Some friendships are truly exceptional like the one
described by Sola, a reader of this blog who lives in Omaha, Nebraska. I asked
her to share her story because her wisdom and insights about female friendships
are universal.
The students came from all over the country, with a few from
other African countries. Over the next couple of months we discovered that we
had both grown up in Lagos. We found that our mothers shopped in the same open-air
market. What were the odds! We had a strong belief in God and that there was a
Master plan that we didn’t understand. We laughed at the same jokes. We also
found that we both didn’t have too much money to spend. By the beginning of the
second year, we pooled resources to make meager funds go a long way. We shared anxieties of college life and then the joy
and sweetness of success at graduation.
Afterwards, we
separated to seek our fortunes and raise families. Personal contacts were few
and precious. We were living in Nigeria but in different
states, so we got to see each other twice a year. When we were apart, letters
went back and forth. There was a time we had no communication whatsoever for
about three years. Whenever we met, there was that comfortable feeling of
picking up where we stopped---like it was yesterday. Then I moved to the States
and for years we burned calling card
minutes chattering like parrots on the phone across several continents. We
shared cards with mushy messages. Marriage and children were thrown into to the
cauldron of our lives. We shared the sorrows of the loss of her husband ten
years ago. Toyin always ‘had my back’ as I do hers.
Lasting friendships require a great investment of emotions,
time and more but the returns are priceless. I have found that one must be
ready to magnify rights and ignore/reduce the importance of slights/wrongs. A
listening ear and an affirming attitude have helped our friendship. Sometimes
when I have a rather heavy heart or I feel that she does, we decide together to
count our blessings before remembering our difficulties. Lack of trust and
second guessing intentions are great enemies of a lasting friendship.