Gladys Weatherly had survived many difficult trials throughout
the first fifty years of her life. When she was four years old, she broke her
arm after falling off a chair. What Gladys remembered most about the incident
were the comments she heard afterwards from well-meaning adults: “You’re so
lucky you didn’t bump your head.” “You’re so lucky it was your left arm.” “You’re
so lucky it will be good as new.” Gladys didn’t feel lucky at all every time the
reoccurring throbbing pain plagued her throughout her life.
When Gladys was seven, her parents divorced, and she never
saw her beloved father again. Her mother refused to discuss the situation.
Gladys felt abandoned and insecure. This was also around that time that she
began wetting the bed. After having an accident
at a slumber party, she was teased and shunned. From then on, at school she
hung back in the shadows, convinced that her horrifying humiliation would never
be forgotten.
A few days after Gladys celebrated her tenth birthday, two
policemen came to the door and took her sixteen year old brother, Robert, away.
At any mention of Robert’s name, Gladys’ mother became stern and stony. Gladys
didn’t dare ask her what became of Robert. She just knew there was something
dark and disturbing about his leaving.
Gladys grew up, got married, and
was once again abandoned—this time by her husband of four months who simply
walked out the door one autumn day. Gladys soon began having frequent nightmares
in which her husband and/or her
father glared disapprovingly at her and said she was a naughty little girl. Or
they laughed at her and called her worthless as they walked out the door over
and over and over.
Her mother passed away; Gladys was deserted once more. Every
night she sat in her tiny, dim studio apartment in New York City. Every night surviving--and
only just that.
For nearly thirty years, Gladys had been employed by a small
company which contracted to clean various office buildings. She made ends meet.
She met a few other nice-enough employees,
but every night when she dragged back to her simple refuge, she sat rigid in
her only chair for hours She ached to hold a husband, a baby, a friend, but her
arms were empty, and her heart was broken.
Two days after Gladys turned fifty, a turn of events made it
possible for her to realize a kind of joy. A distant Uncle had died and left her
a “tidy sum.” With her propensity for frugality, she realized that the money
would likely last her a lifetime. She shared the news with four acquaintances
from work and gave her notice. But before her final day, Lydia, the kind one, convinced Gladys that she
should get a computer to keep her company and to help her stay in touch with
world events. She helped Gladys set it up: showed her the basics of Word, Goggle
and Facebook. Lydia
invited several women from work to be Gladys’ friends. Four of these women
immediately replied and sent brief messages of encouragement. The world began
to open up for Gladys. She had friends. She was not alone.
Gladys approached her relationship with these four Facebook
friends with both enthusiasm and a kind of reverence. She felt a profound sense
of solemn responsibility to be helpful and considerate. She spent over two hours writing lengthy replies and
waited eagerly to hear back from them. Gladys soon found the courage to invite
four more people. Three confirmed. Gladys felt like a part of a group. She
belonged. She was in the loop.
As the weeks went on, Gladys acquired more and more friends.
She finally had to keep her replies shorter than at first, but she made certain to respond to everyone. If someone was
having a bad day, she would send messages of hope and care. When she saw
pictures of babies, pets or vacations, she would promptly reply, telling her friends
how cute, how adorable, and how fun. Sometimes she was the only one replying,
but often her comments joined with comments from other friends—a real
conversation of sorts.
Months passed by. Gladys hardly had time to eat and began
going to bed later and later. She had so many friends. So many! By the end of
each day, her shoulders ached after being hunched over her keyboard for hours. Some
days she felt drained and weak, but she would
never dream of letting her friends down. Never.
Hundreds of friends. Hundreds! So many pictures to comment
on. So many people to cheer up. So many condolences to write. And
congratulations. And words of encouragement. And people were inviting her to be
their friends. Inviting her! She confirmed and confirmed.
Gladys continued to faithfully fulfill her commitment to her
friends. There she sat everyday: Typing. Composing. Replying. Inviting.
Confirming. Caring. Very often, morning light would slip in through the window,
leaving her to wonder what had become of the night.
There was no one in her apartment to gently rub her shoulders and whisper,
“It’s late. Come to bed, my dear.” Nor were there pets to walk. No phone to
answer. No dinner engagements. No club meetings. No Church gatherings. And no
children to hold or teach or love. Even with all her Facebook friends, Gladys
sometimes felt lonely. During these times, she spent even longer hours inviting
more friends and working more diligently to write well thought out replies to
anyone who sent her a message.
One Tuesday night after hours of reading and replying,
Gladys was again physically drained. She put her fingers on the keyboard and
for the first time posted a message of her own rather than simply a reply. Sometimes I am so weary, I want to die. POST.
There it was, her unexpected cry.
Gladys was quickly embarrassed that she had posted something
personal and depressing, but within minutes, up popped three replies. Three friends
wrote words of comfort and support. After that, she began to notice the likes: two, now seven, now fifteen. With
each like, Gladys sank in despair. She froze in place as she saw the likes
growing. Every tortuous event in her life burned through her mind: pain,
abandonment, disappointment, grief and loneliness--above all, loneliness.
At her final count, twenty-three of her friends had responded
with like to her desperate post. For
Gladys, this implied that twenty-three friends were happy that she wanted to
die. Twenty-three liked that she was depressed. Twenty-three friends.
Twenty-three. She was betrayed and
abandoned again. Again.
As new comments and likes continued to trickle in,
unread, Gladys slipped awkwardly from her chair, her breathing becoming tortured
and ragged. As she hit the floor, her eyes shot open wide with surprise at the irony
that her defeat finally came about by something so benign. After years of
battling demons, a simple Facebook
post was her undoing.