Category Archives: Friendship

My First Girlfriend

The first time I kissed a girl my eyes were wide open. It had been a long time coming and I was surprised it had taken as long as it did. The bland disappointment that followed, however, I did not expect. It was not a major anti-climax or steep decline to nothingness but rather a sense of: “oh…ok”.

It all started with baggy pants and hip hop music. Shaggy hair, bitten nails a deep voice and a pair of converse sneakers were enough to convince all those around me that a boyfriend was out of the question. My choosing comfort over style was apparently an encrypted statement of homosexuality. I was a seventeen year old girl who smoked weed and listened to the Wu-Tang Clan and so was of no interest to the boys at my brother school, even more insulting was the fact that they were mediocre looking. Not one of them was strapping with broad shoulders and dreamy eyes, instead they were skinny with disproportionate rear ends and un-kept hair. So when one evening a new and incredibly attractive girl came into my room, closed her eyes and leaned in…I leaned in too…eyes wide open. I had been kissed by a girl once before, but this was the first time that I had ever kissed back. My eyes scanned the room as I waited for the time to stand still and for us to be thrown into a dizzying lust only to be jerked back to reality by the sound of the “lights out” bell. None of this happened.

One of my closest friends was lesbian and she was having the time of her life. She didn’t walk into spaces and constantly feel awkward and underdressed or any of the other symptoms of social retardation that burdened me. She took what she wanted and I admired that. I wanted that. So I kissed back. I was not sure if this girl was what I wanted but I decided to take her just in case. It was only after I watched her leave my room, her walking on air and me stead fast on the ground, that I came to realise what it meant to succumb to pressure. Here I was, awkwardly groping some confused young girl who had probably mistaken her own admiration for lust. I knew that if she turned around and came back into my room I would do it again, but I was not sure why. I was a senior and she was a junior but we were both just kids.

It was done.

She came into my room often and I let things happen. I let her straddle me and pine over me. I let her send me letters and tell her friends and all the while I felt nothing. Every time I heard her knock on my door I took on the duty of groping and kissing, teasing and whispering things I had heard on TV, it was awkward. She began to pick up on the chill I was giving off and sought comfort elsewhere…I felt no particular way about that either. It was when another young girl came to my room seeking some of what “old girl” had got that I realised that the charade had become exhausting.  I realised that I owed my first girlfriend an apology.

I used her. I wanted to be wanted. I needed to be needed. I longed for someone to look at me and struggle to catch their breath, for them to toss and turn at night, all but begging the sun to rise so that they could see me again. I wanted someone to feel sick at the thought of losing me and though she was the person who felt that way…she was not the person I wanted to feel that way.

I was in a parallel universe where people pretended to be gay to fit in and be wanted. I now recognize that as a symptom of a society that shames those who travel alone. Apparently we all need someone to confirm our existence. So rather than an apology, I think I owe my first girlfriend a thank you. There is no shame in being alone and I learnt that in her arms.

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Filed under Friendship, Growing Up, love, Sex, Sexual Experimentation, Sexuality, Uncategorized

The First Time My Vagina Reminded Me of Sisterhood

Women always talk about the strength a sisterhood has but I have always wondered how true this is. I’ve never really been a person involved in big groups of friends; I always had one friend, they would always become my best and close friend until unforeseen circumstances changed that and then I would be forced to find another good friend.

My cycle of friend hopping changed when I went to university and I met a friend who had a friend who had a friend who eventually became my friend, in the end a huge network of friends was woven and when we met our res rooms would be filled with young women literally on top of each other enjoying each other’s company. I had never felt such a strong bond with so many women- we would wait for each other before we ate, we had our own table, on Sundays we would go to church together and discuss the sermon afterwards and we even developed our own secret language.

I always wondered how far my friends would go for me, I always wondered if what we kindled was a true friendship or a hobby to pass by the time. We shared our secrets, what hurt us most and what our real problems were; for such a huge group our secrets amazingly stayed well within the web. We would buy food, tampons or medicationsfor each other. We knew who had asthma, who was allergic to what, and who had never used a tampon before. We had immense knowledge of each other and our love had no bounds.

One day my friends and I were talking about private parts; which looked better between the vagina and the penis, and of course the vagina won. My one friend recalled a funny incident were her friend had called her in a frantic state asking her to come over to her house. When my friend got there her friend asked her to look at her vagina, my friend was shocked and asked why, her friend replied said that it looked weird that some hanging bits weren’t supposed to be there. My friend being the good sister she was inspected it and assured her friend it was in a normal state. I laughed when I heard the story but then I realised I really did not know what my vagina looked like, not shaving made my problem worse and I really did not know how my vagina looked like.

I felt a sense of loss, not knowing the most intimate part of me was sad and suddenly I understood what my friend’s friend must have felt like. I looked at my friend in a different light from there on, she was truly a good friend, and she went into uncharted territory not out of curiosity but out of kindness and care for her friend who was really worried. I mean how many friends would inspect your vagina for you?

Image from goodmorningandgoodnight.com

I looked at my friends in a different light from there on. There were with me when I could no longer go on with my studies, they supported me when my faith was at its thinnest, they prayed for me and asked for God’s favour to fall upon my life. They are still with me in my heart and of course on Facebook; our bond surpasses all kinds of matter. It turns out it was a true friendship I was kindling and still kindling, it wasn’t something to pass the time, it was something to contain time. I discovered true sisterhoods do exist- I am reminded of this every time I look at my vagina.

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Filed under Friendship, Growing Up

The First Time I lost my best friend

I only met my best friend when I was in my mid-twenties.  We met, just clicked, and in no time were inseparable. We shared each other’s joys, heartaches, crushes, breakups, tears, considered each other the one other person in the world who would always understand. Although we spoke over the phone or e-mailed each other throughout the day with exciting updates on random happenings, we still met up almost each day. I could not picture a life without her – honestly, the thought never crossed my mind.

After years of having an irreplaceable confidant, she became enamored with one of those guys, we all know one of them – the ones who can tell a woman likes him and strings her along, manipulates her and uses her without ever actually promising anything.

The strangest thing though, mere days after she met him, when I told her what I thought he was doing she yelled at me.  Of course after so many years we’ve had fights and disagreements but nothing like this.

As the days went by I saw less and less of her.  She became closer and closer to him and I became less and less important to her.  She lost her temper with me more often, became dismissive of me and sometimes, simply ignored me while sitting in my living room chatting to him.

Within a month of knowing him my birthday came up.  We have, for as long as we’d known each other, spent the night before our birthdays together and celebrated atmidnight.  But that year it changed.  No plans were made.  She had discarded our tradition to go partying with him.  I felt like she had discarded more than a tradition, she really had discarded me.

By the time she had known him for two months, she simply broke off our friendship.  No reason and no warning.   I accepted it, but I hated her for it.

A few months later she realised what kind of person he was, and was coming over for visits again, chatting, e-mailing, calling.  We never discussed what happened or why. We tried to plaster over the holes and cracks in our relationship, pretended it was fine, but it kept falling apart.  I lashed out viscously whenever I lost my temper over some insignificant thing and went straight for the jugular, so much so that I shocked myself.  I realised then how cruel I could be, how hurt I actually was.

We just had another argument recently – again about one of those guys she’s known for a few weeks and is doing what one of those guys does, I don’t know if we’ll talk again, if it’s even worth it.  I’ve lost my best friend and it breaks my heart.

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Filed under Friendship, Loss