Something rather new is happening in my life and I am a bit confused, when I think of it. I used to move through my life with a handful of good friends around, about the same amount of them most of the time, not too many, not to few, just about right. And I am talking about friends as I have defined them in my Friendship on an island post. I would just add one additional attribute of a friend to the two in the mentioned post, and this would be a “soul mate” quality, an open flow of connectedness, or perhaps immediate recognition of that. A non-erotic variation of being in love, I would say.
Anyway, about a year or so ago this established number of friends in my life started to increase radically. Perhaps I opened up a bit more and started to see, respond, attract, resonate, connect… more than I did before, perhaps something else has changed, who knows, but what firstly started as a noticeable increase in the number of genuine connections, has slowly turned into a waterfall of true and good friends pouring in. I keep meeting new friends while travelling (the last one joined my collection just last week in Warshaw) or in my home town and there’s truly abundance of them nowadays. Plus there is, of course, this blogging tribe that is throwing all these beautiful people at me. I mean, Robin, Sanity, Razz, Jennifer, Hayden…, what else can I call you guys but friends.
And I am being the same sort of a rather introvert and anti-social guy as it has been the case in the last ten years or so.
Well, I hear you say, what is the problem? What is there to not know about that? You are getting loads of friends in your life; enjoy and quit complaining!
And you are so damn right.
But the thing is that I have noticed how my mind has been utterly spoiled by this action-oriented type of modern mentality. The urge to do something about it, to create something out of it, to move and to evolve it, is growing. You know, I HAVE TO DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT! It is true that I do not have any burning need for helping hands nowadays, nor do I enjoy just hanging around with people, talking nonsense in order for the time to pass. But, but, but, I cannot just sit here and have all these friends scattered around the globe, there must be something to do!
And there goes my mind: “Let’s organize something. Perhaps a gathering. Every month in a different city. Or let’s do a facilitated mind-blowing retreat together. Workshops. Re-unions. Perhaps just simple parties. Hm, maybe not just parties since they tend to turn meaningless, let’s do a facilitated thing. At least a karaoke night. Or, let’s do a Skype conference. Or perhaps I should just invite everybody here… Or, perhaps we can write a book together. Or…”
This mind of mine is really a funny creature: it wants to move and to change things. Even friendships. I mean, how eternally far away am I already from the scene we so often saw on our journey to the East in places like Eastern Turkey. Friends just sitting together.
Now, I do have some doubts whether their wives had the same appreciation of the ways their husbands used to enjoy the company of friends every day from mornings till sunsets, but let us stay focused here.
The thing is that it seems to me I need to re-learn to just be with people, not having to do anything. Even when I am all excited about them for them being so beautiful and for feeling such a fulfilling connection between us. It is OK just to be. When I think back of Zen seshins or dialogue processes and remember the beauty of the moments, when there is interconnectedness between everybody in the room, yet there is no need to do anything. Presence and silence are enough.
But still, it is kind of funny; at 42 learning how to just be with people. How to just be with friends, without having to do anything.





What a heart you have! Phew. So much love and creativity you’re bursting!!
I’ve had this same feeling. It was so good to see it written right out loud here. In fact I’ve had this feeling so many times with friends like this that I was curious what you would say here.
Then as I read your conclusion I realized that yes, we are all connected, us souls that need no preamble and just pick up where we left off, and that will never change. So we can let go and simply BE, and the connection will not dissolve. Maybe we are as one fabric. There is certainly a strength I sense in acknowledging this reality of connectedness.
And yet….it sure would be fun to have a “gathering” some day!!! (She chuckles)
Comment by rainforestrobin — September 4, 2008 @ 1:34 am
Did you maybe ask the universe for positive abundance or something? Because, if so, the answer is “Yes!”
I just can’t tell you how happy that I have met you and others through something as simple as blogging. You’re so creative to come up with all those ideas for us to connect.
P.S. Have you ever read “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy”?
Comment by Hayden Tompkins — September 4, 2008 @ 11:20 am
“…karaoke night” … a WHAT? We need to seriously talk about that word in there… no, seriously now it is wrong wrong WRONG!
Ok phew glad to get that off my chest. Each day I wake up astounded at the most incredible people I have met and come into contact with, it truly blows me away.
I am game for the Skype – depending where I escape to then the rest I am game for as well. Am busy working on a book concept remind me in a month or two because it involves you and a few others *grins*
I’m on GMT+2 whats yours? CET?
Comment by SanityFound — September 5, 2008 @ 12:08 am
Whenever I read one of Robin’s comments, I always think: yeah. that! that’s what I wanted to say .. if only I could articulate it! And then I see your posts, or one of your comments on a blog that I frequent and I often have the same feeling you express. You tie your thoughts together so cogently, with an underlying layer of of compassion and humor. Maybe I didn’t know I felt that way until I read your words, but I usually find myself agreeing.
It’s a wonderful thing that your friendships are expanding. My connections are, too, though these are mainly via blogging. i sometimes wonder how this would all work out if the people I’ve “met” across the world were living on my block (what a block it would be). Would we still talk? Would we all be open to friendship? Would we plan get-togethers?? Nothing goes unanalyzed for me, unfortunately. It’s another version of the need to just be here now, to experience things in the moment, without making a plan, without questioning.
Comment by Jennifer — September 5, 2008 @ 3:26 am
Just about everything in our lives is in a constant state of flux. The nature of our relationships, the world we’re in and of how we think about it all. As I get older I’ve come to realise that nothing is set and I’ve come to expect change and to enjoy the ebb and flow of it.
I think that longing for things to stay the same is a bit oedipal and anal retentive. As we grow, we learn to let go of our shit so we can take on new things and grow.
When I drop by Slovenia next year, we’ll have some wine (I hope you drink it) and talk of many things!
Comment by razzbuffnik — September 5, 2008 @ 7:05 am
I love this post… Robert how odd. I was sure I checked your blog in the past and it was in another language. Im on crack I guess. Dang Im sorry.
You are on my reader now. MWAH from me! Definitely a friend.
Comment by Amber — September 5, 2008 @ 7:54 pm
Robert she’s not kidding, she stole my stash so I stole her cookies – she’ll naturally deny it till she is blue in the face but we know right?
Comment by SanityFound — September 5, 2008 @ 10:34 pm
Fascinating. I think I really understand the dilemma you are facing. I especially like how you’ve laid bare the difference between wanting to do something, versus not doing something as the means of doing something. Nice work.
Comment by Dereck — September 6, 2008 @ 2:44 pm
Robin: yeah, it definitely would be fun to have a gathering one day. Let’s keep this in mind and we will materialize something eventually.
Hayden: hm, I did read the Hitchiker’s Guide about 20 or so years ago and did not find it neither funny nor entertaining, thought provoking. I just did not resonate with it, though everybody else did. And than I went to see the movie a couple of years back and also this sort of passed me bye; forgot about it the very next day. So, not really my cup of tea. But my wife adores it. Now, will you still be my friend?
And by the way, why are you asking?
Sanity: I am GMT+01
Jennifer: what an excellent thought; “how this would all work out if the people I’ve “met” across the world were living on my block”. Hm, a very good one, I love it! How thought provoking. It is truly possible that people like this are actually living in our neighbourhoods and we just never stumble over them. Or perhaps we just love to have things out there in the distance, not so realistic, so that we can add on and take away what we want and keep relationship unspoiled, “pure”… Hm, made me think a lot.
Razz: you are my man! I mean, I LOVE your theories, oedipal and anal retentive, good Lord, I would never have made this connection! Great, love it! Of course I drink wine, we have good ones here (OK, you will be a bit spoiled, coming from France, but I will ground you) and oh boy, will we talk long and wide. I am truly excited.
Amber: Crack is not good for you. MWAH!
Sanity2:
Dereck: thanks and welcome.
Comment by Robert — September 6, 2008 @ 6:37 pm
“Of course I drink wine, we have good ones here”
Good, I’m looking forward to trying them. As for French wines, I am a bit spoilt. As you know, Australia is a land of big bold hearty red wines, that if you are used to drinking them, make French wines taste insipid and to my mind dissappointing.
It will be a cool little pose in a few years hence to pull out a bottle of nice Slovenian wine that you’ve turned me onto, and put it on the table at some future dinner at my place whilst declaring, “here’s a nice drop that I came across in Slovenia (it sounds so impossibly exotic from an Australian perspective).
Comment by razzbuffnik — September 6, 2008 @ 11:57 pm
love the post! Your dilemma is very understandable, guess we all go through it. I do!
Cheers!
Comment by Deepali — September 25, 2008 @ 1:39 pm
Deepali, welcome, namaste…
Comment by Robert — September 28, 2008 @ 3:35 pm
you were wondering what would happen if all those amaying people where living in the same block of flats, and how great it would be, wouldn´t it?. This made me think a lot. One thing that is really great with this blog is that you take the time to think about your article, you write it when you are feeling like it, we read it when we are available in terms of time and mind, then respond immediately or later, or never but think about it when it is the right time. While when you live close to each other and meet, you are not always 100% available right when the other one is also available, not just in physical time but in the mind. And this makes a huge difference, and that´s why it´s easier to have that kind of contact over your blog and why relationships in reality are much harder.
If all those people were actually living in the neighbourhood, we would not see of each other the bright side of the great thought-provoking views on life, but we would also see when we are tired and in a bad mood, etc. and we might not see them as as great all the time. And it made me think once more that I should be careful in my everyday life to manage to keep seeing the diamonds that are in the people despite of the dust and mud that can cover it because of tiredness, worries or whatever.
Comment by Ludo et Anne-Claire — November 9, 2008 @ 5:11 pm
Hi Anne-Claire, a good point indeed and I can very easily relate to it. I have at least five of my top friends living less than two kilometres away and I find time to sit with them and engage in a good sharing only every couple of months, on average. And my best friend is living about 25 kilometres away, but working in my town every day, and we manage to sit and talk in peace perhaps 5 times per year. In other terms, I share myself, my feelings and my life much more regularly with you, who are from France, or with Sanity from South Africa, or Robin from the states or Razz from Australia. And, yes, it could very well happen that if you guys were living in my neighbourhood, I would almost never sit down with you and have more contact with somebody from Argentina or Philippines, for instance. I guess the virtual relationships are slowly wining over…
Comment by Robert — November 9, 2008 @ 5:38 pm