Friday, November 6, 2020
So Similar Siblings
Thursday, November 5, 2020
Terror in the Night
This post is a departure for me.
I choose instead to dwell in the past.
It's peaceful there.
But I had an experience . . .
I’ve always thought that I lived in a safe, peaceful world.
As much as anyone could at a time when acts of terror are delivered up with our morning coffee.
Let’s face it, when one lives miles from the nearest town and many more miles from the nearest city, the chances of world-attention-grabbing incidents are few.
But on that night, I had a soupçon of what the rest of the world is enduring . . .
We were on holiday.
Suffice it to say we were deep in the Canadian north woods.
A place of few ‘civilized’ comforts.
Where an early-morning discussion of a group of Ravens or the scramble and squabble of a family of squirrels through the trees is much more likely than the reality of a newspaper or an early-morning commute.
We had been there over a week.
And in that period had witnessed—several times—the glorious and awe-inspiring fury of a summer storm, but only caught the barest whiff of the latest heinous world-wide assaults.
It had been wonderful to be able, just for a time, to let the world and its pain pass by us.
That night, we said good-night to our neighbors and ducked inside our dependable little tent.
The usual night sounds lulled us and we settled peacefully into sleep.
Then, at 3:00 AM, I was jerked suddenly from my slumber.
Someone was screaming.
A hoarse male voice.
Screaming.
Then I heard the sounds of others.
Also shouting.
At one point, they began to chant.
Then more screaming.
And, the most terrifying of all, the pounding of dozens—could it be hundreds?— of feet on the ground.
Were they growing closer?
Okay, in this morning light, I know now that it was probably a drunken group of holidayers, maybe watching a drinking game or contest of some sort.
But at the time, in the dark of a moonless night, when one is snatched from a deep sleep to unfamiliar surroundings, the sound was terrifying.
Maybe it was because of the real and constant danger that seems to be closing in on us in these dark days.
Maybe it was my own vivid imagination.
But for a while, I felt what millions of people the world over feel every single day.
Terror.
Helplessness.
Waiting for the inevitable juggernaut of twisted power to overtake and crush us.
Unlike those peoples, I awoke in my peaceful little world.
Unscathed.
Secure.
But, just for a moment, I had a glimpse.
And my heart is now truly theirs.
Wednesday, November 4, 2020
Getting Badgered
Yes. |
No. |
Tuesday, November 3, 2020
Building. Or destroying.
This is as political as I get. Because it is a politically important day.
True story.
Of course, with the pandemic, that statistic may have slowed somewhat.
But only slowed.
During my thrice-daily walks, I still see a lot of construction. Houses. Businesses. Streets and infrastructure.
At one of the three schools near me, a portable fence was erected a couple of weeks ago. Then men and machines appeared and scrabbling began. Great heaps of earth were thrown up and men and smaller machines boiled about the site.
Finally, their project progressed enough that an actual structure began to take recognizable shape.
Ah. A future ice rink.
One of several that passed through city planning a few months ago.
As I stood and watched those men in their so-productive activities, I was suddenly reminded of something my dad said years (and years) ago.
“Louie,” he said.
He called me Louie. Just FYI.
“Louie, everyone in the world has a need to make their mark. The weak do it by destroying. The strong do it by building. You have to decide which you are. One of the weak? Or one of the strong.
Will you make your mark by destroying?
Or by building?”
I’ve often thought about Daddy’s wise words.
Because, of course, he wasn’t speaking strictly of things created with hammers and nails.
He was also speaking of relationships.
Of business models.
Of governments.
Of living.
On this day of days, when so much is being decided by my beloved brothers and sisters to the south, I am again asking my father’s question: Are you going to make your mark by destroying?
Or by building.
My prayers are with you.
Monday, November 2, 2020
More Than Learning
I know you might find this one hard to believe,
But after grade three, teachers had a reprieve,
I followed the rules and did what I was told,
While others cut up, I’as not cheeky. Nor bold!
And so to my Dad, and his ‘doings’ gigantic,
I’ve had to resort for this week’s ‘High School Antic’!
Dad and his Partner-In-Crime, Mom |
Now my Dad, and his friends (not sure which the trailblazer),
Tried all sorts of shenanigans,
(bunch of hell-raisers!),
From ‘car-theft’ at 10 to
work-pranks at fifteen,
And lots more tomfooleries
betwixt and between,
But one of my favourites
pops up to the top,
In more ways than one, as
you’ll see ‘fore I stop.
See, Dad was mechanical, and
understood gears,
And had to support him a
large group of peers,
The bunch of them (this
is just how mischief spreads…)
Got a prank of
significance into their heads,
Their high school
headmaster was a man good and true,
Did his best for his kids,
to them knowledge imbued,
He wasn’t a man of
material means,
What he had was
well-used, often mocked by his teens.
He had an old car, a ‘jalopy’
some said,
It had seen a few years,
part alive and part dead,
Well, one day those boys,
without much of a ‘think’,
Disassembled that car
just as quick as a wink,
With wrenches and tools
that they brought in from home,
Thus ensuring that old
car would ne’er again roam,
Now your thoughts on this
matter are surely allied,
Your thinking those boys
needed well-warmed backsides,
Please know ‘fore you
drag the switch out (to disproof),
The boys re-assembled it.
Up on the roof.
Cause Monday’s do get knocked a lot,
With POETRY, we all besought,
To try to make the week begin
With pleasant thoughts,
Perhaps a grin?
Have crafted poems for you to see.
And now you’ve read what we have wrought…
Did we help?
Or did we not?
Next week, we’ve something you won’t hate
‘A Domestic Incident’ from Spike’s Best Mate!