Susanne Swinert
How does one celebrate the value
that friendship brings into our lives?
We certainly cannot place a price tag on such
connections, can we? My thoughts go immediately
to my dearest, most treasured friend, the lovely lady
Susanne Swinert. She found me, as friends often do, when
I was at my worst. I was taking out the trash one day, there
was a bit of light rain coming down, just enough, as it were,
to mask the waterworks that were quite literally transpiring
within and about me. Yes, I’d been crying - had been
up all night. It was early one morning and I’d been
scrubbing and cleaning the place in which I live,
having just moved there a few months previous
during a bit of a high moment in a long slump of
what had been, for me, the lowest. I was giddy to
have the privilege of such an eviron, after what I
rather too remorsefully thought of as a too elongated
unfair era. Well, I’d only had the joy of living in this
divine little home for a couple of months when, as my
luck would often do for that period I clung to as tortured
took another downturn. To mindlessly mend my insomnabulent
and despondent spirits, I did what I would sometimes do, which
is clean. I’d scrub and rub the floors and walls and dishes and
furniture as if I were removing all of the dust and rust from my
very soul. But by morning, the task had failed to brighten my
spirits in the least. I had twisted the detritus into a few
grocery bags that I tied up neatly and was carrying a trinity
of these balloons filled with detritus outside my apartment
building and to the nearby garbage bins that accomplined
my building, where I thought myself alone, letting the rain
fall as it did upon my uncloaked neck and douse my
hair, perhaps in an intently dramatic effort on my part,
rather than the light rain’s, when out from beside the
fence where the garbage pails would be aligned, where
into one of which I was bidding an unthinking au revoir to
whatever I had deemed dirty and unworthy, yes, out from
practical invisibility slunk my fine friend, this being before
we’d made any acquaintance whatsoever, well, until that
very moment. And there she stood, having in essence
made herself a sort of oratorial blockade between me
and the release of the last bag of swept nonsense from
my new home and the bin into which the other two had
already gone, with a loud, high trill of “R-r-r-r-right you
ar-r-r-e, si-r-r-r-, what a gor-r-r-geous mor-r-r-rnin’ it
blessed be here at this hour, wouldn’t you say?” I
nearly dropped that last bag right upon her own bonnet
(she’s such a wee lovely lady, that Susanne). Needless
to say, I found my manners swiftly, toned myself up to as
near her spledor as was humanly possible with some pithy
comeback. And we’ve been darling companions ever since!