When Daniel Stopped Answering His Phone
A story about the friends who stay, the ones who leave, and the objects that outlast both There's a particular kind of grief that nobody warns you about. Not the grief of losing someone to death — that grief has rituals, casseroles, cards in the mail. I mean the quieter kind. The grief of watching a friendship slowly go silent. Daniel and I had been friends for sixteen years. We met the first week of college in Ohio, thrown together by the random math of a dormitory room assignment. He was from a small town in Georgia, I was from suburban Connecticut, and we had almost nothing in common except that we were both terrified and pretending not to be. That shared pretending built something fast and solid — the way only early twenties friendships can, when you're still porous enough to let people all the way in. We were at each other's weddings. I was in the room when his daughter was born. He drove fourteen hours when my mother had her stroke. Sixteen years. The kind of f...