Villages Within Villages

There’s something about planning to meet your best friend that makes you realize how much has changed, and simultaneously, how little has changed. Today, while figuring out when to meet my best friend and his fiancée who are in town, I found myself naturally suggesting that we meet first as just the three of us, and then later with our parents. It wasn’t a calculated thought – it just felt right. Because while we’re very much adults now, making our own plans and living our own lives, there’s this wonderful thing that happens when we’re all together with our parents: we get to choose to be kids again. Not because we have to, but because we want to. Because there’s joy in watching our parents beam at our achievements while still fussing over whether we’re eating enough.

When he mentioned that it would have been nice to meet multiple times but we know that both of our schedules are tight, I found myself nodding with a smile. Five years ago, that comment from any one of my friends might have sparked anxiety in me, a fear that friendships could slip away in the spaces between meetings. But today, it felt natural. Our friendship has weathered enough time and distance to know that it doesn’t depend on frequency of meetings. It depends on something much more fundamental – the knowledge that we’re there for each other, growing alongside each other, even when we’re apart.

I’ve been watching my friends step into new chapters lately. Ones becoming twos, twos becoming threes. There’s something profoundly beautiful about seeing friends embrace roles I’ve only known from the outside – partners, parents, different kinds of professionals than they started as. I love how they navigate these new waters, sometimes turning to other friends who understand these experiences better than I can. A friend who just became a parent might need advice I can’t give, but I can still be there – maybe not with solutions, but with presence, with support, with a willingness to learn about this new dimension of their life. I’ve also learned that quite frequently, people aren’t looking for solutions, just a pair of ears and a warm smile.

They say it takes a village to raise a child, and I’m starting to see how that wisdom extends to all of life’s big changes. We’re all part of each other’s support systems, showing up how we can, when we can. Sometimes that means late-night calls about career decisions, sometimes it means holding a friend’s baby while they grab a shower, sometimes it’s just sending a message saying “I saw this and thought of you.”

What’s beautiful is watching our circles expand. Every wedding I attend, every baby I meet, every partner who joins our group – they’re not dividing the existing love and attention, they’re adding their own layers to it. Our friendships aren’t getting diluted; they’re getting richer, more complex, more interesting. I’m loving how friendship evolves. How it finds new rhythms, new patterns, new ways of showing up. How some friends who I used to meet every day are now people I see twice a year but pick up exactly where we left off. How others who were once acquaintances have become central parts of my life. How we all flow in and out of each other’s important moments, creating this intricate web of care and connection.

When I see my best friend soon, I know we’ll talk about his upcoming wedding, about work, about life. We’ll share space with his fiancée, who brings her own warmth to our friendship. And later, when we’re all sitting with our parents, we’ll probably fall into old patterns – sharing glances over inside jokes, getting gently teased about childhood mishaps, being reminded to eat more. Not because we haven’t grown up, but because we have – enough to know that growing up doesn’t mean leaving behind the joy of sometimes being someone’s child.

That’s the gift of these evolving friendships – they give us space to be everything we are, everything we’re becoming, and everything we’ve been, all at once.

Twenty-Six

It has been two years since I wrote anything on my birthday – or around my birthday. 2023 was a painfully dry year in terms of writing, but there has been some kind of return this year I am pleased about. In that post, from 2022, reflecting on my desire for greater mindfulness, I wrote:

I’ve instead come to the realisation that being mindful of things and feeling this gratitude is a journey that you embark on consciously – and like all journeys/habits – it is one that takes repetition till it becomes subconscious.

Me, Twenty-Four

This remains true. Being mindful: a combination of being aware, staying equanimous, and remaining grateful, is something that requires effort from me every single day. It is something I have committed to. At 24, I called on myself to write more/daily, and evaluate where I am on this journey. As long-time readers and friends will be aware, I used to be a strong believer in waiting for the perfect moment to start something new: I would need the time to be 8:30 (or some kind of round number – none of that starting something at 5:27), or a new year, or a Monday. Aside from fueling the inherent procrastination most academic-types feel, this also meant I used to reflect, take stock of things, and set to undertake new resolutions only on occasions like my birthday, and not every single day. While I don’t do that any longer, and this may be one year later than anticipated, today feels like a good day to live up to the promise from 2022 and publicly take stock of the year and day that has gone by.

After dealing with that which demanded my immediate attention, I sat to have a quiet, self-nourishing day of reflecting, filled with books, movies, and food, interspersed with calls and messages from friends and well-wishers. Somewhere along the way it occurred to me that typically in my head, my birthday marked a half-way point in the year. Somehow this year felt different right from the off. It seems that this year is where my inner body-clock has come to align with the math. May 11th is only the 131st day of the year. There’s 234 to go. That means only a third of the year has actually gone by. I am very surprised this didn’t internalise in 2019, where I daily-blogged the entire year marked by day.

Reflecting on the year and day, I was filled with gratitude for everything I have, but also a strong sense of reality of where I was on my moral quest. Some of you will know I practice Vipassana meditation, sitting a 10-day course every August. In 2023 upon the completion of my course, some realisations about my own character meant that my moral quest took new meaning. Every day since has presented its own challenge. Sitting in the place I am, today, all I want to do is to renew my daily commitment to that moral quest. There are days that are less difficult, which are days where I acknowledge I have done well, but the days that are the toughest are the ones that teach me the most. Those days will continue to come, and all I want to be equipped to do is to accept reality as it is.

Everything else is a material bonus. There is likely no causation, but what I have found is this renewed commitment to morality has increased my own capacity to work way diligently at something because it demands that work, regardless of outcome. I hope I can continue to put the whole of my being and intention into the things I want to do – that’s what yields the most enjoyment.

All of this is rather serious, I know, but my mom bookended my day calling me in the morning and is probably the last one to call me tonight, and she’s my pocket reminder to be a child and to have fun. Here’s my pinned reminder: