My friend Joy.
How  long is she gone now, I can't remember. I am living with her in my  mind and continuously re-experiencing memories (like movies in hi speed)  of my very dearest friend... thoughts of her drift through my days and  too, my uneasy sleeps.  She  has disappeared and now lives only in my mind.
I can hear her tell me to "stop this nonsense."
She was my nonsense monitor.
She  was gorgeous and lovely beyond compare, and gracious, and smart and  witty and talented and comforting. She was wise and compassionate, she  was resourceful and patient. She was the lengthening factor for all my  shortcomings. She was my courage booster, my reason to go on during  the darkest days. She was my mood leveler and my check in with reality. She was above all, my most normal friend.
She  was my confidant, my sister, my mother, my baby, my sounding board, and  my inspiration. She was my spirit lifter, my guidepost during lost  wanderings, my light in the darkness, my balance pole on the tight rope  of life's journey.  She made me laugh... and made me think... and then  she made me lunch. How she loved to cook. Can there be anyone ever to  match the heavenly manna she set before us all? She made me understand  that life can be cruel and that is just the way it is.
She  made me listen to many an Opera; she shared her family, her home, her  food, her friends, her time and some of her innermost secrets.
When  I describe Joy to anyone outside the family circle, I tell them she's  the only one I know who managed to raise two absolutely perfect  children!
How  we laughed the day Adam and Yoonjoung walked away, hand in hand, down  the sloping lawn towards the lake in Bovina planning  their wedding and life together, leaving behind, a trailing scent of  the delicious elixir of their happiness. Our laughter and giggles were  wordless and in fleeting glances filled with giggles as we shared the  knowing of their trials to be hurdled in their journey ahead....  What  great joy for her to see her number one son choose, at last, the one! Of Yoonjoung, Joy, she thought the world. She was the one she wanted  her son to marry... though to this moment, I doubt she ever told that to  anyone.
And  Kim, her gorgeous daughter... she told me how pleased she was that Kim  had matured so well and grown to be "quite a gal!" She never bragged,  was quiet, and private and quite conservative but in silent dignity, so  very proud of her  children, and their spouses and the kids they bore.
In  speaking of Jack she'd always begin with "That, Jack," and of Mia, as  "My girl, Mia... she will surprise us all!" Kate was "Her singing,  dancing, special angel" and Luka "Her fine young man, so handsome and  smart!"
She  truly looked forward to seeing her family and spending time with them. The love and devotion that both her children and spouses shared with  her over these past two years especially was most  incredible. I know how very happy it made her to be with them and I  tried to leave space  for them to all be together alone. It is sometimes difficult for an  outside the family member to come and go without being in the way. I  know how important that time together was for her and I am so happy that  it was filled with many fond memories and much love.
Shortly  before she went to the hospital she called and we spoke. "Oh" she  said, "just what I did not want to do... to be a burden on my  children... and here I am... in Adam's house... causing all this  burden." And so...  she was as Kim has said so well before me, so totally sympathetic to  her  surrounding beings... so respectfully considerate and accommodating, she danced off as quickly as might be possible given the circumstances, to her place in what for sure is gracious heaven.
Occasionally she'd  speak of things from way back: from before the time that I had known  her... when she romped Hawaii barefoot, of her childhood school  days, of her Mom cooking, of her Father and his work... and when she  moved to California, of her adventures touring Europe and  singing... of when she left home and when she met Walter, when she had  her babies, when she lost her sister. She must have for sure held a lot  at bay as she rarely uttered a bad word about anyone... quite opposite,  in the many ways, to my approach of, 'say it all - with a general lack  of discretion.'  She was for the most part incredibly tolerant and lost  it with me only once... over my indiscriminate use of a kitchen  sponge... an event which pierced my heart and crushed me flat without  the use of force or weapon.
She  had a wonderful sense of humor, an easy laugh, and most notably, a  remarkable ability to slide over the bumpy spots yet maintain her  equilibrium. If we learn by example, I am "all the wiser," for having  had her as a friend.
She  loved her extended family and in each she looked for always and  nurtured only, the good. She adored Bill and his sense of humor. He  was great company... a pleasure to be with, how he'd made her laugh and  always been available to help with pasting the house back together  somewhere. Her wonderful nieces and nephews... unbelievable,  standouts!... a most remarkable family bound together with special and  enduring closeness. Jan and Fredda and their spouses and kids... she  thought of as blessings in her life; she loved them dearly and spoke of  them often with great love.
All  of her family, she shared with me. How lucky am I!?  From this  example, I have learned to nurture and maintain my own personal family  ties... to try and keep my mouth shut and to put up with some of my  rotten disgusting relatives.
I  remember our outings, our trip to the Hamptons and the room we shared  in a quite dilapidated guest house (the only thing available in the  height of the season) in East Hampton. We nicknamed it: "Musty Manor." She sat on the beach with me (covered up, of course) and in great  fortitude she read in silence without complaint... waiting with patience  beyond all the strength I could ever have, for the glorious moment she  would be 'outta that place'... without the feel or sight of sand  anywhere! I live for and long for only, the seashore.. the sun and the  sand, the waves and the water... and she... could not have cared less if she  never stepped foot on a beach  again!
Our  winters in San Miguel were filled with laughter and day after day we  wandered mindlessly. We trekked just about everywhere... and always  sighed in delight upon returning in late afternoons, to the cool shaded  courtyard of her house up there on the hill away from the maddening  crowd. With peaceful abandon we'd have some tea and toast while  watching the sunset from our safe haven next above, what I named the  view: "rubble in the desert".... that made her laugh and laugh! During these winter stays in San Miguel we'd gather friends in for  luncheons and do glorious dinner parties. We attended every mediocre  event, show, recital, concert, play, craft fair, art exhibit and parade  that took place in that town... and rested and read quietly on the  lower level while the fountain water bubbled, when all else seemed  frivolous. We rearranged furniture, we painted, we watched workmen come  and go and waited and waited the endless wait, for help to show up. We  made up new recipes and she prepared her famous Margaritas  extrordinaire, to ensure that if dinner was not exactly top notch... her  guests would be none the wiser!
We visited Charles  and Soo and shared, like royalty, their gracious hospitality... their  delicious over the top lobster dinner, their lovely home and their  perfect nearby beach. We toured Shelter Island and Montauk, and  traipsed downtown Naples and watched the sunset from the pier, we walked the  woodlands of Canada, the  trails in the Berkshires, we shared Martinis and lamb chops at Shun Lee  - her most favorite! We floated in the lake at Bovina and rested on  the decks and walked in the woods and sat always for meals, at the best  table showcasing the view of the moment.
We  baked breads and cakes and tackled innumerable projects usually  involving yards and yards of something. I called her my perfect little  Korean tailor! We played with make-up, we tried every hair product on  the market. We took clothes in, we let them out. We hung up drapes and  took them down. We went to movies, we dined and picnicked and gardened  and fixed everything imaginable and explored and walked and talked and  rested sharing silence.
And  now, there is quiet. For me: not new... as I have learned to live in  quiet and to know that there is an upside to silence. One can begin to  hear more clearly, the origin or maybe better spoken of as the  birthplace of ruminations... where... in silent communication at the  innermost part of the soul all appears to be connected in harmony... the  greatest music there is to be heard.
And  now, Joy and I, we still talk. We speak in silence, we really do...  and she is telling me quite simply to "Stop all this nonsense."
Joan Bennett