Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Weeding out the Bad News and Cultivating the Good



First of all, is there any other kind of news than the bad? Occasionally, yes, a “brightener” is allowed space, but can be quickly chased out of a news broadcast or written report by Breaking News of some disaster or by a dire development in an ongoing “story”.

A great mentor, Bijan Anjomi, recommends a total divorce from news reports on any media, for the good of our health and our peace of mind. This makes sense. We all know that the news media live on what’s wrong with us, and Them, and anything happening in the world, or our community.

The fact is, however, that the news can fascinate me, and has ever since  my year of training as a journalist at the University of Western Ontario in the late 1950s. We gathered around the teletype machine just outside the J-lab to glean the latest on the Hungarian revolution. We stayed up all night to follow the US election results. I would have to check history to find out who won in 1956, because it wasn’t the outcome that mattered to me then. It was the process, the ups and downs of the election returns, the excitement, the suspense that kept me rapt over and wrapped around the teletype.

All that cascade of thrills was long ago and far away when I spent happy months in the back country of Provence, far from newspapers. I had to find excuses for this disloyalty to my profession of journalism. It had already dawned on me that news items fade in importance rapidly. There was a certain toll on my emotions from the roller-coaster effect of a crisis developing, peaking and diminishing - at least according to the media. I could tell myself that the whole package of a newscast on television depends on how the stories are gathered, shaped and delivered. I can still remark cynically that the language of the news anchor is deliberately designed to poke my fear buttons. And so, I argued to myself that I wouldn’t miss all the drama, and might even enjoy something like peace of mind. This proved true.

Months after my blissful stay in Provence as a recluse, I shocked a friend with my ignorance of the assassination of a bishop in Africa. That was the only world event that escaped my notice while wandering over hills fragrant with wild lavender and thyme.

Over the years since that experiment far from the media I have been developing my sensitivities in various directions - some new to me, and finding I feel the better for it. I had been reading about our hollow selves, but I couldn’t take such philosophizing too seriously. It made me think of Gilbert’s play, “Patience”, where the Poet declaims a ditty about being “hollow, hollow, hollow” and asks the fetching milkmaid if she too feels hollow. Patience replies, “Thank you, sir. I have dined.” If there is a hollow in my inner being, all the better. That’s where my imagination is free to play - imagination that has been growing muscles.

My inner world and the world around me have been on a collision course like a couple of galaxies meeting and duking it out between pieces of themselves and mostly steering clear of each other, easily avoiding any direct impact. It can be distracting. Occasionally as I scan the news out of the corner of my eye, my imagination will seize upon an item that triggers a powerful emotion, like something bad happening to a baby. My imagination fills in the horrors around the details given in the news report, and won’t let them go. Never mind that there are millions of happy babies living sweet lives, loved and cherished, gurgling and opening innocent eyes on a world of wonders. I have to teach myself to focus on these children, and stop imagining that I could have done something to protect the little one in the terrible news report.

Discipline dictates that I must focus more and more on what’s going well in the world - beginning with me. As Richard Bartlett writes, the universe will simply echo the whining and complaining of my Inner Brat when things don’t go my way. Perhaps until I get inspired by what I do want, I could step back and take a break.

I wonder what’s going on in my inner garden? Neglect? Weeding out of emotions evoking the worst of the past? Cultivating the ground for seeding sweet blooms, and watering the places where they will soon send up delicate green shoots? Can I cultivate the patience to give seedlings time to show themselves, no matter how tempted I may be to yank them up to see how they’re doing?

How’s your garden these days?

Sunday, January 15, 2012

SEAWEED À LA PROVENÇALE

Who was it got the dippy notion
of plumbing briny depths of ocean
to raise this seaweed from its bed,
and in his ancient wisdom said,
“Seaweed is a dainty dish,
more delectable than fish,”
and, having taken this posish,
left us with these lanky strands
dripping from our hapless hands?

Before it passes through our lips,
are we to cut it into strips,
or do we simply boil and boil
and also fry? If so, what oil
will do the trick to make it tasty?
By no means let us now be hasty.

Such culinary challenges
do not really need unhinge us.
This one leave us quite undaunted.
“Just what I have always wanted!”
are the words we hope to hear
round our board, resounding clear,
as the connoisseurs proclaim:
“Seaweed! Yet another name
to conjure with in cooking books
and rouse your neighbour’s envious looks!”
As, with lightly racing pulse,
you graciously serve up your dulse.

While I was writing these verses, my husband got down to business in the kitchen. He seized the seaweed and cut it into strips, stared at it meditatively, then sliced the strips into diamond-shaped pieces. These he fried lightly in olive oil, adding soup flavouring, fennel, thyme, garlic and tomato sauce, but deliberately  omitting salt. He topped up the  mixture with water, covered it and simmered it gently until tender. Then we tasted it.
It tasted like seaweed soaked, fried, smothered in tomato sauce and herbs and gently simmered until tender.

©Helen Heubi, 1977

Monday, January 9, 2012

Versatile Blogger Award

Back in December just before the Christmas rush (excuses, excuses), I received a magical message from Mary Chase, Ph.D. I had been graced with the Versatile Blogger Award.

I am now notifying you that I have accepted this award, which qualifies me to pass it on to each of you. You are in random order with at least one of your blogs:

Leticia Austria
http://spectrumofperspectives.blogspot.com

Jennifer Jilks
http://mymuskoka.blogspot.com/

Karen Harbaugh
http://pollyannaofkaren.blogspot.com/

Nancy O’Carroll
http://www.femininepowerplay.blogspot.com/

Monika Aebischer
http://theolivesparrow.typepad.com/

Justice Bartlett
http://justice-bartlett.blogspot.com/

There are a few rules, below, if you like. You will find them by scrolling down in Mary's email. I am adding my perspective to them here:

Thank you, Mary, for this delightful honor. In your honor I have even used American spelling, at least in this paragraph. I may backslide later. For the information of the other recipients your blog is: http://nulla-mary.blogspot.com/

You dedicated your blog with tongue in cheek to one of your (and my) anti-heroes. I dedicate mine and my websites to all who are prepared to read at least one page of them and who actually do so. I love to be read, don't you all? Some of mine are: http://itllcometome.blogspot.com/, http://cometothegravenhurstoperahouse.blogspot.com/, http://greenwoodsongs.blogspot.com/, http://alongwoodlandpaths.blogspot.com/. My websites: http://intoverse.com/, http://eccolibrium.com/,
http://pro-coaching.ca/

My request: if you are not in touch with each other yet, please do write each other welcoming emails, and let us know all your blogs and websites.

Seven things about me:

I. I look forward to Isaac Tigrett's unveiling of his new project on the Mystic Inn of the Seventh Ray on 1 February 2012. We are into sevens here. His website is: http://www.mysticinnofthe7thray.org/

2. I have just finished re-reading Jeoffrey Kendal's autobiography, The Shakespeare Wallah, and feel like starting it all over from page one.

3. I'm thrilled that I've been able to create three websites with an obsolete version of RapidWeaver on my 2005 Mac mini with the now obsolete Tiger OS. Obsolete or not, the effect can be immediate. If I want to change a comma, I can go right in there and do it myself. Sometimes with the very obliging customer service help of FatCow.

4. About great singers, I went backstage to say hello and goodbye to Elisabeth Schwarzkopf after her farewell concert in Toronto. We established that we were both going to live in Switzerland and would yodel to each other from one mountaintop to another. What a great lady with a swift sense of humour. From her sotto voce discussion with her husband as I drifted up to be first in line I gathered she did not appreciate the "bravo man" in the gallery, who effectively destroyed every pin drop silence that she should have had at the end of a particularly moving piece. So, I wish to all singers and other musicians many perfect pin drops to come.

5. My funniest backstage encounter was after a concert by Lois Marshall in Barrie, Ontario. Her accompanist, Weldon Kilbourne, introduced me as one of his pupils, and we all broke out in raucous laughter at the sight of both me and Lois wearing a leg cast each. I had fallen down some stairs and she in her bathtub. That looked as if I were carrying hero worship a little too far. A great lady, fine musician and superb singer she was.

6. Mary believes in reincarnation. Even before I was sure I did I used to take people back into possible past lives. Now I do, and still do after further research and training, I have learned that with Past Life Regression (PLR) - you never know what's going to happen. The tour guide into the past has to be totally on the alert and ready for anything. I love it.

7. It's OK for the Facilitator in a PLR to go partly into trance as the time traveller does completely. What a relief to learn this from a top level PLR guide. And, yes, it is not only possible but quite desireable to be both in trance and highly alert.

Thank you all for delighting with your writing. Be reading you soon.

Cheers,
Helen


This is what Mary Chase wrote to me:
Sunday, December 11, 2011
The Versatile Blogger Award
How nice is this? Fellow blogger and writer extraordinaire, J.D. Mader, has made me a recipient of the very distinguished Versatile Blogger Award. For a very good read, check his blog, Avoiding the Stairs. I can only say that I am humbled and would like to dedicate my award to Newt Gingerich, in hopes that he will pass along his lead in the Republican race to another more worthy than he (but still beatable) -- as I am doing in  accordance with the rules of this reward.

Yes, there are rules.

1. Thank the blogger who honored you and be sure to link to his or her blog, as I have above. Thank you, J.D. You are a gem.
2. Share seven things about yourself.
3. Pass the award on to five deserving bloggers.

So seven things... I am advised these ought to be witty, but will hope readers will settle for succinct.

1. I am currently reading Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman by Robert K. Massie. Next on the bedside table is Death Comes to Pemberley by P.D. James.
2. My favorite line from a movie: "Are you a good witch or a bad witch?"
3. It took me nine years to get a B.A. because I kept changing my major (classical studies, French, drama, folklore, English).
4. I love opera. When I was twelve I sneaked backstage and got Joan Sutherland's autograph.
5. I also love Willie Nelson. He hugged me once in Augusta, Maine.
6. I believe in reincarnation.
7. Last time, I didn't.


And now, the next recipients of the Versatile Blogger Award are:
Helen Heubi
Bill Woolum
Tish Jett
Tom Kepler
Peter Pappas

So, newly honored writers, enjoy your moment in the sun. Speak only the truth. Go forth and enlighten.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Caregivers

Having just turned 81 two days ago, I still have much to learn. Today, I listened to a free session on colds, flu and the like, and tapped along with the EFT expert invited by Jessica Ortner, who first learned about EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques's Tapping Solution) when she was deep in bed with a nasty flu. I got some insights that I want to note, although I am already free of some of the beliefs addressed on Nick and Jessica Ortner's site.

For example, I no longer believe I have to get the Christmas Cold. I haven’t had a headache worth mentioning in years, or even much of a cold - with a couple of exceptions, as when I was briefly at Friends’ House in Toronto a few years ago to take some course or other and Judith Amundsen looked after me so beautifully. Rita Woods came to my rescue on another Toronto visit. Both loving, smart homeopaths.

Now I have to remember next time I go to the Big Smoke to cloak myself with Light when diving into a large bowl of a few million beings radiating all kinds of vibes. I wish I had known about that when teaching in large high schools, but I had no idea then.

Up here in Muskoka, a place with a heritage of healing, I do not pay attention to all those tv ads that assume we are going to get sick. And there are a lot of them for me to close my eyes to. I don’t take the flu shot because after the confusion a couple of years ago it wasn’t clear how beneficial or how harmful it might be.

Patterns of Illness
The EFT expert on the Ortner recording did bring out the question of patterns of illness from childhood. When I was seriously ill, very young, I picked up on my mother’s anxiety a lot. There was something positive in the air too - probably my angels and guides and God, that brought me, and her, through.

When of school age I had chronic colds. This could have been through allergies to coal dust, milk, who knows. It got so I felt punished more than cherished because of Mom’s repressed resentment of having to look after me, as her mother had looked after her younger sister Amy, who was “always ill”. As a young widow, Grandma had a lot of anxiety because of the death of little Henry at two, of diphtheria. She didn’t want to lose any more children. Mom resented Amy, who she thought was a sissy and a spoiled brat hypochondriac.

Sadly, after her marriage Mom developed asthma, and had severe attacks. The steroids prescribed for that may have affected her heart. She died in her early sixties. Amy died younger than that of cancer, probably contracted when painting airplane dials with radioactive chemicals during WWII. Several of the women on that job gave their lives, years later, for the war effort, although it was never proved, that I know of. Mom’s and Amy’s father died young of cancer, so it was also in their background. Two of their brothers also died of cancer, perhaps the third one too.

Now that I look back at my own childhood pattern of illness, I felt partly punished, partly cared for when ill. I kept myself busy with Book of Knowledge, building with toy logs or minibricks or Orphan Annie’s student flying kit, or dolls. Tried not to be a nuisance. I eventually lost the ability to know for sure whether I was sick or not, or to tune in accurately to my body. I kind of took over my mother’s questioning attitude: “Are you really sick or are you just imagining or pretending?” It became more and more difficult to know as I grew into adulthood.

During my first year of  teaching I was living in Midland and coming back to Toronto on weekends. I still had a room in my parents’ house. One weekend it became evident that I had caught the measles - again. Mom expressed quite frankly how she felt about nursing me and bringing me my meals for a whole week. “Your home is not a place to come to when you’re sick.” Huh? I covered up the deep hurt feeling at hearing this with a hardened, cynical decision to re-wonder how welcome I was in my parents’ house. Not. Less and less over the next few years until after my marriage to Paul, when I became kind of acceptable.

Going through a session of tapping (Emotional Freedom Technique) can bring out all kinds of old stuff that it is high time to address. What was I to think about the remarks Mom used to throw me while I was at university, like, “This is not a hotel”? “Everything was fine until you came home.” I heard that more than once when arriving right after classes at the university - late or early afternoon. This could have been the kind of refrain that kept me away a lot too, and reinforced the other criticism often thrown my way that “Home is not just a place to hang your hat”. In my final year, when I had to get decent marks, I had to study in the library, and came home in the evening after it closed, because otherwise I would have been yanked from my books to do household tasks regardless of essay and exam deadlines.

Now every time that sort of memory floats up to the surface like a dead body, thanks to the power of EFT, I can also use the mantra of Ho’onoponopono for healing and cleansing. I don’t know what I did to arouse all that family anger, and it doesn’t matter. I just say, “I love you. I’m sorry. Please forgive me. Thank you.” I’m saying that with compassion to me and everyone involved in the memory, no matter where they are now.

Before I married Paul in 1964, I was really ill with pneumonia, with repeated colds and flu and from that typhoid shot that left me feeling I was going to die. I arrived on my first visit to Europe, skin and bones. Paul took over as my care-giver. I got a lot better over the years of my marriage, but still got lots of colds and flu and migraines. I would wake up at night to find him standing over me with a remedy for coughing, which had awoken him (a light sleeper with apnea that was never diagnosed).

After Paul died in 2005 at the age of 87, I was on my own, and it was my turn to look after me. Thanks to his loving memory, I got better and better! Less worry about him, about me. Headaches disappeared. Colds and flu had less power. I could picture him coming and caring about me, and that was an enormous comfort. I no longer feared punishment if I did fall ill. I accepted myself when I did. EFT is a great help there with, “Even though .... , I love and accept myself.”

Right now I have a cold that I had put on the back burner and tried to ignore. Doesn’t make it go away, just disguises it. I realized it was interfering with my treatment for sleep apnea, recently diagnosed. Thanks to a session of EFT to point out that this a good time to face any buried resentments and fears and also to apply tried and true self-healing approaches to enhance the effect of CPAP treatment for sleep apnea.

I have tools for health: my own wise mind or higher consciousness, my guides in spirit - Sai Baba, my spirit guides, angels, archangels. I know something of EFT and can practice Ho’onoponopono, to sweep away dark, clinging junk from the past and from others, and to clear the house or temple that is my body, mind and spirit letting in more and more Light and Love.

http://www.thetappingsolution.com/
http://www.self-i-dentity-through-hooponopono.com

Friday, December 23, 2011

A Twenty-Eleven Christmas Verse

Twenty-eleven had me fooled  -
barely begun, it suddenly Yuled
leaving me wondering, “Why, why, why
did the Year of the Rabbit so swiftly fly?
Nothing much happened to me, myself.”

In contrast, it seemed the world outside
was ripped apart. Jack Layton died
right after he captured the position
of Leader of Canada’s Opposition.
A media feast of stunning events
of which we had no time to make sense
was dinned in our ears out of Tahrir Square,
Norway, Libya and elsewhere.
Earthquakes, tusnamis - what next was coming?
The total effect added up to: numbing.

“I’m thinking of doing a Christmas letter,”
I mentioned to a passing elf.
“A poem,” he said, would be much better!”
explicitly dreading a tedious dose
of proudly pompous purple prose
all about boring family biz,
and just how amazing everyone is.
This verse has thus been commissioned for you
by the elf, a.k.a. my brother Hugh.

I find I quite like family news
from families much like mine, or Hugh’s.
The Christmas letters in my mailbox
have spared me from earth-shaking shocks.
This year I’ve noticed welcome trends
by relatives and by bardical friends,
who present their year, without undue chatter,
like simple fare on a homemade platter.

Patterns apply, but experiences vary,
from Linda and Gary to Eric and Mary.
Entrances, exits by near and dear
mark the passing of every year.
We cannot remain in the selfsame grooves
as life brings changes, and many moves.

Peter sold his house, but I didn’t sell mine.
I was glad it was there, all cleared of clutter,
its walls renewed with a sunny shine,
when I moved back in without a mutter
after a stay in Springdale Park,
with its glorious canopy after dark
when the stars reveal their far-flung lights,
and the daylit woods abound in delights -
like the deer skull Eloïse “showed and told”
and mushrooms worth their weight in gold.

While I was admiring a northern sky,
Peter and Carol found, close by,
their Toronto condo, and moved right in.
Eric survived a scary spin
into an icy Muskoka lake,
and now he’s learning how to bake
batches of cookies, as Dad-at-home,
while I concoct this rambling pome.

He lost, too early, his dear Aunt Tina,
whom everyone loved who’d ever seen her,
while Carol’s mother passed away
in Virginia, I am sad to say.

Newly arrived at Mary’s place
is Cadmon, a doguess with bouncy grace,
and a delicate way of dismantling Lego,
selectively deaf to commands of, “Let go!”

Young Kate Allen is bound to go far,
newly recruited by the Star,
while Mary in Markham immerses Grade Two
in her trademark French. At a “petting zoo”
her own kids found instruments fun to play.
Christmas will be a crazy day
of multiple music and rafts and rafts
of colourful presents, created as crafts.

Linda’s been living her Thoreau thing
on a ten-acre chunk of Adirondack.
She and Gary winter in town till spring.
When wild flowers bloom, they will be back
in their rustic rural greenery base
with squads of squirrels for Sadie to chase.

I’ve run out of fuel, and so will close
this bulletin, where snows are no-shows.
Never mind! I wish you a fabulous Fête,
and a New Year more blessed than ever yet.

Love,
Helen


First Christmas for a child born in May

Friday, December 16, 2011

Christmas Pitfalls and Pleasures


God bless the master of this house,
Likewise the mistress too,
And all the little children
That round the table go.
Love and joy come to you ...
Old English Carol

Children, elders and Christmas went together like pancakes, butter and maple syrup. No one was allowed to be lonely. What a privilege it was to live among several generations, and find ways to celebrate love despite our differing creeds.

There were a few pitfalls, easier for us kids to skim over than for some adults. Like Santa Claus. When my parents were very new at the job, thus vulnerable to expert opinions, a particularly vocal Toronto child psychologist was frightening anyone who would listen with dire theories of the dangers of letting children believe in  Santa Claus, or, more fearful still - fairies. Fairies can be brushed away like cobwebs, or left in ill-lit corners, seemingly forgotten like religions older than Christianity, where they had pride of place.

Santa Claus, on the other hand, loomed up every Christmas, entering Toronto in triumph on the final float in a big parade. From early November a jolly man in a red suit and a long white beard sat on a throne in the toy department at Eaton’s department store, asking kids what they wanted for Christmas.

We were different, but not so different that my parents dared to deny us the same thrill that all our neighbours and cousins took for granted. We got to watch the Santa Claus parade, and go down and see Santa himself at Eaton’s. My mother must have been very worried because she tried to explain to me on the way back from one such visit that Santa Claus wasn’t real. For years afterward she repeated with relish her story of streetcar passengers around us convulsed with laughter when I chimed out in a penetrating four-year-old voice, “But, Mommy, Santa Claus is so real. I sat on his knee and I felt him!”

By the age of nine I had sorted the wheat from the chaff of the Santa Claus mystique. I remember explaining gently to my mother that she need not worry about my little brothers believing in the Jolly Old Elf, who was just a way of teaching people the spirit of giving and of kindness. “We have it in our house all the time, and especially at Christmas,” I assured her. “That’s what Santa Claus stands for. I’ve come to understand that gradually;  it didn’t hurt at all!”

In our own household Christmas was orchestrated with precision and style. There was no severity, just the serene assumption that we would go along with the rules. After we hung up our stockings on Christmas Eve, the living room door was closed, and it stayed closed until five minutes after eight on the following morning.

No question of wildly tearing downstairs in pyjamas, long before parents were awake, the better to open all the presents around the tree, leaving wrappings strewn and ribbons festooned over the floor. Only once, when I was about ten years old, did I see such undisciplined joy when invited to celebrate Christmas Eve and morning in another household; I was not impressed. Their joy was not my idea of fun, either. Where were the gentle rituals attended by all generations? Where were the trays to display each person’s gifts? And where were the cardboard boxes? (One for recyclable wrappings and ribbons, and the other for twisted paper to kindle a fire in the fireplace or furnace.)

On Davisville Avenue, we could not help waking up before first light, all excited, but our parents were ready for that. We were not to get out of bed until called around seven, but there would be plenty to do there, all cosy while Dad shoveled another load of coal into the furnace.

In the grey light of dawn I could feel an unaccustomed weight at the foot of my bed, and glimpse a row of dim shapes that were not there when I said “Goodnight.” Turning on the light, I would find all my dolls in their best bib and tucker, organdie dresses freshly washed and ironed, velvet cloaks mended, face paint renewed. Until I outgrew my dolls and my brothers their stuffed animals, our mother somehow managed to get all this refurbishing done on Christmas Eve in addition to stuffing stockings, wrapping gifts and getting Christmas dinner all ready to cook the next day. When we were older, we would find one present - a game or a book at the end of the bed, to keep us busy until breakfast.

Christmas breakfast, timed for 7:30 sharp, was an exceptional one. No porridge. No healthy whole grain cereal. On that one morning of the year we were allowed our choice from a tiny box in a variety package of what now would be called junk breakfast food. We could revel in frosted flakes and other nutritionally hollow treats.

At five minutes to eight, we telephoned to the aunts next door, who came over wearing their Christmas corsages on their coats. At eight we were all lined up, in front of our closed living room door, in order of our ages, youngest first, with Aunt Anne at the rear, looking over most of our heads. My father opened the door, and we all filed in to find the tree lit up, in a sea of gifts, and stockings hanging from the mantle-piece above a cheerful fire.

We children emptied our stockings first, under the sentimental gaze of our elders. Then each of us, adult and child in turn, opened one present, watched by all the others, and so on around the room. The idea was to make them last all day, off and on, and the next, right up to my birthday, on the 28th.

At ten o’clock all these frivolities were suspended so that we could hear the King, or Queen, give the royal Christmas address that went out around the world. After the royal speech, my father would take us children out for a walk, not too far or too long, but just to get some fresh air and get out of my mother’s way while she finished cooking the dinner. We would want to be back in time to receive our dinner guests.

My mother’s relatives predominated at Christmas dinner. Uncle Matthew and Aunt Ethel, whose children lived away out west, were often honoured guests. Grandma and Aunt Tillie’s eyes twinkled above pursed lips, as we rationed the youngest member of the family to “only three more questions”, one of which was inevitably, “How many more questions do I have left?”

Evenings were spent with the Allen clan and the Oxford Book of Carols. The first such gathering that I remember was up on Hillhurst Boulevard, at Uncle Elliott’s. Aunt Ruby had chosen to dress her tree in blue lights and silver ornaments.

Uncle Berk Chadwick (cousin Mary’s father) had brought a whole battery of rhythm band instruments from Montreal. We children were grouped as an orchestra between the tree and the piano, where Aunt Jessie provided the tune and the harmony. The rest of us supplied the percussion. Each of us had to choose a favourite piece, and then conduct it.

Swing had just burst upon the music scene. While the rest of us crowded around the buffet, the teenaged cousins were down in the basement recreation room, listening to Benny Goodman. Over the ensuing years cousin Bill, our star conductor of the rhythm band, would join our cousin Jim and his friends as they “jammed” in that basement with clarinet, flute and guitar.

Our Christmas evenings  alternated over the years between two houses. At my next-door aunts’, Jessie’s thinly sliced molasses and porridge bread melted away, platter after platter, but before the refreshments, we usually managed to persuade her to play her “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring”, or “Sheep May Safely Graze” - Bach chorales arranged by her for piano.

As our numbers grew, with friends, fiancés and fiancées joining us, we gathered at Uncle Jack and Aunt Helen’s grand and gracious Russell Hill Road home. By this time, the von Trapp Family were promoting family singing all over the Americas, and later, the world, by doing it themselves. Uncle Jack played some of their recorded music before the carol singing. The beautifully blended sound of this famous family inspired some of us to attempt more Bach Christmas chorales, and continue over the years to add more new carols to our repertoire. Somehow, Rudolph never got his red nose in.

The more popular Christmas music, dinned into shoppers’ ears in downtown department stores from early November throughout December can become wearing, especially since the standard repertoire consists of only a dozen or so pieces. Hearing “When Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by Night” a zillion times by loud-speaker, incited our family carol singers into inventing a new game: find a new tune.

And so the shepherds invoked at our carol evenings watched their flocks to “The Flight of the Earls”, “The Vicar of Bray” or even “Forest Green”, which is usually an alternative tune for “O Little Town of Bethlehem”. The Oxford Book of Carols was not only for Christmas.. We caroled about spring, summer, harvest, Easter and Mothering Sunday.

As the years went by, we had to stretch our time together to fit our expanding repertoire of carols. One year it took us three separate evenings to sing through our all the “must sings”,  and allow the various instrumentalists, soloists and smaller part-singing ensembles to perform.

Then, along came the babies, and often half of each couple remained home. The voices that were left grew less robust, ceasing one by one.

Yet, I wonder if they are truly stilled. Perhaps somewhere Uncle Berk is leading little angels in a rhythm band, as he did us one Christmas. Each angel will get to choose a favourite tune, as we did. Then it will have to get up and conduct the band.

Uncle Matthew may very well be guiding newcomers from inside the pearly gates to their long-awaited heavenly homes on divinely designated Golden Streets.

Among Green Pastures there could be a sunlit house with open windows that let out the inimitable sounds that Aunt Jessie could coax out of a piano when she played Bach’s “Sheep May Safely Graze”. I can hear her still practising for accompaniments. With those rippling fingers as backup, she could have made a gazoo-player feel like an artist, and even play like one.

In some realm of Paradise, where “hearts are brave again, and arms are strong”, I see Uncle Jack on a clear blue lake, making a canoe almost fly over the waves, double-blade paddle flashing in the sunlight.

I can imagine him organizing a flotilla of canoes, rowboats and sailboats for a sunset singsong, as his parents and their friends used to do on the St. Lawrence River. Ringing from rocky shores I can hear again that magnificent baritone voice, leading Jack’s favourite hymn: “For All the Saints” - the Vaughan Williams tune, of course.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Geneva, Switzerland, as seen by Bill Bryson, and me

The American author, Bill Bryson, spent two days in Geneva, wandering around longing to be somewhere else. That could have been easier than he guessed, had he happened on a sign pointing to a local beauty spot called Le Bout du Monde, and had he had someone with him to translate the sign into End of the World. He must have been there the wrong day. Le Bout du Monde boasts a large stadium where the Americans of Geneva go to celebrate the Fourth of July after the biggest, splashiest parade outside the US.  They bring bands all the way from California, complete with majorettes twirling batons with abandon.

He must have hit town on a Sunday when everything except the cathedral is closed tight and all you can do is window shop. Many restaurants are closed too but the one at the Bourg-du-Four isn't. (Great fondue, coffee and steaks too.) Guess he didn't like the atmosphere of Calvinism leashed. Unleashed, as in the days of the Escalade, or any other day, it can be colourful.


Obviously he wasn't there in early December, at the time of the Escalade, when kids go around shouting the first three verses of the Genevese National Anthem in 17th century Genevese, all about beating the pants off the Savoyards who tried to invade but were beaten off by getting sloshed by cauldrons of hot soup over the battlements. I love the Escalade, when people smash huge cauldrons of chocolate with marzipan veggies inside and shout, "So perish the enemies of the Republic."

Bill couldn't have been there for the Fetes de Geneve fireworks either with all kinds of food from all over the world along the quais.

He says everyone walked hunched, not looking anybody in the eye. There he's right. I soon learned not to look anybody in the eye in downtown Geneva because if you do they know you've seen them and expect you to get out of their way. And so I soon perfected a half-focused gaze, enough to see where I was going. That way I melted through the unseeing crowds like butter, because they could see me not seeing them. This peculiar gaze allowed me to recognize people I knew, and there were quite a few of those, or to make contact with anyone I didn't know if I wanted to. And sometimes I did, as when listening to buskers or interviewing them.

Bill goes on to say money is everything in Switzerland. He confuses Geneva, which is not Switzerland, with Switzerland as a whole. Geneva happens to be a republic within the Helvetic Confederation, as well as a City, a State and a Canton and contains many ethnic communities including English, American, Portuguese, Spanish and Scottish, and is the Canton least inclined to vote against being nice to foreigners.  If he could understand French, the official language there, the odd time you hear it spoken, he would hear lots of talk about money, and be proven right.

As for the squeaky cleanliness of the sidewalks, I don't recognize the place from his description. People keep lots of dogs in all those apartments, but do not scoop ...

He probably never had to visit a doctor's office, where he would have been greeted with a polite Bonjour on entering from everybody in the waiting room, whether you know them or not.

Then he speaks of declining the advance of "Geneva's only prostitute". Rosemary is a very nice woman, who used to keep an eye on the little shop of an unworldly Indian lady I knew. ("She's not there today, and last time she forgot to lock her door" ...) I know Rosemary's not the only one, because in broad daylight I heard this dialogue in French shouted across a street over my head between a woman in an elegant pink suit and two colleagues on the other side:  "Hey, you don't look like a whore! All dressed up like a lady," and her cheeky reply with a proud toss of her head, "No, I don't, but I am one." I couldn't help chuckling, and I could see they were trying to shock prim-looking me. We shared a hearty laugh as I passed by. To me Geneva rhymes with the unexpected.


Hey, Bill, learn at least one other language, and see how the world opens up in technicolour.

And try for some less tasteless humour while you're at it. OK, sometimes you surprise me into laughing, but I find you too cynical for comfort.

Still, since Ken and Phil speak highly of  your walk in the woods, I look forward to its return from its wanderings back to our local library, where my name is down for it.

It didn't last long in my hands. Bill's and my woods bear no resemblance to each other.