Tuesday, October 23, 2018

The human connection

       
I used to do things that I shouldn’t… at least a things that a wide-eyed, well-meaning girl of twenty shouldn’t do. I drove a string of beat-up classic VWs and believed to the bottom of my heart that driving past a hitch-hiker without picking up him, or her, or them, would break some fundamental law of the universe.

Of course, they had to also choose to get in… and my brakes only mostly worked (the heat and windshield-wipers never did). Never mind the rotted floorboards, the missing gas pedal (it was a cable line with a bolt through it, I’d drive in bare feet and pull the throttle open with my toes) and the stabilizer bar held in place with a shoestring. But somehow it worked out.

I also spent some time going alone to downtown Vancouver, chilling out on the corner of Main and Hastings and handing out granola bars. No real reason. I just figured maybe some of the regulars were hungry. Maybe I was in danger, but I didn’t feel it. I remember one of the regulars asking if I needed help. Was I lost? Did I need directions?

I travelled in Europe at 20. Once, wandering around lost on the streets of Worms, Germany (I seem to get lost a lot), I passed by a group of young men from north Africa. It was an isolated part of the city and they took instant notice of me, jeering and cat-calling. I nodded and walked quickly past, hoping to give the impression that I knew exactly where I was going and what I was doing. I turned the corner. One of the men peeled off from the group and began to follow.

The harder I tried to head for the main city centre, the more narrow and isolated the roads seemed to become. The man sped up, approaching me aggressively and still cat calling.

What should I do? Run (I was loaded with a 50lb backpack)? Scream? Fight?

Then the words hit me, they seemed to come from outside of me and they filled me up with warmth.

“Give him his dignity”.

I stopped and turned. The man was right behind me now. I stuck out my hand and smiled. I said, “Hello! My name is Charity, what’s yours?”.

I don’t know how it happened, I don’t know if he had time to think about it. He took my hand and shook it almost by reflex, and told me his name.

And everything changed.

I asked him about where he came from, if he had any family. He told me about his sisters and mother in Morocco. I shared some of my background as well.

We chatted like new friends do. After a few minutes, he asked me if I would like to go for coffee with him. I told him it was wonderful to meet him, but I had a friend waiting for me, and we parted with a wave and a smile.

I’ve always wondered what he told his friends. Something nice I imagine.

Now that I have children, and a very concerned husband, I take my personal safety more seriously than I used to but… I’m still the same. I really believe in the goodness of humans, given dignity. Despite what the news tells you about the ‘others’, the poor, the addicted, the displaced, the gang members, the immigrants, terrorists, LGBTQ2+… I learned that day that fear is what you carry inside of you, and the acknowledgment of basic human dignity goes a long way.

Saturday, October 20, 2018

2011-2018

My first child didn’t sleep. Neither did my second. Between the two of them it was four years of my brain slowly unraveling. It wasn’t postpartum… as far as I understand it, it was more like the slow eroding of the rock by the sea. Two hours a night, three and a half, some times four. Never more than four.

My second child was one month old when my husband left to attend RCMP training in Regina, Saskatchewan. I wanted him to go. His current job made him miserable. I told him he was the right man for the job, and I was the right woman to support him.

Because I am strong and my well is deep.

......................

Don’t worry about money. We can do it, I tell him. I’ll host international college students. I’ll cook and clean and teach them our culture. I can drive them around town. The money will be good. The children will be safe.

I’m talking with an agent as he prepares to go. My dream agent. She’s from New York, from my favourite agency. She loves my book and wants to represent me. But… it’s too short. 10,000 more words? 15? 20? Deepen the characters please. Strengthen sense of place.

He leaves. I start to have nightmares, and anxiety attacks. I fall asleep while bathing the baby to jolt awake in a panic. I ache with the loss of my love, my partner as he trains. My toddler screams with raging night terrors, screaming for her daddy.

Just 10,000 more words. It might as well be 100,000.

He comes home to visit, twice. For a day. then flies back. He won’t come again. It hurts too much to say goodbye. He cries every day. He nearly fails his midterm. But somehow, he passes the second time.

Now it’s time to think about placement. Where will this new job take us? What will we do with the home where I birthed my children? Who will tend the garden with the wild cherry tomatoes that eat the yard? Anywhere, we say to the RCMP (and thank you for asking) anywhere far and wild. By the forest or sea. Somewhere where we can build a home. Anywhere but there.

There. Where the future dies. Busy people, small parking spaces. The houses are too big. Too close, built of cardboard and greed. 

Big houses, with lidless soulless eyes and gaping high ceilings like the gaping trachea of a wide hungry beast. 
Houses that consume the land they squat on to raise the prices. 
Houses that grin with toothy jewelled teeth. Boats and quads and a place for hockey equipment and a truck and a car. 

Costco has toolboxes now. Big shiny red ones. And little electric cars with music. Hummers and sports cars. For boys to drive around the cul-de-sac.

We will go. Anywhere but There. Where the soul dies. Where the moles are murdered and dandelions are poisoned. Where the wild coyote shudders and dies. Shedding his dignity in clumps of mange and starvation. Choking on plastic coated Christmas lights next to the inflatable reindeer.

Where there are different words for murder. “Targeted shooting” “gang related” “isolated incidents” make empty people in empty houses feel better.

Where it is never ever ever fucking quiet. 

The birds are the only thing that grow still. Voices lost in the hum of traffic. Beasts of tin belching poison into our air. 

We must go 
There.

Where dragons of a different nature begin to raise their humped concrete backs up into the sky. Stealing the sky as they squat across the land. “Guaranteed vista. Magnificent views,” they roar.

Fuck you. I think. 

The shadow they cast is icy cold. There is no sky. They have eaten the mountains. And what do they see? A parking lot? An expanse of smaller cages at their feet? :Where us lesser beings scrabble to make a home. 

I don’t write. I don’t sleep. We came Here. My lover returned from training and we were ripped from our home in four days, like a babe ripped early from the womb.

Instead I must fight. I must destroy. I must forget compassion and chill my heart. So my children can have the best. I must take, hoard, deny. Be better, be stronger, be faster.

I win. 

I have it all. My husband has his career. My children are in the best schools. My writing is published.

My mind is as empty as the router box plugged in behind the couch. At last. The good life.

I lose.

Because this well only draws polluted earth.
My husband breaks and crumples inside. The job beats him about the head.
My children can't hear the call of earth. They don’t know the song of sea.
I write meaningless articles without sustenance. Easy to chew and swallow, cheap to consume.

I am eaten to bone.

I die.

I stand outside in the wind and the rain. Barefoot on a shorn strip of grass. I scream to the sky and let my tears water the earth. Weep and apologize for whitewashed sins. For the sins of our ancestors. I am sorry. We am sorry. Here. Take my blood, my toil.

I tend the garden. The roses grow, the vines bear fruit. Then another kills them because they are too big, too wild.

I weep.
I begin again. The roses return.
I plant for the bees, I sing to the trees. Each one will grow as a friend.

The sky burns. We hide indoors and tremble. 
I weep in fear and loss. My chest tightens and I can’t breathe.

I wait. I pray. I begin again.

I can no longer fight, I can no longer win. I do not belong here. I cannot be this city. It is full of monsters.

But I can grow a new one. Plant a seed.

A city that honours origins. That expresses thought like the many blooms that fill a garden. A city that stirs and remembers green, that remembers the sky, the trees and the sea. And joins it’s soul with the gifts of nature. A city that connects like the mycorrhizal network of shrubs, trees and seedlings. Old, new, and strange.

Breathe.

Love your roots. Share your pain, show your need. Be strange. Digg deep. Use less plastic.
Vote.
Sleep.
Know the humanity of all living things.
There’s no must, there’s no should, there’s no “have to”. When it doesn’t work, change the rules and move the goal post.

I breathe. I begin again.