July 28, 2011

But not forgotten.

Her name was Amber.

I knew her only so briefly before her bright spark sputtered out, alone, in an abandoned house in Trenton, New Jersey. A heroin overdose at age 21. She was found in August 2006 and yet her family wasn't notified until March of 2008, despite her mother Linda filing a missing persons report as early as February 2006.

We went to college together. She lived in my building when I was an RA. She dated a close friend of mine and we stalked the hell out of each other on LiveJournal. She was a Millennium Gates Scholarship recipient; she had a free ride to college.

Amber was fucking brilliant.

I miss her.

This might sound strange, but when Larry told me that Amy Winehouse had died this past weekend, I immediately thought of my friend Amber. She wasn't Jewish. She wasn't British. But I see in Amy Winehouse so many of the same things I saw in Amber: an incredible talent gone to waste, a personality too big and too bold for this world.

I think people will confuse Amy Winehouse as just another drug addict and drunk and forget that she was truly a revolutionary musician. It's the same fear I held about Amber, that her life and all her amazing brilliance and accomplishments would be overshadowed by the circumstances of her death. I never thought of Amber as a drug addict.

Amber was my friend.

Her LiveJournal still exists on the web, a time capsule of her life, a frozen and incomplete picture as her life  spiraled out of control. To this day, I still don't know what the catalyst moment was for her that sucked her into this downward vortex of self-destruction. Her last entry was dated just minutes before midnight on New Year's Eve in 2005. Her final mark on the web: just the word "omg" over and over again.

She was found dead eight months later.

Amber's penultimate journal entry was one that I've visited again and again over the years. It's only in reading it this most recent time do I have the mental stamina to keep up with it and really understand what she's written. This sentence from that rambling, manic post hangs haunted in the air as I remember her:

"Okay so whenever you’re ready, I’m just a connection and star away."

She would have turned 27 this year. She could have done so much good with her life - I wonder what she'd be doing for marriage equality now if she were still alive as it was an important cause for her when we were in college. G-d, if only she could have lived to see the victory in New York.

Amber was a star who simply burned up too quickly, consumed by her own light.

I miss you, Amber. I really do.


---

I've been in a morbid mind of late. Between the Norway massacre, Amy Winehouse, and the fact that Tisha B'Av is in a couple of weeks, it's like death - or rather a remembrance of those gone - has been whirling around in my brain recently.

I kind of get like this every year, too, I've noticed; there's just something about the beginning of the summer doldrums, I suppose, that gets me in this melancholy frame of mind, that makes me recall those who have passed on in my life.

I also just learned that the Fast of Tammuz began last week, a minor fast holiday in the Jewish calendar that begins the mourning period leading up to Tisha B'Av, the Jewish day that marks the destruction of the Temple. Tisha B'Av is supposed to be the saddest day on the Jewish calendar. So I guess I'm just responding to an already melancholy spiritual wavelength that's out there.

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I've been thinking about Amber and that so weird summer of 2003, when I lived at college. The summer Larry moved in illegally into my room and we lived together for a month. The summer I got hit by a car while I was riding my bike. The summer Amber would come and visit because she lived in the area and we'd just hang out and shoot the shit because we could and because I felt like I was being welcomed into a treasured inner circle of close friends, an invitation extended only to a lucky privleged few.

We drove around the streets of Trenton in her piece of shit convertible, the one where we had to physically collapse the roof even though it was supposed to do it on its own. Singing along to Tom Jones' "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child" on that nasty humid night, the A/C blaring as the sweat still formed on our brows. Brainstorming all the cool shit we were going to do in the Fall when I was president of our college gay/straight alliance.

I still remember the sound of her voice - clear as day - and thinking to myself at the time, "I wish I could be as cool as she was." And feeling like maybe a little of her cool rubbed off on me that one night as we drove past her old middle school and talked about her life growing up, existentialism, writing, and lesbians.

G-d, Amber was so fucking cool, I thought. Smart, too. Sassy, strong, wise, tough.

I don't know if Amber ever knew that I looked up to her even though she was two years my junior.

That summer feels like another life, like I was another person in another world entirely. That time feels so distant from my life now and yet, I still remember the people and events of that summer like it was yesterday.

---

This post is for the loved ones who left too soon or who simply have left a mark on my heart, the names and faces that have crossed my mind in the last few weeks, the people I could never forget so I must remember them.

This post is for Amber.

And for Michelle.

And Leila.

And Nan.

And Granny.

In remembering them, we give them life in our hearts.
"..and bind their souls among the living,
that they may rest in peace."


- from El Malei Rachamim, a traditional Jewish memorial prayer