I met R. in Israel during the summer of 1998. I was doing research for my dissertation; she was studying Hebrew just for fun. From there, she planned to go to Bali.
We became fast friends. Because of her I actually left my computer to travel around Israel. I followed her through the West Bank and to Tiberias. We picnicked in the Golan Heights. On my birthday we ate St. Peter’s fish by the Sea of Galilee, and she presented me with a magnet: “Falafel: Israel’s National Snack!” She said things like “Everybody should admit they need love.” Always these unselfconscious bits of wisdom and truth.
A year later she came to my wedding even though she didn’t know a soul. She wore a floor-length strapless gown and graciously danced with some of my aesthetically challenged relatives.
Over the last year I assumed that R. was keeping an eye on me (or at least on my profile picture). It’s not just that I thought she was alive. She was alive. Smiling, bikini-clad R. romping in the surf. Then I visited her page a couple of days ago, intending to send her a message. At first glance, everything seemed normal: pictures, posts, groups. But then I see that these are no longer maintained by her. They’re a living memorial maintained by friends and family since her death almost a full year ago.
I keep thinking about what one of my students said during our discussion of King Lear last week. She remarked that we hear about Gloucester’s death long after the fact so that we feel as surprised and disoriented as the characters in the play.
Is this one of the consequences of the Facebook age? Virtual friends are there for you even if they’re gone?
Some people think Facebook’s impersonal; I think it’s weirdly intimate. The simulation of closeness makes the discovery of absence and loss that much more shocking. I would say that this Facebook experience has made me feel helpless, but there’s no excuse for feelings of helplessness on Facebook where you can always find some form of expression. I joined the Facebook group to honor R.’s life, but I may start one called People Who Only Recently Found Out about R. and Feel Really Screwed Up About That.


Salon.com
Comments
Rated.
Thanks.
Rated!
Sorry for your loss.
rated.
Absolutely. That's true of Facebook in so many ways. Great post, and I'm so sorry for your loss.
I'm sorry for the loss of your friend.
I'm with you, it is weirdly intimate. Rated.
I haven't yet lost any of my FB friends. Will be weird, though.
Rated
For me, Facebook is too intimate, too personal. People I barely know sending me endless updates about their mood, pictures and quizzes and holiday "drinks"....which....???? I have used it to find a few people that I had lost touch with, but after that initial contact through FB, I move the conversation to email.
My daughter was recently in a life threatening accident and is still in rehabilitation and therapy. She has a traumatic brain injury and will never be the same. She is 16. When things were still critical in the beginning, her myspace occurred to me and I went to it. Her last log in is the day of the accident. Because of the accident, she can't remember the password and so it sits. The girl in the pictures and posts is not entirely here anymore, but lives on there. I know I could contact myspace and maybe get into it or shut it down, but I don't think I will.