I am going into surgery for a hysterectomy in a few days. Being the intelligent enough, rationale enough, and calm enough adult I am, of course, completely terrified. So what follows is my ‘in case I die’ letter. Humour me. Or don’t and just stop reading now and save yourself all the eye rolling and tongue clicking. It’s up to you. I know it’s going to be fine but I’d like to leave something in case it’s not, and it’s never a bad time to say important things to people you care about. It’s never a bad time to take stock things you’d like to share. It’s never a bad time to sum up the blessings of one’s life. It’s never ever a bad time to say “I love you”. I’m not so deluded or morbid to write everyone I’ve ever met a million good bye letters (actually I am but I’m also too tired and too lazy). But I’ve got 1 in me. This 1 is for my sons.
There is much I have yet to learn and figure out. But I have learned a bit in my life. I want my boys to know these things …. Or at least hear them. What they do with these observations is up to them. Since they were born I have whispered this prayer to the Universe. “Thank you for my children. May they live long, mostly healthy lives. Let them find love. Let them be happy. Let them be good people.” The thought of not witnessing their journey to ‘adulthood’ (whatever that means) pains me beyond words. But if they were to finish growing up without me I would want them to consider these things and be self aware enough to ask important questions of them selves.
Keep your needs and wants in balance. In this world, NO ONE should go without what they need but many do because so many can never get enough of what they want. And we are all complicit in this truth. I have endeavoured to never be a person of great exorbitance. It’s ok to want things. But just be aware that the world will never run out of things to desire. Never. The cup of acquisitiveness can never be filled. Like most things in life those cups just keep growing larger. Insatiably larger. And pursuing the perpetual filling of that cup can often push other cups aside; cups like love, knowledge, wisdom, experience, and human relationships may all get dwarfed. It is my belief that no one has ever found happiness trying to fill this cup. In fact it is my belief that striving to keep this cup as small as you are able is a key factor for happiness. I want you to remember that I was gleefully happy with a smooth flowing pen and a brand new notebook to fill, a sun warmed shore rock in my hand (only to hold not to keep), a bracelet made of smooth glass beads, or a colourful pair of chucks.
Admire ambition. We’re all different. The path of fulfillment is different for everyone. Everyone has cups they want to grow and fill: achievement, mastery, education, discovery, travel, experiences, invention, leadership, even power (if benevolent). People who have the grit to know what they want from life and go after it are strong. It takes focus, self discipline, imagination, tenacity. Most of us lose our way. I lost my way. Or maybe didn’t lose it but found a more ambling path and decided I enjoyed existence. But I wish for my kids ambition …. Not blinding but measured, not greedy but passionate. Just be mindful that your goals should not take away from others, you must act in good faith with your humanity, you must not be so focused that you sacrifice your relationships, and you must make good friends with failure so that it never shatters but teaches you. Lastly, tie your ambitions to your sense of purpose to rise above materialism and selfishness. I think maybe that’s the trick. And if you end up more like your parents (without much raw ambition) then do your best to not fall into the traps of laziness, purposelessness, resentment, and apathy. It’s ok to find purpose in living a simple life filled with work, joy, family, friends, service, curiosity, and gentleness. I think some of the most admirable people live quiet lives as good people and simple wishes. That’s admirable too. Just be as YOU as YOU can be without hurting others. You will fail sometimes because we all do, just be as true to you as you can.
Be kind when you can and stand for kindness when you can’t. I struggle with this all the time. The world often feels divided into 2 camps. Those who think that powerful, cold, ruthless, controlling people are strong. And those who feel that generous, caring, thoughtful, inclusive people are strong. I believe it takes much greater strength to be kind. I hope you do too. It’s the harder path to walk though. Pettiness, resentment, discouragement, exhaustion, longing, greed, frustration, anger will shriek in the back of your head all the time ….. acknowledge those voices and then do your best to let them go. I have so much trouble with those feelings, those voices, it often takes all the strength I have. But striving to be the person I want to be keeps me going. I’m not there yet. Call it my life’s work …. And I think it makes me strong to try to be kind. Just remember that kind doesn’t mean passive and apathetic. Sometimes you must be a real asshole to stand up for kindness. Human rights and true global human equality through knowledge, science, and education don’t require kindness to defend and advance, they require standing for kindness. Let’s call it “active kindness”. Do your best to be actively kind.
Be curious. Never lose that. Please. Never stop wondering. Please. Let imagination and creativity and inquisitiveness always be the spark in your eyes.
For starters learn the fucking difference between socialism and communism. Holy shit. Please. In my opinion, it’s not wrong to believe society should be built around “we” and not “I” at it’s basic level and then make room for personal freedoms, personal success, and individuality. People who say the word “socialist” as an insult need your wisdom and a diagram of how the political spectrum and compass works. Sigh. Talking people down from ideological viewpoints and into real issues is exhausting. Just do your best.
Volunteer. Engage. You should do your best to walk the Earth in gratitude and you act on that through service. You don’t have to do everything. Just do something. My Grandmother said “many hands make light work” and it’s true. It is also true that no one person can change the world but a few people can change a corner of it.
Vote. Vote with your heart and your head in concert. It’s going to break your heart and tax your reason but remember to stay engaged. I hope you’ll follow a good and thoughtful leader with no answers before a disingenuous and affected leader with promises. And if you find the courage and desire to run for office then know I think you are among the bravest humans on Earth. People who run for political office to serve the greater good are truly abused and underappreciated in our world. We have built a political climate so cruel and invasive that the only people who can survive it have no soul ….. and then we wonder why most of our politicians seem soulless. Sigh
Laugh. As often as you can. Laughter humanizes. Laughter heals. Laughter is contagious. Fake laughter can become real so fake it until you make it when the world is hurting you. Find the funny in life because life is really funny.
Weave yourself into the lives of others. Interpersonal connections with others create a net that holds you together when you fall apart and catches you when you fall. And you do that for others too. It also creates the fabric of a life fully lived. The people you love, like, laugh with, celebrate with, problem solve with, create with, grieve with, grow with, ‘be’ with, are life’s greatest treasures.
Pack joy into the everyday. Make it a priority. My Mom always says “don’t wish your life away”. Don’t wait for special occasions or trips or achievements to be happy. Make contented happiness as essential as air. Life will throw you things that make that impossible sometimes. But if life leaves you breathing then hang on to joy as an irrefutable part of it. If happiness is a choice then choose happy. It’s not as simple as that except maybe it is. I’m still trying to figure that out.
Find love and take care of it. Love is alive and it needs to be nurtured. Value it. Enjoy it. Cherish it. Grow it. And let it go if it is lost or irreparably breaks and then believe in it again. Your Dad is the best partner I could ever dream of. He’s my best friend. He’s my courage. He’s my strength. He’s my reality check. He’s my comfort. I hope we make each other better people. I know we make each other happy a lot of the time. After 25 years he’s still the jam in my peanut butter sandwich. If you can, find that.
Know that you are the best thing I’ve ever done. And I was never the Mother I hoped to be. Never even close. I was just the Mother I was. I hope it was enough. You are amazing people and growing more amazing everyday. If I was a composer then you two would be my Magnum Opus. If I was a painter you two would be my Masterpieces. I am a Mother and you are the favourite and best thing I’ve ever done. I love you more than you could ever ever know, or at least until (if you choose to) you have children of your own. I love you with a kind of anxious hurt I can’t describe. I want so much for you. But mostly I wish for you to be good, kind, happy people. I wish for you health and happiness. I wish for you purpose and friendship. I wish for you love. But I loved you first. I am your Mother and I love you ‘bigger than the Universe’, ‘bigger than the stars’, ‘bigger than forever’. I love you to infinity …… and then just a bit more than that.
Because my youngest always says "seriously, man?!?" and because Motherhood is hard and because life is hard and because I wouldn't want to miss any of it.
Saturday, 5 August 2017
Wednesday, 12 July 2017
What I want MY kids to know about sex.
It seems everyone with a keyboard and kids is writing a ‘what I really want to tell my kid about sex’ piece. I immediately reject the ones which only really advocate for abstinence, any of the ones that make sex sound dirty or vulgar, and any of the ones that shame. They just don’t fit with my world view. But I read most because, like most parents, I don’t want to get this wrong with my kids. I want to make ‘the talk’ an ongoing conversation with my boys as they grow because there’s a lot of information to cover, a lot of questions to ask and answer, and a lot of awkward silences to work around. So far, I haven’t found one which ticks all the boxes. For one thing, most seem too heteronormative and, whether I suspect that my boys are straight or gay or somewhere in between, I just want their thinking about sex to be more inclusive and representative of the world around them. And furthermore, most of these articles are aimed at boys and, while they try really hard to teach boys to be gentlemen, they end up perpetuating the ‘girls as gatekeepers mentality’ and I hate that. The subject of consent, respect, and appropriate ways to treat women is important and correct but there needs to be a few clarifying statements made to ensure the responsibility for saying “no” doesn’t fall into the ‘pink job’ column in a kid’s mind. So anyhoo …… here’s my sex talk. Mostly because I want to have it to refer to when my mind goes blank as I stare into the eyes of my child and realize I’d better make my words count because he’s about to flee …. Either mentally or literally physically flee. Because ‘sex talks’ are hard and we’re going to need to have a lot of them to make sure it all sticks.
- You don’t have to have sex. Not ever. No one should ever make you feel weird or strange because you didn’t want to. It’s not a measure of your ‘manhood’ or ‘womanhood’ or whatever manufactured construct people want to label it. It is generally accepted that about 1% of human beings are asexual, meaning they have no sexual desires at all. That’s normal for them. It’s also normal to have all sorts of sexual desires and urges but just not want to have sex sometimes for any reason whatsoever, period. And you don’t owe anyone an explanation at all.
- People have sex because it feels good. You might as well know now. It. Feels. Good. It’s nothing to be ashamed of. It’s nice.
- There are a few things, however, which can make sex feel lousy. If not during then after. Non-consensual sex is rape. Always. And it feels really lousy. Sex which is coerced or pressured feels lousy. Sex without enough communication will often leave somebody feeling unsatisfied and unappreciated, which is lousy. Sex without enough lubrication will probably feel lousy, if not during than later. And finally any sex which results in an unintended and preventable consequence like an unplanned pregnancy or a STD will most certain feel lousy after the fact.
- Consent. As I said in point 3, Non-consensual sex is Rape. No one can give consent if they are inebriated, very high, or incapacitated in any way. So if consent is not possible then sex should not happen. Ever. Understand that consent can be given and then taken away. This means someone can change their mind and stop at any time. So then it stops. Immediately. If you do not know, trust, or understand the person you are about to have sex with well enough to feel comfortable with the clear establishment of consent THEN DON’T HAVE SEX WITH THEM.
- Guilt is not foreplay and pressure is not arousing. When people have sex with each other then everyone should want to have sex with each other. If you’re trying to make someone feel attracted to you then try making them feel attractive, not compelled. And if that doesn’t seem to be working, take “no” for an answer without making them feel bad. There are a lot of ways to pleasure yourself alone, and a lot of nice ways to spend time with others that don’t involve sex. Keep it in perspective.
- Keep it honest. Keep it real. Not every act of sex needs to be an act of love. But be honest. Talk about what you want out of the encounter. If it’s just sex then that’s ok. As long as it’s what your partner wants too. Mutuality is important. Know each other’s expectations. Just sex? Just once? Ongoing? Open to a relationship? Open to an exclusive relationship? No judgement, just honesty. Respect and honesty are sexy. Just do me a favour ….. trust me when I say that sex in a loving, growing, committed relationship feels great. Your Dad and I have nurtured a loving relationship along for 25 years and counting, and it’s hard but it’s worth it, and sex is a big part of it. Be open to what the heart wants too. Be as honest with yourself as with your partner.
- “Let’s talk about sex” isn’t just the Salt’n’Pepa masterpiece on Mommy’s nostalgic playlist. It’s something I want you to do, often, and with confidence. And I don’t mean crude, disrespectful, or demeaning statements about sex and certainly not about sexual partners. Please be better than that. What I mean is don’t have sex with anyone you haven’t spoken to about sex in advance. After the honest conversation (see number 6) about what your heart wants (or doesn’t want) then there is some stuff you need to talk about. In detail. What is happening to prevent STDs? What is happening to prevent pregnancy? If either of those measures fail what’s the plan? How does each participant in the sex plan on dealing with a STD? Or if the sex you are having could lead to an unplanned pregnancy then how will the other be contacted and what will everyone’s responsibilities be? Just to be clear, in the case of pregnancy it’s her body so it’s her choice but if you were there when it started then you need to support her in whatever she decides. All this talk not sexy??? Uncomfortable? Embarrassing? Scary? Well suck it up buttercup, because if you can’t have the conversation about everyone’s responsibility during and after the sex then you shouldn’t be having the sex.
- Sex isn’t a video game. There’s no levels. There’s no points system. There’s no passport to collect stamps in. Within the spectrum of physical intimacy and sexual intercourse there are limitless possibilities.…. you don’t have to get to them all. Might I suggest quality over quantity as an excellent rule of thumb, as it is for most things in life really. But especially for sex. You don’t have to be good at all of it (trust me at first you won’t be) but endeavour to be better, for yourself, for your partner. Variety may be the spice of life but mastery gets you a PhD. Sex is best as a physical embodiment of a human emotion. Whether the sex you are having is an act of desire, or passion, or curiosity, or friendship, or urgency, or comfort, or love, try to be in tune with the other person (or people!!). Laugh when it’s funny or awkward, smile when it brings you joy, express yourself when it brings you pleasure, and leave room for your partner to do that too. You don’t have to work your way through the Kama Sutra like it’s a 2 week tour of Europe. Some people will feel comfortable and fulfilled with a very narrow repertoire and others will search and explore further to keep happy and interested. The range and scope of what human beings do sexually is vast and it’s ok if you feel you need to explore that. It’s ok. But, seriously, you don’t need to plough through the possibilities like Ferdinand Magellan with a teleporter. Or maybe you do, but make sure each new discovery moves you closer to the real you, the you-est you. Take a compass and check in with true North often. Sex can make you feel happy, proud, virile, adventurous, or loved, but it can also leave you feeling very empty and lonely. I hope you always consider where the journey is taking you.
- Porn. Sigh. Yep, we’ve got to cover porn. It’s not real. Nothing about it is real. I don’t want to inject judgment and shame here. It’s only sex. But I want you to know there are some people involved in those scenes that will be harmed by the work and some will be empowered by it. I don’t want to go on a feminist diatribe right now but just know that. And more importantly porn will set you up with very unrealistic expectations for real life sex. If I could wish anything for you it would be that you can be someone who can appreciate the beauty of a real human body and all it’s potential and vulnerability. When you became attracted to someone I hope it’s about more than superficial beauty. I hope you are attracted to their mind and heart and sense of humour and the way they smell and the way they laugh. I hope they make you feel great about yourself and the way you can talk about anything with them. I hope you find these qualities are what attracts you to a person. I hope, one day, you even fall in love for the same reasons. Porn won’t help on that journey so just make sure it doesn’t actually hurt that journey. Ok?
- Sexuality is a spectrum. It’s ok if you know if you’re gay or straight. It’s ok if you’re not sure and have to explore to find out. It’s ok if you settle in the middle. It’s ok if you change your mind as you get to know yourself better. It’s ok. Just treat others well and honestly along that journey and you’ll have nothing to be ashamed of.
- Sometimes you will be really attracted to someone and they won’t feel the same. Rejection hurts. It hurts a lot. But don’t let it change you. And don’t change yourself because of it. Be yourself and you’ll attract people who like you for you. Oh, and remember how it feels when it’s your turn to reject someone. Be clear. Be kind.
- Dad and I are here for you. Anytime. Have a question? Ask. We might have to google it, but we’ll find the answer. Want to share a fear or worry? We’ll listen. Maybe we’ve felt that way too. Felt embarrassed? Get it off your chest. Growing into a sexually competent adult is a dance and nobody starts as Fred Astaire or Ginger Rogers …… more like Mr. Bean. And that’s ok too.
Sunday, 5 February 2017
A post Trump Canada - what now?
Growing up in Canada (I
was born in the 70s) the term multiculturalism was thrown around a lot. It was
a beautiful idea with Disney-like shine on it. It was a noble idea, more akin in
it’s day to the modern-day term Pluralism, and it was largely imaginary. We
have failed at it and on an ongoing basis. From the moment “we” showed up on
the shores of a one-day-will-be-Canada we have created a group called “them”.
I guess I am what
Harper called an “old stock” Canadian, some of my ancestors came in the 1600s,
and I am certain they did (or at least were complicit to) terrible things to
the First Peoples of this land. And we’ve never gotten any better at ‘first
contact’ have we? Always a new group of “them”, each in turn suffering horribly
from the dehumanizing and demoralizing process of exploitation, exclusion, and
intolerance. But within the
Multicultural dream there is a striving towards the fairy tale ending of
inclusion, acceptance, and belonging ……. It’s yet to be fully realized but
sometimes close, almost tangible, sometimes even “them” folding into “us”. Ever
so slowly we inch closer to the potential of this Multicultural dream.
Sometimes, it’s close and you feel you can almost get there from here. But each
time a next wave of “them” is created in our imaginations our attention shifts
and “we/us” refocuses on a new target. The predictability of it is so sad and
painfully pathetic.
Our collective human
history is so categorically cruel and flawed when it comes to difference. In a
world where no two people are the same it seems illogical that we could come up
with so many ways to categorize, divide, and group ourselves as human beings.
And while it can feel wonderfully welcoming and comforting to ‘belong’
somewhere, we must also acknowledge that when we specifically identify with one group and specifically not with another we can become fearful
of the other. The natural human fear of the unknown is part of us, but what we
fear we can start to dislike, to reject, to regard as inferior. Acknowledging
why this happens is no excuse for accepting that this happens. In the end it is
the unchallenged acceptance of that hateful and fear based rationale which has
allowed every human atrocity I can think of. If human history teaches us
anything it’s that people can do terrible and unfathomably cruel things to
those they feel superior to and different from, and that no one will stop them
if they accept that the fear and dislike is understandable. But it’s not
understandable.
The truth is that
there seems a limitless supply of wilfully ignorant, savagely cruel, and
hysterically fearful people who will harness those human attributes into power
over others. And there seems to be a limitless supply of people who will follow
them. It makes my head ache. It makes my heart ache. It makes my spirit ache.
But people who rise to power in this manner are willing to do what other people
wouldn’t, not what other people couldn’t, which proves only that they
lack the moral fortitude to lead or to be followed. Our collective willingness
to forget that fact boggles my mind. Trump was anything but original in this
process. He wasn’t the first, he won’t be the last, and there’s Trumps and
Trumps-in-waiting all over the World using the same tactics. But they can be
stopped if we merely engage in thoughtful acts of citizenship (both Nationally
and Globally), educate ourselves on the issues, reject fear mongering and hate,
and view equality as the most important right. We don’t have to allow ourselves
to be fooled into voting against our own self interest, and we don’t have to
allow ourselves to be fooled into voting against the interests of others either.
We can be better.
Here’s a few things
that might help:
- · Learn about people who are different than you. Take the time. No difference can stand up to the test of finding out how very similar we all really are ……. Good people are good people. Learn to see the beauty in beautiful diversity. And everywhere you see difference, empower and affirm even more difference. Encourage individuality everywhere it blooms.
- · Segregation has long been used as a tool to keep people from humanizing each other. Please don’t buy into segregationist mentalities. Send your kids to Public-Public school. Saying you respect people of all Faiths but then sending your children to religious schools is disingenuous. Schools which exclude by omission, by deliberately alienating those who won’t feel safe or comfortable there, sets a segregationist mindset in the next generation. It negatively and powerfully effects both our now and our future. Support social housing and supportive housing in your neighbourhood. Don’t tell yourself that it’s a good thing somewhere else, but just not in your neighbourhood. Be braver than that. Speak up when equal rights are being challenged or violated. Every time. It’s important.
- · Understand that while you have the right to believe what you wish and live as you wish, you never have the right to harm or exclude or oppress others in that pursuance of that right. Not ever.
- · Take some time to learn History. Everyone doing what they want whenever they want to whoever they want with no laws or order or governance is not Freedom …….. it’s chaos. And it’s how things like slavery, forced marriage, rape, feudalism, child labour, indentured servitude, murder, theft, witch hunts, torture, etc. happen. It’s might makes right in it’s truest and most terrible form. It’s wealthy armed men raping girls then snatching their babies away and stomping them to death before their shattered Mother’s eyes. I believe unfalteringly in human beings as both the most noble and the most terrible creatures to ever walk this planet. But I have no wish to go ungoverned or without the rule of law. That’s why we must make being a vigilant, engaged, and informed citizen our duty, so that we never suffer the injustice of absolute cruel liberty or of cruelly oppressive governance.
- · Take some time to realize that nothing is perfect, and there is no perfect way of doing anything. That’s why, when it comes to how Nations are governed, the pendulum must swing. It’s how we keep ideas in balance and the pendulum should spend most of it’s time near the middle (in a place of common ground or compromise or cooperation) but we have lost the ability to think in those terms. It seems we only think in black or white, left or right, and opposing viewpoints. We have lost the ability to seek consensus and the creativity to imagine the spectrum and possibilities of life between the swings. We keep lining up behind people who are swinging away from centre and all the many answers that occur in between. We need to seek out the consensus builders and those who understand how to act in service, we need to respect them, and hang on tight through the swings.
- · Never stop asking that public funds (tax dollars, crown assets, etc.) be spent wisely, fairly, and justly but stop asking that government be run like a business. Government is there to provide services and guidance to it’s citizens and to participate as a Global citizen on our behalf. Businesses function with a profit motive, governments should not. Period. In Canada we have built an incredibly high quality of life for a vast majority of our citizens (at least in contrast to many other Nations) and behaved Internationally in many positive ways (though we could do much better). We have a very VERY long way to go, but as a Nation our systems of health, education, policing, government, law, social assistance, infrastructure for transport and communications and municipal investment, etc etc etc have given many Canadians an enormous level of security and opportunity. That’s socialism. Stop using socialism as a dirty word. Seriously, you sound stupid when you do. Socialist policy means we can travel from sea to sea, send our children to school regardless of income, receive medical treatment when we need it regardless of income, expect to receive a liveable wage, have a certain level of job security (if we get sick, or as we age, or are a member of a minority group, or if we become a parent), have legal rights (regardless of income or gender or sexual orientation or faith or colour), visit a national or provincial park regardless of income, expect to buy safe regulated products and services, work in a safe environment, receive some financial help when unable to work, and expect and receive equal treatment in every aspect of life. These are socialist ideals and they are what governments do. Get involved, demand they do it right and do it honorably but stop pissing and moaning and yelling “socialist” every time someone receives a benefit that doesn’t directly benefit you. It’s ridiculous. A governments job is to know what benefits us all is a healthy, empowered, supported, educated populace and to act accordingly. Our job is to participate with vigilance and empathy for others.
- · Ensure you understand your rights and the rights of others. No one said this would be simple but no individual’s right may supersede another’s. Don’t be obtuse about it. While you may, sometimes sadly, have the right to believe what you want, it never gives you the right to erode the rights of another. On this there can be no compromise. Human rights must advance, must expand, and must be incontrovertible. There is no other way. Every individual’s right has the corresponding responsibility of upholding it for others.
- · Understand that willful ignorance is dangerous. Choosing to believe something is a choice. We must all make responsible choices. A fact isn’t a fact because I simply choose to believe it. We can all be fooled but I believe we can do better than this fake-new, alternative facts, suspension of disbelief, opinion-as-fact paradigm we seemed to have shifted into. Develop a filter. Ask if it is plausible, reasonable, or manipulative. Always consider the source. Ask smart people. Ask experienced people. Ask kind people. You owe yourself some reality in your reality.
- · There are many things that make a society work in the day to day: Government, Business, Food production, healthcare, education, the transport of goods and people, the protection of goods and people, the counters of the beans, etc. These and more are things that make society work. But let us never forget that the Pure Sciences and Arts make society …. Society. These are the creative conduits through which we shape our consciousness and hone our collective image. They represent discovery, possibility, exploration, and at the very least our betterment. They are what make us possible. They push our boundaries, our intellect, our philosophies. May we never forget the creative genius they inject into “us”. May we never forget that it’s important to discover, eventually, all that may be known.
- · When in doubt, help. If you see a need, be part of filling it. If you see a problem, be part of fixing it. You never must do it by yourself. Just be part of it.
- · Be yourself. My Dad has always told my brothers and I “you don’t have to change the world, just don’t let the world change you”. And that may be your life’s work. Be yourself, yourself on the way to being your best self. Just do your best.
- · Always make room for Joy and Celebration in your life. Make room. I don’t mean engaging in ridiculous levels of opulence as an act of indignant defiance as others suffer. I mean, if your life is being lived in relative peace and in relative comfort then find every reason to celebrate. Celebrate in small ways special days, holidays, the holidays of others. Invite people into your world and laugh and break bread together. Take joy in every beautiful moment, pause to acknowledge every moment of joy no matter how small or fleeting. Make room for joy in your life. I do not believe you can ever help a person, a group, a cause, or a world in need if you can not find the joy in life. I do not believe you can ever truly appreciate the value of a good, just, simple, beautiful life if you can’t find joy in it so how would you ever know how to fight to ensure others may have it too? Socrates wrote “Living well and beautifully and justly are all one thing.” That really resonated with me. A person can not be whole without joy. So find joy. So make joy. You will be a better person for it. And the world needs everyone to be their best.
- · Contentment and Satisfaction can make a poor person rich. If you don’t learn this then there will never be enough, if you do then you will almost always feel like you have everything. Human beings weren’t born with this knowledge. There is no cup to fill to the brim and then feel satiated. Human being will always just make the cup bigger. Tap into the cup …… appreciate what’s in it always, and make sure that it is mostly full of loving human relationships and joyful experiences instead of objects and wealth. For it is the things with no real value that are the most valuable and most likely to help you on the journey towards happiness.
Multiculturalism/Pluralism
remains an ever widening, layered dream. But it’s such a great dream, such a
worthy dream. Do we call it a failed experiment? When an experiment falters, do
we abandon it or do we carry on because the evidence points to a breakthrough?
Because we know it is worth it. Because we know the test subjects are many,
many, of millions and they can’t just be put back in the test tube. I believe
we’re far too close to quit now. Success is worth striving for. We have not yet
reached a place where we can say ‘this is what the dream looks like’ but we can
see it from here. The ONLY way to turn "them"
into "us" is to know them, to grow with them, to celebrate with them,
to laugh with them, to cry with them, to live with them ..... And suddenly
there is no them, only us. May we find all the ways we are just all human
beings being. We are more us than they.
I refuse to accept that Canada is a failed experiment. I refuse to believe we can not find the solutions that fit because we make them for ourselves. I refuse to believe we can not uphold the highest standard of human rights and still create a safe and welcoming diversity in which to grow and live.
Friday, 16 December 2016
I went to OZ to ask for courage, but it was hiding in my heart.
I’d be lying if I said
I just sit down and write. Most often the topics I write about have been
percolating, evolving, stretching, and flipping around in my brain for weeks or
even months before I ever sit down to type. Even then, the words seem to flow
through me more than from me …. And I agonize over each turn of phrase. I write
to deal with the emotional turmoil in my head, and to try to balance out all
the things I feel sad or mad or scared about with something that feels hopeful.
Sometimes that can be hard to do. I have had a terribly hard time trying to
find the words to quiet my fears for women right now. Something just changed,
there was pressure building up under that glass ceiling we’ve all been hanging
from, building and building, and our ears had normalized the pressure and we
stop feeling the squeeze. But something changed and the ceiling shattered but
the pressure wasn’t pushing up, it’s pushing down and the air is full of the
jagged shards of the illusion.
I have an opinion on
many things. I am rarely wont for a thought or two. I have been wrong and
right. I have always thought that I was careful about expressing it so I didn’t
hurt or offend others. I have convinced myself that it was ok that I had an
easier time expressing my view points when I was in the company of women and
men who I felt safe with. I told myself I wasn’t afraid. I told myself that my
opinion mattered. But the truth is that I know when I use my voice in the
spaces that it is really needed it is dismissed because I am a woman and, worse
yet, because I am a Mommy. My voice may get heard but it isn’t listened to.
It’s the monkey with a type writer …. “sure, it wrote a few lines of Hamlet,
but it’s still just a monkey”.
And it’s not only because I am a woman, but it is because I am a woman that my opinions are
automatically lumped into the ‘heart over head’ category. Men who let the heart
guide them are referred to as ethical or honest instead of sentimental or soft
hearted, but their thoughts are deemed irrelevant too. We are fast becoming a
society that sees compassion, ethics, caring, and prosocial behaviour as
weakness. We have made the heart the enemy, and the disenfranchised and the
frightened have filled the space left behind with hate.
In the last year or
two I have watched it bubble and rage. The hijab shaming, the resurgence of
blaming rape on the victim, the homophobic cementing of gender, the societal
backslide to viewing women as sexual gatekeepers, the ‘lock her up’ campaign,
the ‘ditch the Bitch’ mentality, the bone crushing hate of women in politics, the
dismissive treatment of female journalists, the attacks on the rights of a
woman to have autonomous control of her own body, the labeling of birth
control methods as unnatural or sinful, the treatment of sexual enjoyment as
dirty and not celebratory especially for women, the consent debate, the
terrifying threats against vocal women and then the trivializing of those threats by the same influential
people who incited them in the first place, and not to mention the 2016 election of
a truly terrible human being as President-elect of the US. On and on, our
possibilities narrow and blur. And then today
I saw a video of a man follow behind a young woman and mercilessly kick her
causing her to fall violently down a flight of stairs while his 3 friends
looked on. It’s awful to watch. But it feels like a symbol …. Like a sign. When
you make the heart the enemy the void does fill with hate but something else as
well, because in the end it's not the hate it took to do this, it's the utter
indifference of her as a human being that is terrifying. It’s soul crushing.
It's breaking my heart, but at least I have one and it's no time to stay
silent.
I love Wonder woman. She's my favourite superhero. She had a heart and she wasn't afraid to use it. But, let's face it, she had to use a gimmick to get heard. Every damn time an issue came up that needed her involvement she had to pour herself into thigh high stiletto boots, a bustier that defied the laws of physics and a skirted bikini bottom which required more ongoing grooming than I would think a Super hero had time for. Would anyone have listened if she showed up in sweat pants, no make up, and an intelligent heartfelt good idea?
I love Wonder woman. She's my favourite superhero. She had a heart and she wasn't afraid to use it. But, let's face it, she had to use a gimmick to get heard. Every damn time an issue came up that needed her involvement she had to pour herself into thigh high stiletto boots, a bustier that defied the laws of physics and a skirted bikini bottom which required more ongoing grooming than I would think a Super hero had time for. Would anyone have listened if she showed up in sweat pants, no make up, and an intelligent heartfelt good idea?
Let me tell you why
you need us women, us Mommies, us softies. You need us because we kept our
hearts full to do this work. Because we constantly battle to raise good and
decent human beings, because we endlessly balance the wisdom of parenthood
which innately dwells within us with the white knuckled panic of believing we
are doing everything wrong. Because we are in it for the long game …. We won’t
know if it worked for decades, and we’re willing to see it through. We know
that success for our child at the expense of someone else’s is no success at
all. We know that as parents no two of us are alike but when rallied around the
same goal for our kids we can make the impossible possible. We know how to spot
bullshit, even when we stupidly buy in. We know the head and the heart must
work in concert if we have any hope of getting it right. We have no time to
rest on our laurels or lick our wounds because they’ll be up again at 6 and
want food. We know the greater good is good for our kid and we know it’s good
for yours. We know any differences we have are leveled by the equal ways we
love our kids. We know our kids need boundaries, and rules, and consequences or
they are selfish tyrants. We know sometimes there is no solution so we must
just get on with the fixing work. We know sometimes you do negotiate and
sometimes you don’t. We know teaching them how to be grateful is the key to
their future happiness and teaching them to use their ambition to be their best
self is the key to their future fulfillment. We know that nothing boils down to
a black and white answer so we better align ourselves with people who hope for
the same good outcome for our kids as we do for theirs and nurture those
relationships. We know we will mess up, we know we are not perfect and we know
our kids aren’t either. We will yell, we will completely lose our shit, we will
say things we can’t take back ….. because we care too much to just leave. We
seek to make our kids better than ourselves. And isn’t that what every
generation should do? Shouldn't every generation work to make the one which follows better?
When we seek to become
better than what came before we align with a goal that transcends partisan
politics, religion, polarized points of view, and most certainly transcends
gender. You need us. The world needs us. The heartless have become the lyrics
and the music but the song is now wildly off beat. Turns out we need the heart
or we die. I am a woman and a Mother, and more importantly a person with a
heart. My heart has a compass which is always seeking true North and, although
it often spins, it is always trying and it’s not afraid to point into grey
places. It knows the answer often lies in the grey. You need my voice attached to it's strong heart, even
though you have always viewed it as irrelevant. Even though I did too. Because
it is powerful …… I, and the 'oh so many' of those like me (of any and every gender), are your canaries in
the coal mine and we’re signalling the alarm. You need us, and we are stronger and braver than any of us thought.
Friday, 11 November 2016
Uncle Vince's letter from Belsen
My great Uncle Vince Spowart lives on in memory as one of my favourite
people. He was the brother of my maternal Grandfather (who I was never
fortunate enough to meet) and was about the steadiest and most content person
you could ever hope to meet. He carried with him a strength and grace I can
only hope to grow into …… I’m not sure it’s in me.
George Vince Spowart served in the Royal Canadian Air Force during the
Second World War. He became a highly skilled airplane mechanic and spent much
of the war working on Lancasters, Halifax, and Wellington bombers, Typhoon, and
Mustang fighter planes. He was stationed in England, France, Belgium, Holland,
and finally in Germany. A few weeks after the liberation of Belsen prison in
April, 1945 he drove with a few fellow soldiers to the camp to see it. I’m not
sure he was prepared for what he saw and wrote a letter home to his parents
detailing the experience. By the Fall of 1945 he was home, in Canada, and soon
to be married to his true love. As a child, I often heard of the pictures he
took, the experiences he had, and the letter he wrote. I never saw them then,
and I have no recollection of him talking to us about his time during the war.
He was a happy, gentle person, and very rooted in the present, in the positive,
and in the small joys of life. He lost his wife young and spoke often of his enduring
love for her, he baked his own bread, he wore an infectious smile, and he
fiercely loved his kids and family. That’s what I remember. But still I come
back to this letter …… it sticks. And it deserves to be shared. But it is a
hard read, heartbreaking in it’s wide eyed naivety, and touching in it’s
tenderness and shock. It may trigger much so please read only when prepared.
And for the love of Pete, please remember it when it comes time to vote …….. it
is a slippery slope from talk of hate, to acts of hate.
I should also add that one of my other favourite people was German and
immigrated to Canada after the War. He was a “Nazi” in the sense that every
young man had to serve and was a “Nazi”, he was a gentle and kind soul. War is
complicated …… a game of twisted ideals played by men safe in warm, plush
seats. The horrors of war do not ever just belong to the victors. Remember. We,
as humans, can all do terribly human things if we fail to uphold beautiful
human ideals.
Uncle Vince’s letter was published in the ‘Cumberland Gazette’ on June
28, 1945. Some of the attitudes may seem a little dated but please know how
progressive he always was for his time.
“Dear Mom and
Dad,
Here’s
that son of yours again. I was going to write you the night before last, but
had nothing to say. I now have plenty to say.
I
went yesterday to the Belsen prison camp, the most horrible sight in Germany.
This time I was lucky enough to meet a few people who could speak English, but
I’ll start from the beginning.
Three
of us left camp early in the morning on a 35 mile trip to the camp. We caught a
truck going out of the gate that took us within 2 ½ miles of the camp. We
walked for about half a mile and decided there was no future in that so we
decided to just take over the first German car that came along. One came and we
stopped it. I had a bid wicked looking .45 revolver at my hip and the other two
boys were packing German Lugers so it was quite easy to talk to the driver and
we had no trouble getting him to see things our way- hence, in due time a
relieved driver ejected three airmen at the Belsen camp.
As
we came through the camp gate there was nothing out of the ordinary to meet the
eye, a gay splash of bright coloured dresses of the women was brought out in
contrast to the dull, drab, shabby dress of the men. They did not look too bad
but a good meal would have filled them out a little better, I thought ‘poor
devils’. I found out later that their stomachs were in such shape that a good
meal would have killed them.
One
of my friends had contacted an interpreter there and we were to find him first.
He was a Romanian lieutenant and had been a prisoner before the camp was
liberated by the British. He was a sharp looking man in his thirties, a man
that you like at first sight before he says a word. Introductions were made and
he spoke good basic English with an accent that added more colour to his
winning personality.
We
inquired about the burial grounds, explaining that we wanted to take pictures.
He grabbed three bicycles for us, then decided it would be a little hard to
give directions so he grabbed his Major’s car and took us down to the graves
himself. We were very fortunate to land there in time for the 10:30 burial.
It
wasn’t a pretty sight, but it was one which held your gaze as though under a
hypnotic spell. Every once in a while, I would snap out it long enough to take
a picture. The grave was about six-foot-wide, six-foot-deep and about 100 feet
long. The bodies were laid in layers in much the same manner as sardines in a
can. This has been going on for months but now it is a little more like a
funeral. An army Padre says a service. A huge army truck pulls up at the end of
the grave and eight or ten big Germans start pulling corpses roughly from the
truck. Every fourth or fifth is naked. It is just the last day or so that the
number of dead has been low enough to cover them up in sacking for burial.
One
pathetic sight was that of a baby wrapped in a cloth no larger than a towel.
This they laid beside the body of a woman that I was told was the Mother. No
wonder they died, her legs were no thicker than my wrist at any part. Those
that were naked, all the bones of the body were in plain sight. The skeleton at
St. John’s Ambulance Hall in Nanaimo looked in better shape, and at least it
looked happier.
I
have had reason to tell you little white lies in my life Mom – such as the
answer to “who took half that cake I was saving for supper”. I have nothing to
gain by telling lies in this letter. But to go on with my story ….
The
lieutenant was waiting for me to make some comments and I could find no words
other than “my God, what a grim sight!” He just smiled and said “it isn’t so
hard now, they have it more or less under control now. In the days when the
Germans were running the camps, they buried both the dead and those who were
not quite dead”. He said he had seen the ground moving as they covered the
bodies, some of them were not quite dead are were putting up a feeble fight to
get out.
The
three of us climbed into the car with the officer and drove off towards his office
not saying a word the whole trip. We were in no mood to make conversation.
Just
about that time the old clock on the wall showed 12:00 noon, which is the time
to eat, but I just could not. I am just not the type Mom, I’ve seen death from
the shores of Normandy a few days after D-Day all the way through to Germany.
We have been bombed, shelled, strafed, during which death came in many
different forms, to say nothing of pilots burned alive in aircrafts, and it did
not affect my appetite one way or the other. But this “go” at Belsen was just
more than I could handle. I was not sick, but just had no desire to eat.
The
people are a little crowded in the large brick buildings, but they try to keep
them clean since they were moved into them. They were the barrack blocks for
the guards. The buildings in which the prisoners used to live were all burned
down to prevent the spread of Typhus. Flame throwers burned them down and did a
good job. Any germs that lived through that will be too weak to do any damage.
I
wanted to see this part of the camp so I used it as an excuse to get out of
eating. It was a good mile to walk as the camp is a huge place, but fortunately
I got a lift with a visiting army Padre. His uniform was good to get me in any
place so I stuck by him all the way there.
There
is a large sign at the gate of this section of the camp, I took a picture of
it. It states that 100 000 people died in there and other things not very nice
to think about. The place was burned flat but there were graves all over and we
looked at them all. They are not the kind of graves you know. It was earth
piled about three feet high in an oblong about the size of one of our lots.
Besides these neatly piled huge mounds were signs in English. Some of them had
5000 buried in a grave no larger than a city lot. I don’t know how deep the
grave is but by the smell of the place it wouldn’t take much digging to strike
the bodies. All these graves had 500 to 5000 each.
The
German inventive genius had manufactured another little plaything for burning
bodies. This was placed in a handy spot where it wouldn’t be too far to drag
the dead. They had some nice gas chambers there too, I am told, but they were
all destroyed before I got there.
The
German’s are a sports-minded race as you know, so they made a point of putting
whipping posts about the place just for the soldier’s exercise, of course.
I
was to be back at the officer’s office at 2:30 so I had lots of time to spare
and walked through the woods around the edge of the camp.
It
seems the prisoners have been told to get all the sun treatment they could, so
they strip down and lay in the sun. The life these poor people have been
leading the last few months has left a large percentage of them either a little
mentally unbalanced or unmoved by sights out of the ordinary, so a little thing
like laying out in the sun naked meant nothing to them. I didn’t see it quite
that way, however, so I walked through the field of naked men and women in much
the same manner as you would look through Esquire with sunglasses on.
When
I reached the office, there was my chum, Johnny, and his lieutenant waiting for
me. From there we whistled down the road to one of the large brick buildings and
we began to see the brighter side of the camp.
We
went through a door on which there was a sign that said “Recreation Room” in
about six languages. The room was quite large and furnished to suit the taste
of the Germans, who could no longer use it. Large easy chairs, writing tables,
and two nice pianos gave it a comfortable appearance, and the presence of five
good-looking young women made me quite happy that I had gone there. This had
all been pre-arranged by the Lieutenant. I knew when he told me that they could
all speak some English. Introductions were made and we began to take stock. We
had to watch what we said as they all spoke English so we had to revert to good
old Canadian slang. Johnny’s description seems to fit as well as any, and I
quote “Dat ain’t de type of babe you snag on Tony’s Corner, dat’s da stuff of
the higher brackets”.
Two
of the girls, like the lieutenant were Romanians, one was a Gypsy, and the
other two were Hungarian and Dutch. One of the Romanian girls was very pretty,
with dark skin, black hair and dark eyes. Me, being a man, noticed she had a
very nice figure too. You, Mom, being a woman, will want to know what she wore.
She had a neat white skirt on and a brilliant red blouse. These stood out
against her dark hair and skin and she wore it well. The others were dressed in
a similar manner and they looked quite healthy and none the worse for their
experiences.
I
had been told that she could sing so I coaxed her to sing for us, which she
did, aided by the Gypsy who did not surprise me by wielding a wicked bow on a
violin. Her voice was, without a doubt, the best I have ever heard. I have
heard plenty of singers since I joined the service, from top-notch singers to
rock-bottom bores and never have I heard anything to equal this girl. Music
took up the best part of the two hours, and we got back to talking again. The
Dutch girl, it seems, is of Dutch nobility, and certainly looked the part.
When
Johnny had a go at speaking French to me to try and slip one over on them, they
shot French from all angles at us. One, two, even three languages – I can
understand them speaking that many- but they could all speak six! Three Canuck
Airmen were feeling quite foolish for a while.
The
girls told us more stories of cruel treatment at the hands of the Germans.
Johnny offered his sympathy and said soon they would be able to go home and
take up wherever they left off. The answer to that stunned the three of us when
they said they no longer had homes and most of them think they have no family
left. It kinda makes you think, doesn’t it?
I
wish I could tell what I have written to you, to every person I know. It would
give them a little to think about. Good Canadian blood was shed to put an end
to places such as Belsen camp. Let’s hope it wasn’t shed in vain.
Time
to go and eat Mom, and this time I’m sure I can handle it.
Your
loving son,
Vincent”
The afterthought to this may be to think it takes someone especially
evil to partake in such cruelty. To believe such horrors could only be
perpetrated by a monster. But I think the point is that anyone, everyone is
capable of all the best and all the very worst of what it means to be human.
And I don’t think it is the loss of the human ideal of kindness and compassion
that first sparks such dark times. I think it is the loss of the human ideal of
equality.
I believe Equality is the highest human ideal. The moment we see anyone
as anything other than our equal, the moment we draw a circle around a person or group and call them ‘other’, the moment we fall into ‘we’ versus ‘them’ thinking, we
leave the door open for small cruelties and tiny humiliations. Each small
unkindness emboldens and strengthens the next, makes it easier. Do we really
think we are so different? Do we truly feel we are so incapable of sinking to
such depths? Because we shouldn’t.
The ideal of Equality is undermined every time we break a rule based on
fairness because we decided it wasn’t for us, every time we demand a right
without returning the corresponding responsibility, every time we hurl
heartless words and judgements and punishments at any harmless soul we view as different,
every time we profit from the vulnerability of others, ever time we stand
silent when we should speak, every time we turn away when we should witness,
every time we allow power to stand in place of wisdom, every time we let money
stand in place of honour, every single time we forget all the things that make
us so terribly and beautifully human dwell in each of us.
Sunday, 21 August 2016
A Tragically Hip Good Bye
“There are three things we cry
for in life: things that are lost, things that are found, and things that are
magnificent.” ~ Douglas Coupland (Girlfriend in a Coma)
It’s the “last” Hip
concert ……… I don’t mean that to be facetious, and I actually hope I’m wrong …
I HOPE that I have 40 more years of watching Gord and the band play out my
Canadian rock poet fantasies, I hope he kicks this cancer shit to the curb and
leaves it there …………… but the odds aren’t in his, or my or anyone’s, favour …..
he is leaving us line by line, word by precious word.
When I started
watching tonight’s concert I thought I could handle it ………. As a fan from the
first album, a spectator to many a tour, and a lucky soul who saw the first
concert of THIS tour in Victoria, BC. Tuning in tonight felt like a patriotic
book ending of a National experience, a fan’s simple act of reverence. But it
was so much more. I wasn’t prepared for what happened tonight. The tearing
open of deep wounds. The hemorrhaging of emotions, this might really BE what
this really seems like, and they made it look easy enough to not seem like what
it is. The behind the scene of their embraces and kisses was so piercingly
intimate and genuine that it caught in your chest and let you know the night
was going to get pretty honest and pretty raw. They took to the stage with all
that grace and intimacy; as family.
“Any given moment – no matter how
casual, how ordinary, is poised full of gaping life” ~ Anne Michaels (Fugitive
Pieces)
There is a little friction
among the found fans and the old fans, the lost fans and the non fans ….. but
enough, this is not our path, for our Canadian path – the path that has always
defined us – is far more twisted and complicated than that. Our path is one of
misstep and overcoming, of individuality and unique weirdness ………. And what
could be more Tragically Hip than that? The truth is everyone, old and new
fans, true and fickle fans, have tried to pay tribute …….. tried beautifully,
and aren’t we better for the trying? Can’t that, at least, we all agree on? The
truth is that NOT all Canadians love the Hip, many don’t even like them, and
that’s ok …. Honest. The best way to describe why the Hip is still so relevant
to all Canadians is their mastery of the Canadian voice, their bent to the
crooked, their unique brand of weird …. And as Canadians we seem to adore that.
We can’t say why, but we do. You may not like the Hip, but chances are as a
Canadian you like love an artist or art form quite like them. We seem to
like our artists to show us the beautifully terrible and the terribly beautiful
about ourselves and then try to make those ragged pieces fit ….. to me that
sums up Canada.
“Yeah. We’re sweet but savage,
and I think a lot of Canadians are that way” ~ Bruce McCulloch, KITH
My family travelled to
Victoria, BC to see them open this tour. I was so grateful to have been able to
take our kids with us and also that they had seen the Hip tour before as well.
The Hip was well known for it’s quirky performances: Gord dancing and writhing
on stage, songs often taking sharps turns into dark places: tangents and tall
tales, and the amazing ability of the musicians to seamlessly keep up with the
ever changing landscape of their songs. God those guys can play. So, this tour
it really stood out how contained Gord was, how tightly the band played around
him (both in proximity and timing), and the strength it was taking to be there
(as a band and as a fan). I felt prepared for this CBC televised final concert,
because I had already seen one, but I wasn’t. I was a mess the moment they
started to play. Sobbing and overwhelmed. By the time they hit Little Bones
they had hit their stride but the awful truth of his illness kept shattering
the moments of perfect lucidity with waves from a broken brain, like ripples on
a still pond and all around helpless to stop it. My brother texted me as he
watched and made the insightful comment “I can’t help but wonder what he is
thinking … of us. Is he worried? That he will forget the words? He is using the
teleprompter because I think the cancer is eating the words away from him.” (He’s
a PhD in science but sometimes he can really turn a phrase) I answered back “the
brain finds a way, the rest of the show you watch his brain fire up and his
body turn to ash. He’s running on will. It’s phenomenal. I wish you could have
seen them live before, it was bizarre and wonderful, he danced and played with
the audience, he was a poet …. A poet with an amazing group of musicians who
joked he was a dancer. Every show was so weird and thought provoking and fun”.
But this tour? I’m not sure what we’re watching, we’re bearing witness to
something very personal, and it will be different for everybody.
“The first sentence of any novel
should be: trust me, this will take time but there is order here, very faint,
very human.” ~ Michael Ondaatje (In the Skin of a Lion)
The moments Gord
watched the crowd were so undefinable and very raw. This
feat that the band has pulled off, this experience they have generously shared
with their fans only worked because of the sincerity, authenticity, and
incredible vulnerability of the band members and their fans ..... something
small and precious and emotional; like a sun warmed piece of ocean glass
in your pocket. A mutual gift of gratitude. The band: Paul, Rob, Gord, and
Johnny somehow finding the power to will it all into being. I cannot fathom
where they found the courage and strength to honour their friend in this way.
“Conversation in it’s true
meaning isn’t all wagging the tongue; sometimes it is deeply shared silence.” ~
Robertson Davies (The Rebel Angels)
When Gord did speak it
was either to express gratitude or to issue a challenge. He is, at his core,
the kind of artist who likes to shine light into dark places, to never let a
self satisfied happiness go undisturbed. He expressed deep concern over the
state of the Northern peoples and specifically our Metis and First Nations
peoples. A parting shot reminding us we still had many wrongs to right. He
glowed over Prime Minister Trudeau and implored us to follow him where we need
to go on this. For what it’s worth I think Gord is right on both counts: that
Trudeau is worthy of the responsibility and that the responsibility is deeply
worthy of undertaking. Imperative in fact. I am so glad he did not shy away
from this part of himself. That this disease, this tour, this experience has
not eroded his character or sense of self. I love people who have a moral
compass that points straight and true, a good soul, a conflicted beautiful
messy unrelenting messenger. Cancer may be stealing his words, but not his
message. And the message he has always delivered has been one of the importance
of tearing open old wounds so we may try to heal them properly. To bear
witness. To tell stories. To never allow the pleasant to get in the way of the
real.
“I didn’t know how to say ‘I’m
sorry’ but the big tear that went out of my eye said it for me.” ~ Robert
Munsch (From Far Away)
“The two
most important phrases in the human language are ‘if only’ and ‘maybe someday’.
Our past mistakes and our unrequited longings. The things we regret and the
things we yearn for. That’s what makes us who we are.” ~ Will Ferguson
(Happiness)
When Gord hit the
stage in that amazing silver sparkling suit and they broke into “Something On”
the entire band seemed to exhale. The tight breath they all had been holding,
and everyone watching had been holding, suddenly exhaled. It was tangible. Joy
entered the room. The sorrow and the joy mingled as it had in Victoria a month
earlier, a feast of the bitter and the sweet. The joy fuelled the rest of the
night and honoured the pleasure they have clearly shared together over the
years. There was a quiet strength and dignity to it, a slow powerful beautiful
burn. I can’t imagine another band anywhere pulling it off. “Those guys fucking
love each other. I hope my kids can have friends they love that much” my
brother texted to me. “Yup” ……. Because how often does someone really let you
in like that to see? Brave isn’t a big enough word.
The void which would
be left by the loss of Gord Downie’s voice if we lose him will be immense. But
we can all endeavour to seek out the wealth of other Canadian artists … the
keepers of our voice, our Philosophers. Canada is full of people who express
the answers in search of our questions, who challenge us, who remind us of who
we are and who we could be. In fact, the only thing that saved me from utterly
falling apart during the entire CBC broadcast was putting pen to paper,
scrawling out words that passed through me, and soothed me. I searched for
words of other Canadian artists that resonated for me. I scribbled down
thoughts as they unfolded and the lens I watched through changed from one of
grief and loss to one of celebration and expression. I hope that people will
seek to express and actively find other Canadian artists who make them feel
like the Hip. I have shared many quotes throughout this blog from such Canadian
writers to inspire you. Please find the words that speak to you about this amazing,
complicated country. I think it could be essential.
“You wish you could tell yourself
that this is all too sentimental.
You want to agree with the person
who said, “There’s no salvation
in geography.”
that this is all too sentimental.
You want to agree with the person
who said, “There’s no salvation
in geography.”
But you can’t
and you’re beginning to suspect
that deep within you,
like a latent gene, is this belief
that we belong somewhere.”
and you’re beginning to suspect
that deep within you,
like a latent gene, is this belief
that we belong somewhere.”
~ Bronwen Wallace, a Poet from
Kingston who died of cancer at age 44 (excerpt from ‘Lonely for the Country’)
I’d still like to
believe that it won’t be true, that Gord Downie will live through this and
continue to front the Tragically Hip for decades. Maybe we can keep him. But
this felt like good bye; a knowing, bone deep felt good bye. And it felt so
incredibly special that they gave us the time and energy to do it. I wrote a
blog about my feelings after the band broke the news of Gord Downie’s illness
because I wanted to acknowledge how important they have been to me, even just
for myself (the link is below in case you're curious). I knew I would have to write again when the
tour was over, just as so many people have done, and express just how grateful
I feel to have experienced this. I have loved the Hip from their beginning. I
was there and we have grown together; they feature heavily in my soundtrack as
it were, and so many Canadians feel the same way. They have an ability to
create a song that feels written or performed just for you …. even when in a
room, a hall, a stadium, a Nation full of people who feel the same way. Hip
fans are all the authors of their own interpretations of Hip songs …… Thank you
Gord, Paul, Rob, Gord, and Johnny for being the
powerful subtext.
Let's get friendship right
Get life day to day
In the forget yer skates dream
Full of countervailing woes
Get life day to day
In the forget yer skates dream
Full of countervailing woes
In diverse as ever scenes
Proceeding on a need to know
In a face so full of meaning
As to almost make it glow
Proceeding on a need to know
In a face so full of meaning
As to almost make it glow
For a good life
We just might have to weaken
And find somewhere to go
We just might have to weaken
And find somewhere to go
Go somewhere we're needed
Find somewhere to grow
Go somewhere we're needed
Find somewhere to grow
Go somewhere we're needed
~ The Tragically Hip (excerpt
from ‘It’s a good life if you don’t weaken’)
In the end it was just Gord on stage as he simply
stated “Goodbye everybody. Have a nice life.” And no one doubted the sincerity
of that. It was just so fucking Canadian.
Tuesday, 12 July 2016
Bras. Lowering your standards to raise your spirits ... and girls.
So I realize I talk about my boobs with nauseating regularity ....... but at this point in our online relationship you may need to accept that it's not going to stop and embrace it. For me, my breast awareness mirrors my awareness and feelings about myself ....... both took a long time for me to accept, both suffered from self inflicted impossibly high expectations, both have gone south fast as I have gotten older. Pfffft. Also, I am at times both a figurative and literal BOOB.
And so I, as you all well know, have a drawer bursting with bras which make me ...... unhappy. They poke, deflate, bubble boob, cone boob, dangle boob, back boob, side boob, drop boob, uni boob, NW SE boob (I'll give you a minute on that one ......), and generally, literally and figuratively, 'let the girls down'. Sigh.
None of this is an excuse, but simply an explanation. I went to a store I will call Vancouver Hush-Hush and bought a $50 bra for the girls ... and the girls are happy-ish. Look, I WANTED to send a clear 'vote with your dollar' message that I will not support a company that makes lingerie for 8 year olds. I WANTED to hold my ground and not support a company that says it embodies the modern self actualized sexual strong woman but then creates advertising layouts which look suspiciously like the brain child of Charlie Sheen and his porn family, and runway events that appear choreographed by Hugh Hefner himself. Pfffft. I WANTED to buy into the notion that price equates quality and you get what you pay for. However, I went in and a lovely, shapely girl named 'Clinique Happy' (no, not really, she was named after a different fragrance but I'm protecting her identity) fitted me into a version of the same model of bra that has been my when-I'm-feeling-bad-about-myself-go-to for about 6 years. Of course, I had to exchange it the next day as the band width she talked me into was definitely too big and was sliding up my back (which means doooown my front) and I knew that would be the case but I was trying to be "nice" and then festered about it all night until I went back and exchanged it. She was nice about it. The girls are just happier being in the locked north and upright position with their friends the back boobs than they are heading south and dangling. Just saying.
To anyone who bore with me through this, my 8 millionth diatribe about boobies, the lesson is that sometimes you have to go with what makes you happy, sometimes you have to eschew conventional wisdom and embrace the fact that a cheaper item can and will out perform a self declared superior one, sometimes you can try to hold some semblance of moral high ground by participating in the real world and the parts of it you don't like by engaging in meaningful dialogue about the changes you want to see without actually abstaining from the industry you want to change (like a vegetarian who eats bacon). A good bra is important ladies, every girl with boobs knows it. All those bra-burning feminists of the 70s have come clean ...... few, if any, actual bras were ever burned. It turns out it was one of those seemed-like-a-good-idea-at-the-time ideas that fizzled because A. it was a largely symbolic gesture by a woman who didn't really need her bra and threw it in the trash can at the Miss America pageant protest B. they couldn't get the flame retardant poly blend material lit before the police showed up to stop them and C.from that point on every boobied woman at a rally said "hell NO, I NEED this bra". http://www.snopes.com/history/american/burnbra.asp
So that's my latest story in my continuing bra saga. I'm still not "there". I am still conflicted. I am still battling "squish points". I am still cheap as heck. But today I'm feeling ok about myself .... well, ok-ish, because I feel like the girls will be supported and look alright and because I expressed myself, and in any self awareness journey that's a start.
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