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- From: jon@zeus.med.utah.edu (Jonathan Byrd)
- Subject: Best Enemies
- Sender: news@math.utah.edu
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 00:13:39 GMT
- Organization: University of Utah
- Message-ID: <JON.93Jan26171339@zeus.med.utah.edu>
- Lines: 69
-
-
- Did you ever know somebody who just rubbed you the wrong way? Maybe
- not; maybe you're one of those people who can tolerate anybody, but
- not me. I can't exactly put my finger on why some people seem to
- bring out the worst in me. All I know is, every once in a while, I
- meet somebody who just grates on my nerves. Most of the time, it is
- easy enough to avoid these ball-busters, but when I was about 11 years
- old, I knew one such person that I could not avoid, because he was my
- best friend.
-
- His name was Ken, and he came from a broken home. From what I could
- tell, his mother was having emotional troubles, and declined to take
- custody of him when her marriage to Ken's father fell apart. He lived
- with his father and brother, and his stepmother and her three kids in
- a small, perpetually dirty house in the rural Utah town where I spent
- 10 years of my childhood. He never seemed to be getting along with
- any of his family (I used to think it was because they were all
- rotten, just like he said), and so he spent a lot of time at my house.
- It was obvious that he really liked my mom, possibly because she was
- the only adult he knew who didn't try to act like a youth counsellor.
- Or maybe she was just a convenient mother figure for him. Whatever
- the reason was, I didn't care. She was my mom, not his.
-
- All though junior high school we were inseparable, despite a few
- fistfights. Neither of us ever got hurt during these fights, but he
- won them all, by any objective assessment. Once, he sat on my chest
- until I agreed that he was right, and I was wrong. By the time he had
- wrestled me down, I had forgotten what the argument was about. As far
- as I knew, it was just another stupid fistfight, but Ken had some
- point to make, and he wasn't going to get up until I acknowledged it.
- Tiring of his tearful, incoherent babbling, I finally relented without
- knowing what I was agreeing to. I was puzzled about that for a while.
-
- We saw each other less frequently during the summer between 9th and
- 10th grades. Ken had a job, and I had football practice. Besides, he
- didn't really fit in well with my other (popular) friends. That fall,
- he won a coveted role in our drama club's one-act play. I received a
- lesser role, and in the regional competitions, I won Best Supporting
- Actor. Ken was named Best Actor. A few months later, I decided to
- skip the tryouts for "The Fantasticks."
-
- That same year, the girl that Ken had been chasing made an overt play
- for me. I barely knew her, and I wasn't really interested, but I
- don't think it made much difference. Ken started to act strangely (a
- feat for Ken, I thought), and sometimes seemed convinced that someone
- was out to get him, undoubtedly as a consequence of his relationship
- with the girl. I listened to his stories, but did not voice my
- disbelief.
-
- One day, Ken told me that his family was moving to Wyoming. He didn't
- want to leave, but his protests were being ignored. His only chance
- of staying, and finishing high school with the rest of us, lay with
- me. Would I ask my parents if he could he stay with my family? Of
- course I'd ask. Later, when I told my mom of Ken's predicament, she
- thought for a while without saying anything. Then she said "Do you
- want Ken staying with us?" I was surprised by the question, and
- perhaps even more so by my answer. I looked down at the floor,
- shaking my head no.
-
- The night Ken came to say goodbye, I had been out partying with some
- other friends. It was late, I was slightly drunk, and probably stoned
- as well; in short, I was not in the mood for a long, emotional
- farewell, despite the fact that Ken clearly was. I told him "good
- luck" (was that a rotten thing to say?), shook his hand, and he left.
- We exchanged a few letters, and then stopped.
-
- --
- jonathan byrd
- jon@apollo.med.utah.edu
-