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Make New Friends and Keep the Old; One Is Silver, The Other Gold

By Becki Cohn-Vargas November 19, 2025 Family

Last week, I traveled to say goodbye to one of my best friends, who just decided it was time to be in hospice. Her cancer had spread throughout her body, and the second round of chemo was not working. My husband was kind enough to drive me three hours through the storms and then stay outside and wait, rather than bothering anyone.

As we drove through the pouring rain, I wondered if anything I could say or do could lessen her pain or give her hope. Would I be intruding on her husband, two daughters, and sisters, who were all there by her side?

“No,” they assured me, “she will be happy that you came.”

Robin was lying in a hospital bed that her husband moved into the dining room. She was breathing with the help of oxygen. A hospice nurse’s aide was there to help. Robin reached out for me, and I gently hugged her and held her hand.

Although she was too weak to turn over or stand up, and pumped up on painkillers, she was lucid. Calmly and in great detail, my friend described her excruciating pain that led to an ambulance trip to the emergency room, emergency surgery, and a week in intensive care. She knew that she was dying, so she made the difficult decision to go into hospice, and she was resigned to that reality. “I am not putting in my contact lenses or my hearing aids – I don’t need them anymore.”

How Our Friendship Started

Robin and I met in college about 50 years ago at a meeting where we helped found Sonoma County Women Against Rape in the 1970s. A nurse started the group and trained us to be rape crisis counselors. Along with a few dedicated college students, we organized and staffed a rape crisis hotline out of our homes and accompanied women of all ages who had been raped to the hospital and court hearings to offer support.

We remained very close friends from that moment on. She attended law school, and I earned my teaching credentials. Over the years, we camped together on the California coast and traveled to Guatemala twice.

Robin and Becki in Guatemala in the 70s.

Staying Close Across Time and Distance

We never lived in the same town after college, but we stayed in touch. After a few years working as a lawyer, she pursued divinity school and became a Methodist minister, while I became a school principal. We saw each other regularly over the years. While I lived outside the US, we wrote letters to each other describing our loves and the daily dramas of our lives.

When long-distance phone calls became free, we began speaking frequently, and that continued to this day. We shared our long-term relationships, breakups, and marriages – the births of our children, the deaths of our parents, and the many challenges of parenting our children – lots of tears and laughter.

Robin could always make me laugh, even in the worst moments. We both had a few worst moments, including nightmare jobs. We talked each other through those situations. Her husband would laugh and say we were each other’s therapists. Even though she was Methodist and I was Jewish, our spirituality, compassion, and commitment to feminism, social justice, and civil rights were entirely in sync. We always said we would grow old together, and to a degree we did, although losing her came way too soon.

We Had Good Lives

During our final visit, Robin and I agreed that we had had good lives. It did not mean that everything was easy by any means. We discussed the recent past and our many adventures growing up during the 70s.

I brought her a black-and-white photo from 1977, when she visited me during the year I volunteered at an earthquake relief hospital in the Guatemalan highlands. It was a group photo of Robin, my friend Betty, and me with two Cakchiquel women and several children in intricately woven huipiles (blouses). She remembered Betty, and she knew Betty had died a few years prior. “It is strange, she said, that always in a photo there is one person who has died.”

When it came time to leave, we hugged, and each of us said, “I love you.” The next day, her husband texted me that after I left, Robin fell asleep and suddenly woke up, saying, “You need to give Becki something to eat.” Even in her last hours, she thought beyond herself.

Her daughter had noted that sometimes people have a day of clarity right before they die. She didn’t think that was what was happening, nor did I. Robin seemed way too alert and alive. And yet, Robin passed away the following evening. I was grateful to have had that time with her.

The Losses We Go Through

Part of aging is experiencing losses. I recall how a friend of my father’s, who was in his 90s, told me once, “As you hit your 60s, you start losing people who were close to you, then in your 70s, and 80s, more pass away. By your 90s, even fewer people you’ve loved are left.” Now in my 70s, I realize how true that is.

Robin’s passing has reinforced the need to cherish our loved ones, both old and new. She leaves me with fond memories and profound lessons about friendship and love.

Top photo: Robin and Becki at Yosemite in August, 2025.

Time to Reflect:

Have you lost anyone in the past year? Have the losses started to add up? Who do you miss the most?

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Winifred Kovacik

I had a very best friend from 3rd grade of school until she died 70 years later. We traveled together, helped each other pack for household moves, regularly stayed in each other’s homes and regularly attended NYC theater together – our great extravagance in life. However, after high school graduation, we never lived close to each other. Recently, a friend told me her close friend for 50 years was leaving her personal family (who sort of ignored her) and moved hundreds of miles to live in same town as my friend and I do. I am so envious. Yes – long term friends are irreplaceable and at 93, my closest are gone. Treasure your own.

Hannele

Thank you for the lovely and beautiful article of loosing dear friend or friends. I had two girlfriends from the age when we were little over twenty years . We grew up sharing family life experience becoming mothers and shared the years with our babies , school children qrowing up to teenagers and finally young adults. We also shared the happiness becoming grandmothers. One of my dear friends passed away because of a agressive cancer just two months after she’d become a grandmother. I’m a registered nurse and I felt helpless I couldn’t help her , only support and listen to her. The other one of my friends died accidentally because of medication. I miss them,
Last year I lost a very dear but much older girlfriend than what I am. I am 70 years old and she was 94. I live in Scandinavia and she was British living in London but we spent winter months in Andalucía Spain as next door neighbors 25 years and we also were in contact by e mails while staying in our homelands. She advised me some years ago to get friends of younger generations, otherwise when live live long enough you’re have no friends left. She was my soul sister, I am so grateful I knew her.

Georgia C Bennett

My husband died in May of this year, on my birthday. I also had the Hospice Nurse with me through it all and I am deeply grateful. Especially for the dying to be at home, where Steve was happiest. Nothing about this was easy but the support and comfort was incredibly helpful and made it all simpler. i am slowly walking this new path.

Karen Siegel

I lost one of my best friends this past year. We laughed alot and shared our creativity. Carol the play director/dancer (she was in the original Chorus Line) and me the painter/artist.We walked the beaches and forests together. I will miss her forever.

Sami

On November ninth of this year, my best friend Carol passed from this earth. We built this close friendship over twenty five years. She was my voice of reason, I was her sounding board. We talked about everything every week. We would spend an hour, sometimes 2 hours on the phone just yaking about what happened that day, about new recipes she’d tried or I had demolished. She would tell me what to try to make a recipe work. She was so proud of me when I finally got snickerdoodles to be hard on the outside, soft in the center.
She had a wonderful husband who was her best friend.The love of her life, and two children who she loved dearly, and grandchildren.
She was religious, and I am not. When things would get really rough for me.She would say “i’m saying a prayer for you. I always pray for you.” I would tell her that whatever she wanted to do, “that would be fine. It makes you happy to pray for me.”
Because we talked about everything.
It was so incredibly hard for me when she suddenly passed away without being able to talk to her about it. I didn’t get to say Goodbye to her.
I didn’t get to hear her tell me at the end of our phone call that I needed to get on with whatever I was doing.
And I’ll never again get to hear her, say “love you, babe.” I will miss our conversations, our laughter, our tears. Now on the 20th of Nov. I am almost able to hope this new journey brings her happiness and good health and that she doesn’t miss me too much when my spirit crosses the universe.

Lisa Stege

Sami, your story touched me deeply, tears in my eyes. We never know when that last time will be.

The Author

Becki Cohn-Vargas, Ed.D, has been blogging regularly for Sixty and Me since 2015. She is a retired educator and independent consultant. She's the co-author of three books on identity safe schools where students of all backgrounds flourish. Becki and her husband live in the San Francisco Bay Area and have three adult children and one grandchild. You can connect with her at the links below.

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