Ever know someone who makes you feel as though you’re home every time you’re with her? The kind of person who, were she an actual structure, you could crawl inside, curl up and fall fast asleep in the safety of her walls, but you never really would fall asleep because you might miss something fantastic she has to show you, like a new set of china or a fabulous new piece of art she’s displaying? This is my friend Shelby.
I met Shelby 8 years ago, just after giving birth to my first son. She was a fiery red head with a personality to match, someone who by all accounts seemed completely put together in ways I never even considered. I was fat from pregnancy, exhausted from caring for a newborn, and still reeling a bit from the sting of a year spent in rehab. She worked as a corporate trainer, wearing Brooks Brothers suits and still tucking her button-down shirts into her tailored, perfectly creased size 6 pants. I was what you might call a peripheral part of a title insurance office, mainly there to accomplish all the menial tasks no one else had time to do, and I only wore professional clothes when I absolutely had to. I never tucked a shirt in because doing so highlighted my bulging belly and ever-expanding butt. As soon as work ended, I rushed home to find a pair of forgiving pants with elastic waistband and wear them as long as I could. I probably had 9 pair of sweatpants, while Shelby owned none.
I remember one of the first times I went to her house on a social visit. She invited me over to make strawberry freezer jam one Saturday in June. Max was just turning one and I was still trying desperately to figure out this mom thing, but I went over anyway, considering how much I truly loved homemade strawberry jam. The home she rented was gorgeous, with matching décor, beautiful landscaping, and level floors. We owned a duplex at the time located directly next to railroad tracks with floors in some rooms that made you feel like you were in the carnival funhouse. She stood ready in her lovely kitchen, all her products and necessary items lined up on the counter, poised and waiting to be transformed from simple sugar and fruit into fabulous jam. Shelby moved through the kitchen, talking as she went, and describing her actions and decisions like the best cooking show host. I discovered later that Martha Stewart was in fact one of her idols, which was a ridiculous thought to me. But despite our differences, I liked her. She never made me feel frumpy or unpolished. Instead she was gracious and kind, always offering some word of encouragement. I found myself tripping less as I got to know her more.
In time we ended up working together at our church, co-leading the music team that led worship on Sunday mornings. It seemed like an odd thing at first as Shelby was handling the job solo for sometime, but when we combined our efforts and brought together our gifts, the match was almost perfect. Shelby was (and still is) wickedly organized and operated at lighting fast speed. I was (and still am) much more slow and methodical, considering all sides before making decisions. We discovered there were times for both and we quickly learned to appreciate the other for her gifts, and to utilize them when needed. It was a unique relationship for me in that I had never spent so much time with someone who I was so different from, and yet who didn’t annoy me tremendously. I found myself being grateful for all the ways she filled in the gaps where I was lacking. She picked up pieces I dropped, sometimes even as they were still falling. And I was able to do the same for her, even though I was a bit slower on the uptake. I did more stooping to pick up off the ground what she was quick enough to catch in mid-air. But she was giving me confidence in the gifts I was given which was new for me.
Letting her go and watching our relationship change due to the distance between has been tough, but necessary. It is still difficult to consider what I lost when she moved 700 miles away. I am grateful for cell phones and email and text messaging because all those things help to make her feel closer; although they don’t replace the moments of curling up on the couch with a cup of coffee on a blustery winter day, children playing all around, and looking into the beautiful eyes of my friend. But seeing who she has become, how she has touched lives that would have never been touched had she stayed, and how her family has grown, make it all worthwhile. She’s changing the world one relationship at a time, much like her love and friendship changed me. There might be another flailing woman somewhere in Pennsylvania needing Shelby ’s help to stop tripping, and start gliding.
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