sorry!
((((HUGS))))
Sorry Kim, I get it. I lost practically every friend I had after my husband’s death. My best friend, My maid of honor, my high school and college best friend, the couple we relocated cities/jobs to be near…and the list goes on. It was my co-workers that I barely knew that were there for me. Funny thing, they still continue to be there for me 9 years later. Every. Single. Day. I feel so blessed and through death I really learned a lot about friendship. I’m really sorry that Gregory’s death brought out the ugly in people that you trusted through friendship. Stay strong Kim and do just what you said…look out for what’s best for “you” and “you” only.
Granny told me when I was a young girl “Buni, folk come into your life for a reason, a season or a lifetime.” I never understood it until I became a widow. My life changed and theirs did not. I became griest for the mill. When I decided to release what is behind me, I released them. Regardless of the reason or the season, my lifetime is my own. They will mourn you long before you miss them.
Have no fear, the real ones stay.
‘Buni
I’m so sorry. People don’t know how to deal with grief and sometimes, as you well know, they get really shitty about it. I don’t understand it, but it sure makes it easy to find out who your true friends are.
Unfortunately, I can relate.
Release them so you can be a better you….no one needs that kind of drama around them.
Toxic people sucks. Being around those kind of people is frustrating and will throw a healthy, sane person into a tailspin on a good day.
Bless them for showing you who they are.
Damn straight! I’m sorry you went through all that. I can only hope that we’re all a little stronger when we come out the other side of the pain.
Hey there Kim we always seem to chat on twitter but I come by here and don’t say boo. Do know that people are listening and relating to what you are saying here. I am amazed all the time at what you have dealt with in this widowhood journey. Some folks never know how to act. Let ‘em go and good ridance
Those are what I call “paper people” — just blowing along in the wind. Don’t waste your time on them. Let them just blow away.
Unicorns farting cupcakes? I gotta get me some of that! Are you still an Auburn fan? I’m more of a Seminole guy myself but where I lived in the panhandle, I certainly had to make my preference of Auburn over Bama known. Also, one of my employees is an Aubrun fan. His wife, Bama. Go figure.
Anyway, I hope things do settle down and settle in for you. We’ll send some sunshine your way, we have extra.
I’ve always said that weddings and funerals bring out the worst in families and friends. I’m sorry that that continues to be true in your life. It’s hard to ignore them when you may want to say something to these people, I know. I have an aunt who pulled a lot of crap when my grandma died and has brainwashed my grandfather and he no longer will speak to me because I won’t sit quietly. It’s hard to sit quietly, but these people will get their due… and you can sleep soundly at night, knowing you wouldn’t sink to that level.
Definitely nothing wrong with shoving toxic people out of your life. Anyone who sucks the life out of you needs to go. Good for you!
You need more friends who wear crimson instead of orange! I mean, look how awesome I am…I never bother you while you’re cutting grass!
Mmmmmm….cupcakes! I hope they’re not shitty cupcakes
I hear forgiving and forgetting is a good thing. I suck at forgiving, so I won’t suggest that to you.
Good riddance to toxic people.
I have a friend who once told me this analogy that I loved…
Your friendships are like a garden. You have to tend to them and love them to help them grow and flourish. But sometimes? Some of ‘em just gotta get weeded out. Sounds like you’re overdue for some pruning in your Friend Garden.
I hope that your friend realized later (after she sobered up) that she called you and was suitably horrified. I kinda doubt it, though.
Good riddance to bad rubbish.
I get this. I completely get the toxicity of which you speak. After being stabbed repeatedly in the back by someone I thought was a friend, I decided nine years ago to get rid of people like that. It’s hard figuring out who those people are because they disguise themselves very well. It sometimes takes us kind-hearted people a while to figure them out.
I’m sorry they’ve hit you where it hurts most. If you need help with an ass-kicking, call me.