I was thrilled to be over at Sally Cronin’s Smorgasbord for her #Influencer – Coffee Morning, Bring a Friend series. In this post, I’m unmasking Zan (San) one of my oldest best friends, and our relationship that has survived the distance and decades.
Smorgasbord Coffee Morning β Bring a Guest β Meet My Best Friend San by D.G.Β Kaye

Today a story of friendship that has thrived despite distance and pandemics for over forty yearsΒ Debby GiesΒ brings her best friendΒ SanjaΒ to coffee.
Meet My Best Friend San by D.G. Kaye
Today Iβd like to introduce you all to my best friend Sanja, a.k.a., Zan, who you may recognize her name from some of my books. Sanja, pronounced β like βSβ plus βonβ, plus βyawβ. I call her San (sounding like sand without the βdβ) and when I call her by her full name, I pronounce it as San Ja, as in βjawβ. You will learn later how we love to make up new words.
Weβve been friends since we were both nineteen years old. Thatβs a long time, but then again, never enough. I met San when I moved away from home and worked part time in the building I was living in at the Recreation Center. I was the receptionist and gatekeeper of law and order of the gym, and San was a part time lifeguard up at the pool. After a few shifts together and one very quiet day at the Center, I buzzed up to the pool to ask her a question, and we blabbed away most of our shift. That was the beginning of our lifelong friendship.

This photo is us in our early twenties. Me with my blond hair streaked more blond and San with her natural hair color β until we changed our colors.
I should actually write a book about us and our shenanigans through the decades together, and most likely I will, but for now Iβll talk about how San became my βpersonβ in life through thick and thin, and how even an ocean that has separated us geographically for the last twenty-eight years never hindered our connection.
I grew up in a world of βcolorfulβ characters in my motherβs circles and with very conservative Orthodox Jews on my fatherβs side, despite my father never living his life as a conservative Jew. So that spectrum of my life was a total oxymoron when it came to family. I was a precocious, inquisitive, clever and street-wise child from a young age.
Because my mother was a social butterfly, barely home, we spent way too much time at our paternal grandparentsβ growing up, a good βdump offβ spot for my mother. There was nothing Jewish about our family other than we were, and we went to synagogue with our dad and grandparents on all the high holidays out of respect for my dominating grandparents. Back at home we ate bacon and pork (although I personally no longer eat pork, as a choice, not religion) and my dad (when he was ever living with us), loved to order in Chinese Food or Pizza. I look back and it isnβt difficult to see how dysfunctional my family always was. And the funniest part was my, not even fully Jewish mother, who never had time to mother, had made it clear to me that I could only date Jewish guys. LMAO.
Okay, maybe I digressed here, but I had to set the setting to how my friend San turned my life into a 180.
Where I grew up, I only ever knew Jewish people. Exceptions were some of those βcolorfulβ characters I mentioned earlier in my motherβs gambling and racetrack circles. Heck, even my high school was 99 point something percent Jewish. After my tumultuous homelife and my parentsβ many break ups, they finally divorced when I was sixteen. Two years later, my dad decided to sell our family home. My Aunty Sherry (my motherβs sister, and more my mother to me than my own mother), who happened to be a rental agent for a popular apartment complex mid-town in the city, hatched a plan with my father, to set me up on my own, to set me free from my motherβs rule, and allow me to experience life. My aunt got me a primo apartment and my dad paid my rent for two years until I could get myself sorted in what I wanted to do or be in life.
Enter San. There was an instant connection with us that first day we yacked for hours together at work. San, too, came from a somewhat dysfunctional family life, and that may have been the first thing we bonded over. Despite us being the same age (Iβm actually 5 months older), I always look up to her like an older sister, sometimes even as a mother. I remember always feeling safe with her, safe to say anything, and protected. San was and is very nurturing and tactile, sheβs warm and loving to everyone. When she enters a room, thereβs a light that just puts her right in it. Despite the fact sheβs physically beautiful, her heart and soul are equally beautiful, and she can often be the loudest one in the room. I warn, put us together and you will have a party. Until I met San, Iβd grown up afraid of my mother, afraid to ask questions (Iβd seek them out in other ways), zero talking about birds and bees, and the words βI love youβ were not common practice anywhere in my life.
San introduced me to a whole new world of friends, and of living. And she taught me what unconditional love meant and taught me it was okay to tell people I loved them β something which felt most difficult to say all my life. She had/has many pet names for me and would often hug me and tell me she loved me. Oh, it felt so weird in the beginning, and of course, I felt so comfortable talking to her like I never had with anyone in my life until that point β not even my Aunty Sherry. I couldnβt tell my aunt my deepest feelings, for fear her allegiance to my mother would have her share anything noteworthy.

This photo was taken at one of girl get-togethers we do when Sanja comes home, about four years ago. This is my tribe. From left to right is me, Al, San, and my other bestie Anna, better known in my books as Bri.
San brought me into her world of close friends, who ultimately became my tribe of friends too. And as we grew and had various jobs, weβd both meet new people weβd introduce to each other, and our circle of friends grew. Only two people were Jewish in my wonderful new circle of multi-cultural friends, and I was loving and enjoying life. My first real best friend San is from the formerly known β Yugoslavia, now known as Croatia, and I fell in love with dating Italian men. I was introduced to a new world of diversity and I was never so happy.
Iβd taken the opportunity to go back to university while my dad was helping me out and San was going to βbeauty schoolβ to become an aesthetician. We remained working at the Rec Center a few more years, part time and Saturdays. And she made a damn fine aesthetician at that career, and magically, I had my own personal manicurist. San also taught me how to apply eye-shadow β PROPERLY. And she gave me the big thumbs down one time she caught me experimenting with BLUE eyeshadow. She still reminds me about that decades later. So, my best friend, sister/mother, social director, teacher of love was the pinnacle of my new life.
Through the years in our twenties, both San and I had active social lives, together, and in our own other various groups of friends. Her then fiancΓ© and eventual first husband Jake lived in my building at the time with his parents while they were dating. Needless to say, San and Jake pretty much hung out at my place in our early years, as I was the one with my own place and they both still lived at home.
Our lives were full and exciting, and despite how busy our lives were, we were always together for everything that mattered. I had lost my father, both my grandparents and my Aunty Sherry in that first decade on my own, and besides always being by my side for lifeβs up and downβs, nursing me back to mental health on several occasions, San was always there to put me back together.

This photo was taken in the late eighties, just before I turned into a redhead. We were at a party.
The years passed and nothing separated us, not even Sanβs first two marriages. Husbands knew I was an appendage to San, and we still remained besties and there for each other always. Until that fateful day when San was going through some hardship of her own, she serendipitously met her soon to be third husband, only, he was visiting Toronto on business, and he lived in the U.K. In a whirlwind love affair, and after only a few short months of serious dating β flying back and forth to the U.K., among other amazing trips Tray took San on to some exotic places in the world, San announced sheβs selling her house and moving to the U.K. with Tray. If I didnβt know heartache yet, and I had had plenty by then, I knew what a broken heart felt like way back then, but the pain of feeling your losing your best friend, confidante, mother, sister, all rolled in one, was almost too much to bear. After almost fifteen years of being attached to my best friend, she was leaving me, or so I thought, because thatβs how it felt. . . Please continue reading at Sally’s blog to find out how our friendship survived the miles.
Original Source: Smorgasbord Coffee Morning β Bring a Guest β Meet My Best Friend San by D.G. Kaye | Smorgasbord Blog Magazine
Β©DGKaye2021
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