Saturday, November 23, 2013

Remembrance and Father…

Over the last few weeks – since before Remembrance Day, actually – I have been thinking a lot about my father. When he was alive, we were not close. In part, that was due to the years he spent in the Canadian Army in Britain and Europe during World War II. He was gone for six years, without a break. He left just a day or two before I started school, and he returned just as I became a moody adolescent. He had no idea how to deal with adolescence, and I had no idea how to relate to a Dad, since I’d had none for so long. The teen years were a strain on both of us.

During the years on my first marriage, my father and I had little to do with each other. I knew he cared about us, but he had a difficult time demonstrating that. He was much better at relating to the Grandchildren. He was warm and cuddly with them. Each of them developed a unique relationship with Grandpa.

Later in my life, during my second marriage he was much closer to me. He responded very warmly to Beatrix. They could talk by the hour. And he shared things with her. I think she reminded him of his four sisters.

I have two pictures of father in military dress, taken during the war. One was taken when he was on leave in Scotland, visiting his Uncle Archie. He is relaxed, laughing, enjoying the moment. The other picture was taken after he’d been in Europe and seen action in Holland. The picture is plain; his skin colour is darker than earlier. There is no smile on his mustached face. His eyes are penetrating. It’s an altogether sober and serious photo. No laughter there.
I have three special mementos of my Dad, who died in August of 1984. They are a skipping rope, a silver coloured dagger such as Commandos were issued in WW II, and a metal whistle, such as referees use in British Football matches. Each of them carries special meaning for me, and I have created a story around each of them, partly factual, partly fictional.

The skipping rope hung in our basement on Roanoke Street in Transcona. My Dad used that rope regularly as part of his efforts to remain fit into his old age. I don’t know when he stopped using it, but I do remember that, as a teenagers, I could my father rhythmically skipping in the basement for up to 20 minutes to a half hour, regularly. I have no idea when he stopped, but he was still doing it well into his fifties.

The whistle reminds me of my Dad as a soccer player. I heard stories of long training runs along the sand beach at Prestwick. I’ve stood on that beach. The sand in not hard, it slides under your feet. I couldn’t image a ten-mile run in that place. But it happened every Saturday when my Dad was a teenager, to keep the team’s legs in shape.

I saw my Dad use that whistle when I was in junior high school. He was asked to referee inter-high school matches in Transcona. He was the only referee. He ran up and down the field with the play, easily keeping pace with the 16 and 17 year old players. He was likely about 50 at the time. I remember being impressed that he could do that, and keep good control of the game.
The dagger he brought home from the war. At some point, although he was in the Service Corps – transport of men and supplies to the front – at some point he was involved in training men in hand-to-hand combat, such as Commandos would need. The dagger was the knife with which they would kill. It had no sharp edges; it was not a cutting knife. It was for stabbing, as in sneak up behind a sentry and put him down silently; once to the chest, or the kidneys.

In his own way, my father was a teacher. Never formally t rained, he could instruct well. He taught Jennifer to drive, for example. Did he teach Keith, of Caley? I can’t remember. He was an athlete. In his youth, he was a passionate athlete. Being forbidden to play football on Sunday was one of the reasons he got fed up with religion and left the church. (It wasn’t the only reason!) Watching hi m run as a referee, I was impressed that he was in such good shape. During the depression, the Transcona School hired my Father to “teach a class” of 25-30 year olds who returned to school because there was no work! What he did was mostly physical training, sports, something to wear them out. He managed that very well…with his third grade formal education! He could manage them (the whistle) and he could stay ahead of them physically (the skipping rope).

Each Remembrance Day I go through the same process. I remember those objects. I touch them; I replay the war stories (very few) that my Dad told. I go to the community Service, which is always very meaningful for me, no matter how badly it is done, or how horrible the homily is. I watch those young people laying wreaths, and some of the old Korean War Vets, creakily kneeling to do the same, and remember that my Dad volunteered for World War II at the age of 38, when no conscription would ever have touched him. He volunteered his life, and by implication, mine as well, and my Mother’s.

Every year tears run down my cheeks, and I remember my Father with great fondness and respect. I don’t really expect anyone else to be understand this. It just is. And…I wish I’d known him better in life. In death he has been a mentor to me, and I have felt close to him on many occasions. It is past time that I put that fact on paper.


Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Remembrance Day…and walking

Funny week…winter has begun, with snow and cold. My body is taking its time getting used to this. I’ve walked most mornings. It was a little scary a couple of mornings, because of the ice underfoot. I was afraid of falling. The other thing that surprised me…and alarmed me, if the truth were known – was that on the last leg of my walk, which is mildly uphill, I began to feel tightness in my chest. One morning I even got to the edge of pain, which eased when I slowed down. I began to wonder if the time for heart valve surgery is closer than I thought.

I had no trouble with walking in Ottawa. It was warmer, and the climate as moist. Here, it’s been dry and cold. My anxieties eased this morning, however. I walked a double length, and found that not only did I limber up on the second leg, but also I had no chest tightness at all on the whole walk. I’ll have to monitor this closely for Dr. Swartz…and myself, I guess.

I haven’t been back to the pool since arriving home. I still have scabs on my tattoo, and one can’t go in the pool with an open wound. In the next couple of days, the scabs will go, and I’ll be back in the water.

All this, plus my recurring trouble with remembering things, puts me squarely in the line of “recovery.” Still a long way to go, especially if I throw in the heart stuff as well. I’m using recycled material for Sunday worship all this month, realizing that I haven’t the energy to research and write a sermon and service each week for a month. Looks like my career as a Sunday Supply Preacher is drawing to a close. I think back a year or two, and remember how I could focus and work on this sort of thing all morning without a break. Times have changed…or I have changed, more like.

Remembrance Day was emotional for me as usual. This year, I had a special concern: the government’s change of policy regarding veteran’s pensions. One has to be in the military for 10 years to qualify for a full pension. The Dep’t of Veteran’s Affairs has taken to bringing in all the 9-year plus vets, and assessing them for being “fit for deployment.” If a vet proves to be unfit for deployment, he or she is promptly discharged, leaving them without a full and indexed pension. The group that is most affected by this policy is those who have been wounded of injured in the service and in war. They have missing limbs, blindness, PTSD, all sorts of wounds. And therefore they are unfit for deployment, and discharged. So there you are, semi-crippled, perhaps unable to do sustained work, and now, with no pension. These folk are abandoned by the government that urged them to volunteer, praises their work, lays wreaths to “honour” them, and then cuts them off at the last minutes – sometimes just months prior to their tenth anniversary in the armed services!

The doctors tell me not to get excited about anything, but this situation excites me. It enrages  me! The only thing I could think of to do is write letters to the editor. So the local paper, the Red Deer paper, the Edmonton Journal and the Ottawa Citizen all got my letter today. It seems like very little to do. I won’t write to my MP again. He is a toady and an ass, and will just send me a photocopied sheet of the policy and someone’s speech in then House justifying it.

So I concentrate on genealogy, in which I have interested again. Starting to put together a family tree, and looking around for information. Maybe I’ll finally get to the Mormon archives in Edmonton this winter after all!

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Vacation…ended

It’s been awhile. I’ve been away in Ottawa, visiting my eldest daughter and her four boys. It was a great visit; I even got all four boys together in a restaurant one evening. They caught up with one another, as well as with me. Dinners with my grandson Raphael were special. I got to know him a bit better as an adult, and that was a special treat.

I’ve been thinking about the “recovery” theme today. A couple of events to mention. One day, in Ottawa, I was resting after lunch, half asleep, when my mobile rang. It was my former colleague from Lacombe. He was planning an All saints Day service, during which he would mention all the people who had dies and been buried from the church in 2012. He was calling to ask me about two of the funerals I conducted. Remember that I answered him out of a half-asleep state. He asked me about details of the life of one of the men I buried. I could remember the name correctly, but details? Not a chance. The second funeral I conducted two days after my stroke (still in denial) and, though I could remember the family that was it. I think he was quite frustrated with me. Not only did he get little information, but the call was expensive as well, since I was thousands of kilometers away!

This incident reminded me that I have a broken brain, a damaged memory, and an incomplete structure within which to process information. I couldn’t recall much of what he asked for. I felt embarrassed and depressed that I was an inadequate colleague.  He sounded as frustrated as I felt.

By contrast, there was the evening when I took Jennifer, Diego and Rapha out for dinner. Such wonderfully supportive and open conversation! Toward the end of our evening, we were sitting together in a gelato shop (hmmmmm), finishing our treat, when we got talking about 1. Freemasonry (the boys are both interested in that subject, and 2. The stroke; where it occurred, which part of my brain was involved, and how I experienced it. Diego was particularly keen, since he is currently studying the brain in his pre-EMS course. It was a wonderful time, during which I could open myself to the boys and see them respond to my openness.

I also had a very frank talk with Jennifer about my separation from her Mom. I never imagined she would be such an open and caring listener to me. It was a special moment for me.

The worst part of the trip was the flight home. I was tired; the plane was packed, and it was hot, and I felt cramped in the seat. It also took forever. I began contemplating the cost of a first class seat on Air Canada for next time…in my dreams!

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Ottawa visit

It’s October 31, Hallowe’en day! I’m sitting in daughter Jennifer’s dining room in Ottawa, looking out at a dark and sodden sky, from which rain has been falling all day. The promise is that the rain will become heavier as evening comes on, so that costumed children going door to door will be soaked to the skin.  The daylong dark sky reminds me of one the reasons I left Ottawa. Three of four consecutive days like this, and I would be depressed out of my mind!

I’ve been visiting here for two weeks now. I will return home on Sunday, arriving in the late afternoon (in time to watch Battle of the Blades!) Staying such a long stretch has been good in many ways. I’ve been able to spend more time with Jennifer, as she takes breaks between endless reams of translation work. I’ve had a number of really good conversations with grandson Raphael over dinner, which we usually eat together, as Jennifer is out at her daily workout. Managed to have one restaurant dinner with all four grandsons – something I’ve never managed previously!  I’ve also had some serious conversation with Diego about his future endeavors. I even managed a lunch meeting with Gabriel, the boys’ father. We hadn’t met or talked face to face in many years. It was a nice, low-key connection. Perhaps I can continue that  in the future.

This eighteen-day visit constitutes my vacation for the year. Although I have no paid employment, I am kept busy at home with household responsibilities – shopping and cooking mostly. I miss these activities when I am away, and have, in fact, cooked for Jennifer and Rapha on three occasions while here! It gave me a real sense of “contribution” to Jennifer’s busy work life to do this for her and her son.

I have walked over an hour each day while here, mostly to Cafes for a latte or a bun. Tramping the New Edinburgh streets took me back almost 30 years, when we lived and worked here. So much about this old area is charming. But when it rains in the autumn…the sidewalks are soggy underfoot with bundles of wet leaves. The skies, as I have mentioned are gloomy and dark, and when added to the gloomy and depressing political situation in our Capital, the total effect is extremely cheerless.

There has been some real learning for me, as I get to know my grandsons as adult males, or advanced teenagers, rather than little boys. They all have plans for education and growth, and each of them displays a slightly different personality, although they clearly are brothers. There was considerable joy for me watching them talk together, for it had been some months since they last met alone. I feel a sense of pride as I think of them as, in a partial way, my progeny.


There are still a couple of gatherings to be had, and hopefully some time at the end of Diego’s tattooing gun! I think I will return home with a real sense of satisfaction that my visit and vacation were both worthwhile for me.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Vacation moments…

Over a week now in Ottawa. Autumn weather – sun, wind, spitting rain, and “brisk” nigh time temperatures. Plus the usual complaining bout winter coming. Staying with Jennifer for two weeks means that I get to see a lot more of her in between long sessions of work. My God, she works hard and long. No soft life for the translator under a deadline.

I see Rapha every day, usually before he rushes off to work, and after work before he works out. No sign of Mel this week…I’m not sure if that’s usual or strange. I just haven’t seen her around.

The other night, Rapha, Diego and Jenifer were out for dinner and gelato afterwards. Had a long and serious talk about strokes and their impact, as well as about the Masonic Lodge. Diego is meeting with a Mason locally to discuss a relationship with the Lodge. Looks lie this afternoon, I’ll be hooking up with the two of them to go coat shopping for Diego at VV or Mark’s Work Wearhouse. He needs a warm coat.

Recovery is really good here in Ottawa. BP remains constant in the 130’s, and even with lots of walking I experience no other trouble. I’ve put miles on my new shoes, but have eaten red-light stuff in every Cafe. Very interesting reading about T.E. Lawrence in Arabia around the turn of the 20th century. The idiocy of British war planners sticks out all over the place. A quarter million Brits killed at Gallipoli, when a landing further along the peninsula could have been achieved by maybe 10000 men!

Had an interesting evening yesterday. I had heard (on CBC) about a folk concert at Southminster Church last night, sponsored by Babes4Breasts, a breast cancer charity. It caught my attention because one of the performers – James Keelahan – is a favorite of mine. Bought a ticket online, and took the bus around to the venue. The Church was huge, and it filled up totally. Of course, it was a quarter hour late in starting. The music was terrific, and Keelahan was great, as was Lyndell somebody, who played guitar and sand, and then played a magic and mean violin. I left at the interval, because it was already coming up on ten and I had a 45 minute bus ride to get home. And that’s when the really interesting part of the evening began. At the bus stop, there was a woman talking to a young fellow in an animated way. When we got on the bus, she sat with me, and began talking in the same manner; manic, passionate, but also focused and intelligent. I learned a lot about her, including that she is a psych outpatient. Certainly of the more intelligent and articulate kind. I learned about her website (gobatty.ca), about her political opinions and about her divorce. She offered to give me a ride home, even though we were on the bus. I declined, and she boarded her bus and was off.

Just as she left, a young woman presented herself to, squatted down, buying bus tickets from a fellow. Turns out she was the same 20+ year old with whom I talked at length in the Bridgehead Cafe earlier in then day. We struck up another conversation, and chatted all the way to my stop. Interesting kid; 20 something, in a relationship with a Nicaraguan guy. They are buying property in Nicaragua, (with whose money, I wondered) and plan to move there and live “the simple life, away from corporate influence.” Terrifically idealistic youngster, Scottish background “way back,” as well as aboriginal “way back.” I urged her to chase down those roots (to get a better handle on her own identity, I thought), but she seemed only vaguely interested in that.


Suddenly, it was my stop, and after a quick hug, I was out into the night, two blocks from home. I wonder…will I see her at Bridgehead again this week? Wow, some vacation…