I'm Not Gone ... It's Just Me Getting Back to the Basics of Life ...

Sorry folks; for anyone who actually reads my rantings ... I'm not gone. I'm just on vacation.
For some silly reason, I thought a camping trip to Canada with Smilin' Vic and Kiddo would be the perfect time to catch up on blogging.

NOT.

But it's been an amazing opportunity to catch up on s'mores, spooky camp side stories, camping breakfasts, UNO, frigid morning lake dips, moose sitings, Anne of Green Gables retellings, country song sing-alongs, and so much more.

An expat's opportunity to catch up on seven years of lost 'simplicity' and 'the basics of life'.

"So baby, let's sell your diamond ring
Buy some boots and faded jeans and go away
This coat and tie is choking me
In your high society, you cry all day

We've been so busy keeping up with the Jones
Four car garage and we're still building on
Maybe it's time we got back to the basics of love"
[ From: http://www.metrolyrics.com/luckenbach-texas-lyrics-willie-nelson.html ]

Don't forget me ... I'll be pining away in Doha before you know it....

Y'all Come Back Now ...

Nothing prepares you for the loss of a parent.

There is absolutely nothing you can do as a child to steel yourself against the inevitable moment when you realize you have lost the one who whispered soothingly into your ear when you were afraid, the one who kissed booboo's better, the one who taught you how to sing, the one who showed you how to love, the one who introduced you to life and all the world has to offer. There is nothing ...

We know we will lose our parents. There is a law written under the stars that says it must be so. We don't know when, we don't know how, we don't know where. But we know ....

In some cases, we will lose them to death; in others to anger. Drugs or alcohol may have robbed you of a parent, or perhaps they were taken from you before they were ever yours, victims of a desire to remain free, of an inability to truly ever take on the parent role.

In my case, I am losing my father to a veil of forgetfulness, to a quagmire of muddled thoughts and confusion. I am losing him to a spiteful and unforgiving disease of the mind that is slowly robbing him of the knowledge, dignity, independence, skills, and talents he spent a lifetime accumulating.

But I steadfastly refuse to believe it will rob him of his spirit. We're not there yet.

I still refuse to fully accept that he will not come back to us of full body and mind. Even though deep down I know. I know...

I know intellectually that it will come to that if the cancer does not take him from me first.  But my heart banishes the thought.

As I watch him dozing in his lazy boy recliner, I drift back in time, thirty-odd years, to afternoons where we would sit in this exact same way. I was a child, he was at the peak of his career. He would come home exhausted, pop open a beer, sit back in his chair in front of the TV and just doze off. And I would watch him. He seemed so big then; larger than life. I would wait for him to wake up and break into a rendition of Kenny Roger's "Lucille" or other such country tunes of that era. He always woke up smiling.

We were expats. My mom and my dad were pretty much my world. I lived for those moments when he would wake up from his 20-minute snooze, refreshed, and then we'd go into the kitchen where we'd take out some crusted rolls, cucumbers, kalbasa sausage and cheese, and set about making a snack and talking about nothing and everything. There was such wonder in exchange. He was invincible. He could make everything make sense. He could make everything better.

He thought everything I did was so great. He would get me to talk in a British accent, a Texan accent, a French accent. He had never known a 10-year-old who did accents so well. He would listen to me play the organ. Oh, my, wasn't I amazing? Surely I had a gift?  He would watch me practice ballet; how did I ever get to be so good? This mountain of a man made me believe I had it all going on. He helped me believe in myself. He gave me a thousand little gifts; some that were obvious, some that I am discovering now as I struggle to come to terms with this filthy illness. Some that I am sure he will leave behind for me to discover once he is gone.

He never, ever, not once let on that he might not be invincible. Not a single time. Damn him.

As I sit here watching him doze in his lazy boy chair, I think back to earlier this afternoon.  There was a birthday party downstairs. There was music, and old country tunes, and dancing. And I sat next to this big bear of a man and let myself be transported back in time, I was just his little girl again. And I asked him to dance with me. And he tried; it seems we both still don't realize he's not invincible. He was the first to admit defeat. His legs couldn't bear his weight unassisted by his walker. And so we sat back down, and listened wistfully to the old French Canadian songs being sung. Every once in a while, he would remember a few words and sing or hum along. Every once in a while I would feel the tears well up and I would stifle them as quickly as I could.

I let him write on my i-pad to distract him from his inability to dance, and he loves it; like a child discovering a new talent. I watch our roles reverse, as I encourage him in his newfound computer skills, egging him on past his frustration at not getting it right the first time around.

After the party is over, we come back to his room. He is exhausted. He sits down in the lazy boy, has a small glass of wine, spreads a blanket over his knees and falls asleep. And I watch him sleep. He doesn't seem so big anymore. His body and his mind are betraying him. But he is still larger than life. I am still an expat. In a way, so is he, I guess. An expat in his homeland. And this time around, the unknown land is within himself, and there is no fibre optic cable, no Skype to keep us connected across the ocean of disappearing memories.

I continue to live for that moment when he will wake up.

He wakes up and he is hungry. I go to the grocery store on the corner and buy crusted rolls, salami, cheese. And we set about making a snack, talking about everything and nothing, jumping back and forth sporadically across this disjointed time continuum vortex.

And I think everything he does and says is so great. I listen to him explain to me how he is having trouble remembering. How his frontal lobe is affected, and how this makes distant memories seem recent, and recent memories seem distant, or even inexistent. For a while, he is so very aware of his shortcomings. So very insightful. I think he is amazing. Surely there has never been a victim of Alzheimer's so brilliantly aware of his circumstances?

And we eat and talk about nothing and everything. After a while, the same questions come up over and over again. I give the same answers over and over. Where do I live? Do I work? Do I know that beautiful kiddo staring down at us from a picture hung on his wall? Yes, I explain, she is my daughter. Ah, yes, he remembers ....? "But did I adopt her?" No, she is mine. He remembers I was told I couldn't have kids but he doesn't remember that some divine force intervened and gave me the gift that is Kiddo.

He remembers that I am married to a good man. But sometimes he forgets that good man's name. He knows that I am only visiting Montreal, but can't remember that I am staying at my sister's. He knows he is full, but can't remember that he had breakfast. He knows he is nauseous but forgets he is getting chemo treatments.

Nighttime comes too quickly. I have to go. He is tired, sitting on the edge of his bed, ready to let sleep have its way with him. He is still big, but he looks so fragile. He is singing an old song, and he is happy; it is a sad song about betrayal, but he remembers every single word. How very 'à propos'. He doesn't want me to go, so he repeats the chorus again ... he's still sound enough of mind to know I would never leave mid-tune.

I fight the urge to say "dance with me, Daddy", I stave off the damn tears. I lean in gently to give him a hug and a kiss. And he says, "You don't have to be afraid to lean on me when you kiss me goodbye ... I would never let you fall."

Still wearing that unshakeable invincibility cloak. Damn him.

He asks me to turn off the lights as I go. I do. I turn to say one last goodbye, and I see him still sitting on the edge of the bed, surrounded by nothing but shadows. It seems his eyes are closed. And as I pull the door shut behind me, I hear his voice - an echo of the boom it used to be - whisper "y'all come back now".

I think he'd be proud. I hold it together, I stay strong. I walk away with the bearing of a woman who believes we are both invincible.

I get to my sister's, lay my head down on the pillow for the night. I think of him sleeping in that faraway place of everything forgotten.

The floodgates open.

The hand that will not let me fall ...

The hand that will not let me fall ...

36,000 Feet Above and 6472 Miles From Me

I'm flying solo today, off to spend a week or so with my dad, trying to get some precious time alone with him to create a few more two-minute memories that I can hopefully package and bring back with me.

I'm trying to acclimatize at 36,000 feet. 

I think I've finally come to terms with the continuous vibration that naturally emanates from a 242 foot long metal flying bullet spewing fuel out of its engines at a rate sufficient to keep the beast coursing through the heavens.

I am about 4 hours into a 13 hour flight.  I've been awake about 9 hours, but since I've traversed a few timelines now it is actually only six hours later than when i woke up. 

We are suspended somewhere above Poland ... not actually suspended, more like catapulting across it at over 550 MILES/hr. 

According to the flight information on the TV screen in front of me, it is -61C outside ... BRRRR.  Thank goodness I brought a wrap; it was 35C when the cab dropped me off at the airport this morning.  A 96 degree fluctuation in the weather would be considered extreme even by the hardiest of Atlantic Canadians (you know the saying ... 'if you don't like the weather out East, just wait five minutes.')  But a 90C fluctuation?  nunhunhhh.  That's pretty harsh even for us Cold Coast folk ... 

I know it's cold because the old lady in the row across from me is wearing a knit cap.

She is a part of a much larger group of people of all ages, from elementary to golden age.  They are wearing badges that say IOM .... I will have to google it once i am back on Terra Firma.  The group is traveling with one single fair-skinned blonde lady of a decidedly eclectic and granola-like existence.  I'm tempted to ask them where they're from, what they're all about.

Unfortunately that might lead to the impression that i am sociable and elicit actual conversation with strangers, which i pretty much suck at.

The younger ones keep on coming to sit with the blonde lady seated in front of me, surreptitiously squeezing the window shade up, much to the chagrin of the flight attendants, who have repeatedly come forward to tell them to pull it down.  Apparently the attendants would rather keep the vibrating, humming cocoon dark  so as to motivate our collective sleep, punctuated here and there only with drool, a snort, or the dreaded silent killer. 

But these kids don't much care about entertaining farty dreams ... their dream obviously revolves more around absorbing this experience of taking to the skies, around floating around this vast expanse of nothingness they see outside that window.  Flight is a most obvious first for this group.

Halfway into the flight... We are somewhere just South of Iceland now, three times as high above the surface of the ocean as the Titanic lies below.  I try not to think about the close to fifty thousand feet of nothingness that separate me from the next closest solid surface.

My bottom is not feeling too numb;  this is usually the point where everything starts to ache.  Perhaps the half-hearted attempts at pilates, together with vit D and vit B injections are actually working?

My compression stockings seem to be helping ... yet i can't help but wonder if my legs will literally pop out once i remove the socks? They definitely feel tight.

Toilet has not been too much of a problem. Smilin' Vic booked me a great aisle seat 4 rows ahead of the toilets, close to the front of the plane so I don't feel the turbulence so much.

Unfortunately the Indian Sikh and Nepalese mountain woman seem to be perfectly synchronized to my urge to pee. Four times now, I have gotten up to go immediately as the old bearded man is closing the door behind him. Twenty minutes is his average length of visit to 'the facilities'. 

Based on what I've witnessed, he has not figured out the flush function although I strongly suspect he initially made the mistake of not closing the lid before flushing (if you've ever tried this, you realize it has the same effect as an overfull blender without the lid on). 

The Nepali woman seems to always get up immediately after me, her timing impeccable. She stares at me with absolute dejection in her eyes as she pleads wordlessly for me to relinquish my spot I the waiting line. Which I do, every time.  It's my own fault for making eye contact.

Rule number one of flying: do NOT make eye contact.  No friendships to be forged in the 'loo lane'.  It's every man/woman/child for themselves when it comes to airborne bladder matters. Unless you are stupid enough to make eye contact. "Arghhhhhh.... Damn me for being so weak!"

I've been introduced to Suburgatory, officially my new favorite series.  I watch all six episodes.

I watch The Silver Linings Playbook with Bradley Cooper  ... love it!  Wonderfully bleak humor.

Twelve hours in...  I am wondering if my mom who is vacationing with her sisters in Rimouski realizes that i have just flown over her ...that I am now cruising over La Malbaie ...

I haven't slept; I can't sleep in moving vehicles.  I've now been up about 16 hours after about four hours sleep last night. I'm starting to become undone. I'm becoming emotional. Fatigue is weighing down on me; it's literally like a heavy blanket, and every once in a while I nod off; then my head lolls and I awaken suddenly, grabbing maybe four or five minutes 'sleep' at a time.

I'm thinking of the lady seated a row behind in the middle aisle, how she is obviously grieving.  She is seated between her two young daughters and spent the first few hours of the flight sobbing quietly, her older daughter, who is maybe 12, wrapping her arms around her.  She has fallen asleep with her head resting on that stoic 12-yr-old's shoulder.  My emotions are getting the best of me. I want to reach out to comfort this stranger ...

And then I finally let myself settle on the real cause of my angst.  It is the child and husband I have left behind for nine days ... 36,000 feet below, more than 6,000 miles away, 14 hours from me...

I close my eyes, and I cry.  Just a bit.  Silently. It'll go by fast.  It'll be ok.

Love you and miss you Smilin' Vic and Kiddo.

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Show Me the Money!!!!

Want to know the trick to spotting an expat?  Ask him/her for ​change ... and watch them agonize as they empty their change purse, desperate to find the right currency.  Watch Euros, Canadian Dollars, American Dollars, Indian Rupees, UAE Dinars all come spilling out.  Watch the expat's confusion as he/she tries to re-circuit his/her brain to the country/denomination equation.

​Random wallet opening ... if you're an expat, a minimum of three currencies will pop up ...

​Random wallet opening ... if you're an expat, a minimum of three currencies will pop up ...

We're headed back home for a bit.  Every time we leave the country, we open up the safe and empty out Kiddo's piggy bank to see what ​coins and currency we have collected from voyages past.

​Just an example of Kiddo's piggy bank stash:  1 Rufiyaa Maldives, 10 Thai Baht, 1 Philippines Peso, 1 American dime, 50 Dirhams (Qatari), 50 Cent Euro, 2 Swiss Francs, 2 British pounds

​Just an example of Kiddo's piggy bank stash:  

1 Rufiyaa Maldives, 10 Thai Baht, 1 Philippines Peso, 1 American dime, 50 Dirhams (Qatari), 50 Cent Euro, 2 Swiss Francs, 2 British pounds

​It's always an adventure.  Who'd have thought checking out the home slush fund would open up the floodgates to memories of journeys past, of travels to exotic lands, of exciting voyages and family trips filled with precious memories worth umpteenth times more than the collective value of those bills and coins?

Who'd have ever thought I'd be walking around with Rufiyaa from the Maldives in my pocket-book?  ​I might have dreamt it once ... now I've been there three times ... I have lots of coins to remember it by.

The coins themselves are worth little more than the memories.  But the memories are worth all the gold in the world.  Days and nights spent watching the sun rise, shine and set over the Indian Ocean.  An afternoon in awe gazing at the ruins in Petra.  A night of wild abandon on Bangla Road in Paton, on Phuket Island in Thailand; visiting go-go bars and riding three astride on a moped to go watch Thai boxing.  Afternoons spent skiing in the Alps.  Autumn mornings in Tuscany; Smilin' Vic making a fire to keep the damp out and sitting out on the terrace to watch the sun rise and the dew evaporate.  Hanging out at a gay cocktail bar in Soho that served the best blueberry martini ever before heading off to see Les Miserables in London.  Seeing Dubrovnik through the eyes of a traveller when Smilin' Vic had only ever seen it as a peacekeeper.  

The money in my pocket book, in Kiddo's piggy bank, in our bank account; their value is truly found in these memories.  The currency itself is meaningless if it doesn't give greater meaning.  

Obviously we have dreams; to build a house one day, to send Kiddo to university, to retire comfortably.  But we've tried to keep that all in perspective; we don't need much to be happy.​

Along the way, the dosh has given us the journey.  And the journey is worth so much more than the money.​

​So empty out your wallet.  And tell me where you've been.  Or look at those coins, and tell me which ones you'd like to add.

Kiddo's world coins laid out by world flag map, Disney princesses, Philippine conch, Russian matryoshka dolls, a Leaning Tower of Pisa globe and a mini St. Paul's Cathedral.​

Kiddo's world coins laid out by world flag map, Disney princesses, Philippine conch, Russian matryoshka dolls, a Leaning Tower of Pisa globe and a mini St. Paul's Cathedral.​

Thank You, Thank You, Thank You ... From Me ...

I need to preface this by saying I am so happy to have discovered 18 new bloggers through this latest experience.  I have gotten to read their tales and experiences.  They introduced me to lives so dissimilar to mine, yet intrinsically linked by the simple expat experience.  Thank you to them all for sharing their experience and their view on the world.  I am so much richer for it.

Now on to the real self-indulgent reason for this post ...​

I am so thrilled.  I can't hide it.  I'm trying to be modest about it, but it's not working.  My submission to 'Expats Blog' on Working Abroad, titled "Let Me Take You to the Dark Side of the Moon" was selected as the winning entry.​

My desire to write dates back to my discovery of the ability to write.  ​

​I still remember dutifully re-printing (by hand ... it was after all circa 1975) the first five pages of "Alice in Wonderland" when I was about five years old.  Bringing it into my parents' room pre-dawn and telling them I was going to transcribe the whole book and sell each copy door-to-door for 25 cents.  

My father, who always had a keen business sense, explained that taking 6 months to transcribe a book at that re-sell value might not really prove profitable or gratifying.  I didn't care ... I wanted to write.

He then explained the concept of "copyright".  

I was five.  ​But I got it.  I had to come up with something that was mine.

I was five.  I didn't have that much to write about.  So I decided I'd spend some time reading.  I read everything, from the back of the cereal box at breakfast, to the Disney Classics at noon, to the ingredients on the shampoo bottle at bath time.  I guess I was just killing time feeding myself on the much wiser words of others until I had something truly worth writing about.

I think I was about eight the first time I felt true sorrow.  My parents arguing, my inability to do anything about it, my pre-pubescent frustration with the world in general.  The usual writer's angst.  I was lying outside on a lounge chair in Venezuela one night, with ​my dad next to me, and I was asking him about the stars shining up there in the Southern Hemisphere, about what was up there, what was passing us by, what we were missing, why we were here.

And he told me that ​star gazers tend to be lonely souls.  He asked me what I was sad about.  And I told him I couldn't say, couldn't find the words.  

And he said "OK, that's fine.  But if you're sad, it might help if you wrote a letter to yourself.  If you can find the words for you, nothing else really matters."

And with that, he changed my life.  

On that night, he opened up a world that was mine, and mine alone.  I wrote so much to myself over the next to years ('Sybil' references from the Peanut Gallery NOT cool ....)​, eventually finding the words to express how I felt.  Finding safety in the written word.  Finding safety in knowing that it was for my eyes only.  Expanding my vocabulary and my soul as I tried to find the words that truly conveyed what I was feeling inside.  Somehow managing to eventually convey the tortured existence of a miserable teenaged girl's soul through simple consonants and vowels.  A pencil and paper the vehicles navigating me through the perils of adolescence.

Until a few months ago, I didn't share my writing with anyone, not even my husband.  I wanted to write, I ​dreamt of writing daily, but there were so many other things to think about.  Silly love letters to an ancient beau, poems written in the depths of despair, a writing course taken by correspondence in my late twenties ... these were a whimsical, fanciful, capricious indulgence, relegated to times of complete repose and abandon, which seemed fewer and fewer as I grew older.  I had responsibilities; a home to run, a career to tend to, a child to nurture, a husband to love, a body to exercise ... where in the world would writing fit in?

​And then, one day, nothing else mattered.  I decided I was going to pick myself up, dust myself off, and start writing again.  For me.  Letters to me, but in a public forum this time.  Blogging.  For the fun of it.  For the love of writing.  

And a little over a week ago, I got wind of the Expats Blog "Working Abroad" contest.  And I jokingly told Smilin' Vic about it.  And he said "Do it, Babe.  You won't know 'til you've tried."  And I said "But I've only got like 6 hours, I'd be writing all night."  And he answered:  "Why don't you just try?"​

And I did.  And somebody liked what I had to write.  And I am so thrilled.​

So Thank You.  Thank you Daddy, for showing me what I could write.  Thank you Smilin' Vic, for believing I could write.  And thank you to the judges at Expats Blog, for enjoying what I did write.

They liked "Let Me Take You to the Dark Side of the Moon".  And for that, I am 'over the moon'.​

Thank You.  From Me.​