This week, Merryland Girl chose the topic. She wrote: Friend matchmaking: Tell us about a time you were “set up” for a friendship with
someone. Or a time you matched two
friends together. (Or both.) Please keep it to “in person”
friendships only since it’s way too easy to connect people online these days.
After a thorough mental inventory of my friends,
I could not think of two people I “set up” for friendship. (I wondered why that is . . . but only briefly.) I can only think of one person with
whom I was “set up” and met and with whom I continued a relationship. Except he really isn’t a friend, he’s
my ex-husband. And we no longer
really have a relationship. And I
don’t really feel like talking about it.
So, instead, I’m going to cheat a bit and
recycle and update a post I wrote last June, before I was invited to join this
group. (Funny enough, Froggie
(Tracey) was featured in the old post!)
Here’s my take:
When I first joined
Facebook, I made a bright line rule: I would not be virtual friends with
anyone whom I had not actually met at least once in reality. The concept
of having 1,000 friends, 700 of whom I could not pick out of a line-up, was not
my thing. I refused to be a FB
friend whore.
It was my rule, and
it worked well.
And then I bent it.
The first crease came
in the form of a Friend Request I sent to a friend’s wife, a gorgeous
personality I’d never actually met but whom I felt I knew through her husband’s
posts and her corresponding comments. After a lengthy exchange about Jon
Bon Jovi, I thought, “She is my kind of people,” and I friended her. I
still haven’t actually “met” her. But that doesn’t stop me from calling
Dana my friend.
Several months later,
I signed up for a writing workshop in Michigan. The facilitator
introduced the attendees via Facebook and email. A few of us were looking
to share rooms and started chatting, and I made my next “never-ever-met-her” FB
friend, a great writer named Dana (Dana II!). Within days, another:
Tracey. And then, finally, Laura.
That rule?
Completely broken.
We started messaging,
sometimes in pairs, sometimes as a foursome, always as writers who just
happened to be on the path to becoming friends. Real friends.
Back then, Tracey and I shared the luck of geography, as we both lived in Chicago, so we met up for
lunch, and I liked her even more in 3-D. She moved off my “never-met” list
and eased over into my “friend in reality” group. She’s come to be a good friend, and I am forever grateful
for her invitation to join this blog group and for my introduction to the other
bloggers, Melissa (Merryland Girl) and Sara (Moma Rock). I’ve never met Melissa or Sara – hell,
we’ve never even spoken on the phone – and yet I feel I know them as well as –
if not better than – some of the friends I often see in person. I am proud to call them friends. The fact we haven’t met just seems
immaterial.
And when we do meet
(and we will), I know I won’t feel like I'm meeting strangers, because I won’t
be. I’ll be meeting up with old friends – friends I just hadn’t yet met
in person. That’s what happened
when I ultimately met Dana II and Laura last summer in Saugatuck, when we
shared meals and jokes and stories and our manuscripts and then – now – memories. (Interesting aside: my move to Tennessee moved me away from Tracey (and Dana I), but within driving distance of Dana II. It was so nice to know I had a friend waiting for me in my new home state!)
I do offer one
caveat, however. I’ve found that
my bright line rule is an absolute necessity when it comes to male
friends. For some reason, when
I’ve broken my rule with a male, bad things have happened. Remember Pie Guy? He was the first male exception, and he
was a fruit-filled Facebook fail. And
then there was a guy I like to call “The Creeper.” He and I went to the same grammar school (though not at the
same time, as he was several years older) and he friended me last year when our
shared alma mater sat on the Archdiocese of Chicago’s school chopping
block. Within days of our virtual
friendship, he started trolling my female friends – totally uncool and extremely creepy. After the third creeped-out
female friend mentioned his behavior, I unfriended him, and when he tried to
blame his behavior on alcohol, I blocked him.
So, yeah, boys, you and your gender have earned yourselves some disparate treatment!
In the year or so
since I first wrote my post, several more never-met friends have joined my list
of FB friends. They are all
friends of other friends. Would I
like to meet them in person some day?
Sure, why not? But if I
don’t? Well, that’s ok, too.
Unless they are
male.
Great post! I feel the same about you. I hope we do get to meet in person one of these days. It would definitely feel like we had already known each other in person to begin with. :)
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