29 January, 2023

Hemmed wanderlust

Dreaming of summer
Flowers bloom only to fall
I drink more mulled wine.

28 January, 2023

Battling with the winter darkness

Putting on my shoes
Winter greyness cloaks my heart
I seek the dawn's light. 

27 January, 2023

Across the way from us

Sleeping on the street
Suddenly he disappears
Seeking warmth somewhere. 

25 January, 2023

Early morning walk

Walk looking down
Sidewalk surface a painting
Splattered pigeon poop.

24 January, 2023

Defeatism in practice

Start every New Year
With promises to write more
Why don't I last long?

23 January, 2023

Cognitive dissonance

Steaming ginger tea
Burning the back of my throat
Cold winter nose shines.

21 January, 2023

Can or should I look away?

Outside my window
Someone without a home sleeps
New neighbour of sorts.

(This post is part of my "Growing Up & Growing Old" project.)  

18 January, 2023

Reneging on a dinner invitation

Blah... rain, hail, snow
I cannot make up my mind
Fickle friend tonight. 

17 January, 2023

Where is my will power

A whiff of French fries
Slowly walking home from work
Bugger temptation.

15 January, 2023

Morning walk

Barefoot shoes slipping
On icy dicey sidewalks
Pigeons watch, laughing.

13 January, 2023

Chuckle of the day

Tiny child walking
Holding rainbow umbrella
Wind tips them over. 

09 January, 2023

For my brave dear sister

Whenever I watch the Wizard of Oz film, I think of Karen as the lion. She might not have always felt strong, yet she was brave from the top to the bottom of her being. She was brave to have lived her life as she did. She was brave enough to live as long as she chose to and no longer.

Karen and I have a varied sisterly kinship. I knew her well until we were teenagers. Not so much once we were adults. Thankfully, fatefully, we became part of each other’s lives once again in the last eight or nine years. So please forgive the jump in my storytelling.

I knew Karen as an artist. When she was 18, and I was 15, we both left home. She rented this “small house” (slash derelict summer cottage) in Hudson. I moved into a “small apartment” (slash mould-ridden basement hovel) in Montreal. Karen was passionately interested in weaving. She was given a chance to work under the tutelage of a great local weaver, interning with her over the summer. She even bought herself a loom, which took up most of the tiny space she had in her house. She invited me to visit for a few days. We pretended to be adults, but we were still very naïve.

What I remember the most about that visit was the light shining out of her eyes. She loved weaving. She loved her day-to-day life, which was so different from the life of suburbia she wanted to move away from. She wanted to live the life of an artist.

Looking back over the last forty years since that visit with her, I believe she stayed true to her dreams. Even if you take into consideration all the constraints she experienced through her personal circumstances, or those posed upon her through the social norms she was born into, and particularly those that her illness fated, she always was an artist in the way she saw the world and how she used her hands. This is truly inspiring. It is a part of her legacy.

And then, about eight or nine years ago, Karen put together what we called the Hadley Family Council. Daniel, Kim, Karen and I would get together every few weeks to share stories from our childhoods or even present lives or seek advice on how to overcome any current crises we were experiencing. But mostly, we would pontificate on the marvels of our children and our children’s children and how their very existence brought pride and joy to our hearts.

We met not as quibbling siblings but as grown adults without any residue of past resentments. We gathered as adults with varied but shared histories. It is hard for me to describe to you the amount of love and kindness that was ever present in that space we created. All of that happened because Karen persistently sent out monthly invitations. It was clear that those times together meant much to her. Because of this, we showed up whenever she sent us an invitation.

Those times meant the world to me too. Kim, Daniel, and I continue to meet every few weeks. We light our candles so that Karen can take part as well. Salut, my dearest sister. May you be free and at peace.

(This post is part of my "Growing Up & Growing Old" project.) 

08 January, 2023

Morning musing

Raindrops sting the windowpane of our living room. A lone Christmas tree rolls off the sidewalk, propelled by the winds. Buses waver around the moving object onto the other side of the street. A few teenagers pass by with too-cool-to-notice detachment oozing out of their steps.
 
It doesn't take long for a father taking his two children to school to prop his bicycle on a streetlamp and wrangle the tree back to its proper place with the other discarded trees waiting to be picked up by the Stadtwerk.
 
The man's two children stand bored by their bikes, watching their father listlessly while rain drips down from their helmets onto their noses.

07 January, 2023

To those who cannot face winter

 


Early morning tea
Gazing at my neighbour's place
Christmas lights still shine.


05 January, 2023

Short winter days

Curtain of darkness
The streetlight pierces its mantle
Off to work I go.

01 January, 2023

A great and gentle man


Gerhard (1925-2022)

In love and gratefulness.

Gerhard was a great and gentle man
A gentleman. Someone who spent
His life... and what a life... all
Ninety-seven years of it as an explorer
Of literature, an educator, a genius
Of wordplay and puns, an Anglophile,
The reciter of Goethe's works, and,
Most definitely a family man and
Loving husband. 

A man much loved. Marianne met 
Him 73 years ago, was married 
To him for 69 years and loved him
Until the very last day of his life.

(This post is part of my "Growing Up & Growing Old" project.)