Tuesday 24 March 2015

Montreal, 1974

It was that summer on my return from Switzerland, that I contacted Don Murray who was living in Dorval, which just happened to be where my airplane landed from Europe. I was infatuated with his dimples and I knew I had his attention if I were to believe the letters he sent me over the years. He would later explain that he wrote them after he’d had a few drams. I didn’t know what to think of that. You mean I look better through the bottom of a rum bottle? Thanks! I like to think it just gave him the courage to be honest about how he felt.

So I had no qualms about calling him when I arrived in Montreal.  As luck would have it, he wasn’t in.  Since I had no particular destination, I continued on to Ottawa to see my Aunt and Uncle, Pat and Shaun.

It was from this base that I dated Don that summer.  He  lived in a little house in Dorval on Prince Charles Street, with his friend and fellow Quebecair pilot, Don Farion and his girlfriend, Jackie.  

I started staying in Montreal instead of going back to Ottawa.  The stays got longer and eventually I was living there, in a room in the house.  I got a job teaching French at Windermere Public School in Pointe Claire. 


My first car

I knew nothing about cars except they had wheels and could get you from A to B. The fellow I bought the ‘Vega’ from was selling it for a friend.  He could see me coming a mile away; he was like the Cheshire cat that was about to swallow the canary.  The car was green, (like me). It  started. It ran.  It had nice white interior.  Sold. How was I supposed to know that this was the worst rust bucket ever made?  I got the last laugh, however, because the engine was replaced on a recall and gave a much longer life to the car than the boys expected.  It served me well in the end, except when all the rivets would vibrate out of their casings when I drove over the rocky road to the cottage, causing the plastic panels to fall off. 

Chapter 11

Monday 23 March 2015

Switzerland '73-'74

After a few weeks in Spain with my parents, I was ready to look ahead and move on. I liked to remind myself once in a while, you don’t look back unless that’s the way you want to go.

Ideally, I would have liked to have lived in France for a year.  Fate had different plans.

My parents brought me to the train station and there I caught a train heading north. As I clickedy clacked my way to France, I really had no idea where I was going. I got off the train at one of the stops to stretch and look around.  There were posters of all the top ski areas in Europe, one of which was Champery in French Switzerland.  It was so lovely, it looked like a post card and I decided right then and there that that is where I wanted to be. 

A few train stops later brought me to Lausanne, Switzerland, (near Geneva), where I had to get off and take the last train ride to the village of Champery which was situated in the mountains at the end of the train run.

A job at the Hotel Champery
The scenery was so stunning it hypnotized me.  How could anything be so beautiful? I felt like I was in a travel brochure. The train was almost empty except for this studious looking man sitting across the aisle.  I couldn’t contain my enthusiasm.  I had to share this overflowing joy with someone and he was it.

He was a writer who lived in Champery, so he was used to the beauty around. We chatted and when he discovered that I was looking for a job, he said he would call his friend who owned the Hotel Champery to see if he needed any help for the winter.

When we got off the train, this gentleman headed for the pay phone.  When he came back, he gave me instructions how to get to the hotel and that, yes, his friend would hire me. The pieces of this puzzle were falling into place rather nicely.

My quarters were in the hotel attic under an A-Framed roof.  Shutters hung on windows with no screens. The fresh air didn’t seem cold as I snuggled under a duvet that was at least a foot thick.  It was magic the way I could lie in bed and see the light of the moon reflect off the snow on the roof tops.  This was heaven.

The owners fed me and put me up for the months of November and December. The clients weren't to arrive  before late December for the ski season.  This instilled in me an undying sense of  loyalty for them. When the clients started coming, I started working in the bar, where I served and cleaned for the following four months. 

One of the ironies was that everyone spoke English.  The hired help came from England, Canada, US, Australia and New Zealand.  The ski clients came from Denmark and their second language was English. My dream of improving my French died on the vine.  However,  I did meet Philippe, a charming French Swiss fellow, who encouraged me to speak as much French as possible.

Freddy the bar tender
The Hotel owner’s wife, Madame Defago, was an accomplished author and a lady want-to-be.  Her husband was old and in failing health.  She took her woes out at the bar drinking Gordon’s gin and tonic. One could find her there after six every night and sometimes into the wee hours of the morning.  She was getting on in years herself and the beauty of youth was fading.  This might have explained the underlying feeling of envy she had towards me, which I was to recognize only in retrospect.

I worked with Freddy, an Austrian bar tender who had issues with authority.  He liked it. On New Year’s Eve there was a grand crowd at the bar and a handsome elderly gentleman from Italy was playing away at the piano.  When everyone had their drinks, I would grab the maracas and play with him in-between my service for a couple of minutes and then jump back on the floor.  

I guess Freddy thought I was having too good a time and called upon Monsieur Defago.  When I saw him come into the bar with Madame on his arm, I approached him to greet him. It was very loud with the music and the noise of the crowd so we had trouble speaking.  I’m pretty sure he was hard of hearing. He looked ‘hard’ of a lot of things.  All of a sudden, he thwacked me in the arm! Although I never confirmed it, I believed that this was his way of saying, “Get to work, enough of this fun stuff.”  I knew Freddy was behind this; lord knows what he said to him. I was so shocked I couldn’t even speak!  I was very suspicious of Freddy after that and stayed out of his way as much as I could.

Caviar and Champagne
Late one night  I was summoned out of bed to cater to Madame and her friends at the bar as they were sipping Champagne.  I was to serve caviar along with lemon and toast. All this was laid out on a trolly which was placed beside them. I had never seen caviar before and didn’t have the faintest idea how to serve it.  Madame took great pleasure in demeaning me in front of her guests and asking me if I had been brought up in a barn as she showed me how to do it properly. 

Interestingly enough, I was never bothered by her remarks or antics.  I think I understood it was coming from her deep rooted problems whatever they were. I had  compassion for her rather than resentment.

Phillippe
Philippe sent me flowers on Valentine’s Day. Although this seemed innocent enough, I was to pay dearly for his attentions, or so Madame would have liked to believe.  
Madame became like the wicked Queen in Snow White.  “Mirror, Mirror, on the wall, who’s the fairest of them all?”  Well, it wasn’t she anymore.  Her steely gaze was cast my way as she felt both her youth and beauty betraying her. 

Madame would have luncheons in the dining room with her rich friends, like the Rothchilds and Rockefellers. She delighted in having me serve because she would have Philippe at the table as well, filling in as an escort for her lady friends who didn’t have partners. 

The Defagos had an antique Bentley that was used to pick up guests at the train station. It sat regally by the front door of the Hotel.  Madame would hire Philippe to dress like a chauffeur and drive it down to the station to fetch and attend to her special invitees. This pleased her to flaunt Philippe in front of me like this.  

Philippe had an old clunker which he lent me one day to go to Lausanne, situated at the bottom of the mountain.  I knew the brakes were mushy, but I didn’t know they almost didn’t work at all.

The only way to town was down.  I started off with a bit of confidence in the car which didn’t last long, the confidence or the car.

The first thrill was when I was trying to brake for the train.  The brakes responded but not completely, at which point I had to make the decision to go over the tracks before the train did.  I decided to accelerate as I couldn’t count on the brakes. I did survive that one.  But I was still going down the mountain on the winding road gaining speed and trying to slow down using these tired old brakes.  There were a set of lights at the very bottom of the hill.  Unfortunately, I was blinded by the sun shining directly into my eyes. I couldn’t see the lights or the big truck coming into the intersection.

After the impact, I found myself spinning towards the river which didn’t have any barriers.  I thought I was pressing hard on the brakes, but realized at the last minute, in my shock, that I was on the accelerator. I stomped on the failing brakes and pulled the emergency and miraculously came to a stop within feet of the water’s edge.

Coincidentally, Philippe passed by in a car  just as the tow truck hauled away his injured vehicle.  I couldn’t quite understand why he lent it to me in the first place. It wasn’t fit for the road. It took me most of my wages to help repair it.


My parents visit from Spain
My parents came up from Spain to Champery for a couple of weeks on a ski holiday.  They stayed in a little Condo just down from the Hotel.  They met and enjoyed the Defagos, but aside from the odd meal in the hotel, they really didn’t see much of them.

Mom was called Nonna by the grand kids… Italian for ‘Gramma’.  She has passed on to the family what Brandon calls, ‘The Nonna Gene’.  What started out jokingly as an insult, it turned out to be our salvation, as whenever anyone in the family screwed up, they would just bleat out, ‘Oh it’s the Nonna gene!’  This would exonerate them from any responsibility of a terrible outcome of a situation, or of a stupid error of some kind.

The Nonna gene was healthy and well in my mother.  After all she was the original. I guess you’d like to have an example. I have a few for you, and we’ll start with this one.  Let me tell you about the day she was trying on ski jumpsuits in a boutique in Champery.

Keep in mind, I was establishing my good name in this small town as an ambassador to my fine country. Then along comes Mom. On this particular day she was window shopping on the main street. She stopped to admire a mannequin in a boutique window which was wearing a tight, fashionable jumpsuit.  It looked pretty good on it and Mom was sure that she was about the same size as the mannequin and proceeded to go into the boutique and ask the sales girl if she could try one on in that exact size. She knew it would be a bit tight, but that is what she wanted.

The sales girl dutifully took the requested size off the rack and led my Mother into the fitting room.  

So as not to take up any extra space in the jumpsuit, Mom tried it on without her ‘unawares’. Shortly, a helpless voice calls from the changing room, “Ian! Ian!”  Dad darted to her aid. Unbeknownst to the innocent shoppers in the boutique, Mom has got the zipper stuck in her nether region and they could only guess what she was referring to as her desperate cries filled the boutique, “Oh! Ian! Oh my god! Not so fast! Easy! Ouch!”

Dad came out of the curtained cubicle and humbly asked the sales girl for a pair of scissors. Once he successfully cut her out of the suit, we left the shop empty handed, with me wondering when I could get them on the next flight to Spain.

My mother was definitely special.


Liliane 
My dear friend Liliane came to see me in the spring at the end of my stay in Champery.  After a couple of weeks of sight seeing and enjoying the lodge we were staying in, it was time to leave. We planned to take a boat from Monaco to Spain and see my parents on the way home. 

The voyage was nondescript except that Liliane spent the whole time up on deck in the lounge as she was terrified to be below the water level where our cabin was situated. She smoked her nervousness away as we sailed across the sea.

It was a tragedy in my life that I lost Liliane to lung cancer in 2005.

I would always hold good memories of Champery and chalk up my experiences with Madame as, well, interesting.


Saturday 21 March 2015

Spain and the Guardia Seville, 1973

It was the fall.  I had declined the teaching job.  My life was in shambles.  I needed the refuge of home. I thought  I‘d visit my folks in Spain and then maybe think about seizing the opportunity to stay in Europe for a year, to improve my French. We’ll see about that later.

My parents seemed like they were living the life of Riley in a villa in Mijas, with a maid, a swimming pool, a vista to die for.

These were the days in Spain of General Francisco Franco, the communist dictator. He ruled with an iron fist and people were afraid of him. For example, any hint of drugs on your person and you’d be in jail for life, a Spanish jail. This would not be a picnic.

My sister Susan, a veritable hippy, a hoppy, happy, hippy hippy, had visited our parents on occasion through those years. With her brightly coloured long skirts and long frizzy hair , she fit the image of a marijuana smoking flower child. This is not what you wanted to look like in Spain during these times.  She was always well behaved on her visits. At least she never got caught.  But I strongly suspect the Guardia Seville (the police), had their eye on her.

They may have seen me in the same category, being a young person from North America, although I was anything but a hippy.  Why else would they have come knocking? And how did they know I was there unless they were surveilling the place?

My mom and dad and I were sitting around enjoying a glass of wine and there was a loud rap on the door.  My father got up to greet the visitor and who should be there but four Guardia Seville officers in full army regalia.  They were polite, but obviously alert.  My father offered them a drink.  This wasn’t a crime, but they declined, since they weren’t to drink on duty. They shifted their interest from my father.  They were more interested in what our activities might have been while we were there alone, visiting in the privacy of our home. 

They walked slowly about, holding their hands behind their backs, their chins slightly in the air,  their hats perched on their heads, darting their gaze this way and that, looking for any ‘evidence’ as they carried on a seemingly civil conversation.

The Guardia left when they were satisfied there were no drugs on site and not even a whiff to make them suspicious.

When they first walked in, I was stunned that they had the right to brazenly waltz into our home without even a warrant or a warning.  My horror turned to indignation.  Before I could protest, the penny dropped and I remembered where I was and I kept my mouth shut. It was a chilling experience.
It was fortunate for us that we hadn’t decided to try out some of Susan’s hash stash, which there wasn’t but could have been. There was the off chance looming over our heads that the scenario could have been very different. No, my parents didn’t try any drugs, but Susan had a way of making special cookies for them. One time Mom and Susan went shopping after cookies and tea.  When Mom asked the clerk where the hash counter was… (meaning ‘meat counter’), Susan got her out of there and eased up on the cookies in the future.

Dad and his animals
Remember I mentioned that my father liked animals better than people?  He always had a pet, normally a dog, but on occasion he also had stranger animals than would normally walk your streets.  

During the war in India, Dad had a spider monkey.  He had another one during his time in Spain, but it didn’t last long after it shat on his shoulder during a photo shoot. My mother was coaching my father to ‘Smile Ian!’ He replied, “I can’t, the little bugger just shat all over me!”.  “Well, smile and we’ll take care of it later!”

Parrots.  My father loved parrots.  In Spain he had two McCaws and an African grey. He taught them to talk.  I found it amazing that when you spoke to them, they would answer in your voice.  So not only could they replicate words and sounds, they could imitate your voice exactly.

Could they squawk, much to the chagrin of my mother.  One had to wonder if Dad owned them out of love for them, or if it was part of a master plan to scare Mom away because the noise drove her crazy. She eventually did leave Spain and returned to Canada to her daughters, leaving the zoo behind. 

One day during my visit there, we were all sitting on the terrace overlooking the ocean and the forested valley below.  The parrots were untethered and were flapping around our heads and on the floor.  I asked my father if he might be a bit concerned that they’d fly away.  ‘Oh no’ he said with all the confidence in the world,   ‘I clipped their wings and they can’t fly’.  

With that, one of them jumped on the railing and pushed himself off to soar down into the valley. They may not have been able to fly but they could sure soar.

With his mouth open and eyes agog, my father half stood up and froze in that position, staring at his beloved parrot as it floated to its inevitable doom, fading as a wee colourful dot against the backdrop of the forests below. As he disappeared  into the trees, we eyeballed where he might be.

There were beasts that roamed these forests, hyenas, wild boar, large cats, coyotes. That parrot didn’t have a hope in Hades of making it.  Dusk was descending.  Nevertheless, we piled into the car and raced down the mountain to the supposed spot.  We had to find him.

We walked the forest in the fading light and called his name over and over, ‘McGoo, McGoo!’.  We could hardly see where we were going.  I was the hero that day as I found the colourful bird walking around on the ground.  My father picked him up and started patting and smooching with him.  I’m sure he felt great relief in his heart. I felt very proud of myself and I was happy I could do something to please my father.



Switzerland ’73-‘74

After a few weeks in Spain with my parents, I was ready to look ahead and move on. I liked to remind myself once in a while, you don’t look back unless that’s the way you want to go.

Ideally, I would have liked to have lived in France for a year.  Fate had different plans.

My parents brought me to the train station and there I caught a train heading north. As I clickety clacked my way to France, I really had no idea where I was going. I got off the train at one of the stops to stretch and look around.  There were posters of all the top ski areas in Europe, one of which was Champery in French Switzerland.  It was so lovely, it looked like a post card and I decided right then and there that that is where I wanted to be. 

A few train stops later brought me to Lausanne, Switzerland, (near Geneva), where I had to get off and take the last train ride to the village of Champery which was situated in the mountains at the end of the train run.

A job at the Hotel Champery
The scenery was so stunning it hypnotized me.  How could anything be so beautiful? I felt like I was in a travel brochure. The train was almost empty except for this studious looking man sitting across the aisle.  I couldn’t contain my enthusiasm.  I had to share this overflowing joy with someone and he was it.

He was a writer who lived in Champery, so he was used to the beauty around. We chatted and when he discovered that I was looking for a job, he said he would call his friend who owned the Hotel Champery to see if he needed any help for the winter.

When we got off the train, this gentleman headed for the pay phone.  When he came back, he gave me instructions how to get to the hotel and that, yes, his friend would hire me. The pieces of this puzzle were falling into place rather nicely.

My quarters were in the hotel attic under an A-Framed roof.  Shutters hung on windows with no screens. The fresh air didn’t seem cold as I snuggled under a duvet that was at least a foot thick.  It was magic the way I could lie in bed and see the light of the moon reflect off the snow on the roof tops.  This was heaven.

The owners fed me and put me up for the months of November and December. The clients weren't to arrive  before late December for the ski season.  This instilled in me an undying sense of  loyalty for them. When the clients started coming, I started working in the bar, where I served and cleaned for the following four months. 

One of the ironies was that everyone spoke English.  The hired help came from England, Canada, US, Australia and New Zealand.  The ski clients came from Denmark and their second language was English. My dream of improving my French died on the vine.  However,  I did meet Philippe, a charming French Swiss fellow, who encouraged me to speak as much French as possible.

Freddy the bar tender
The Hotel owner’s wife, Madame Defago, was an accomplished author and a lady want-to-be.  Her husband was old and in failing health.  She took her woes out at the bar drinking Gordon’s gin and tonic. One could find her there after six every night and sometimes into the wee hours of the morning.  She was getting on in years herself and the beauty of youth was fading.  This might have explained the underlying feeling of envy she had towards me, which I was to recognize only in retrospect.

I worked with Freddy, an Austrian bar tender who had issues with authority.  He liked it. On New Year’s Eve there was a grand crowd at the bar and a handsome elderly gentleman from Italy was playing away at the piano.  When everyone had their drinks, I would grab the maracas and play with him in-between my service for a couple of minutes and then jump back on the floor.  

I guess Freddy thought I was having too good a time and called upon Monsieur Defago.  When I saw him come into the bar with Madame on his arm, I approached him to greet him. It was very loud with the music and the noise of the crowd so we had trouble speaking.  I’m pretty sure he was hard of hearing. He looked ‘hard’ of a lot of things.  All of a sudden, he thwacked me in the arm! Although I never confirmed it, I believed that this was his way of saying, “Get to work, enough of this fun stuff.”  I knew Freddy was behind this; lord knows what he said to him. I was so shocked I couldn’t even speak!  I was very suspicious of Freddy after that and stayed out of his way as much as I could.

Caviar and Champagne
Late one night  I was summoned out of bed to cater to Madame and her friends at the bar as they were sipping Champagne.  I was to serve caviar along with lemon and toast. All this was laid out on a trolly which was placed beside them. I had never seen caviar before and didn’t have the faintest idea how to serve it.  Madame took great pleasure in demeaning me in front of her guests and asking me if I had been brought up in a barn as she showed me how to do it properly. 

Interestingly enough, I was never bothered by her remarks or antics.  I think I understood it was coming from her deep rooted problems whatever they were. I had  compassion for her rather than resentment.

Phillippe
Philippe sent me flowers on Valentine’s Day. Although this seemed innocent enough, I was to pay dearly for his attentions, or so Madame would have liked to believe.  
Madame became like the wicked Queen in Snow White.  “Mirror, Mirror, on the wall, who’s the fairest of them all?”  Well, it wasn’t she anymore.  Her steely gaze was cast my way as she felt both her youth and beauty betraying her. 

Madame would have luncheons in the dining room with her rich friends, like the Rothchilds and Rockefellers. She delighted in having me serve because she would have Philippe at the table as well, filling in as an escort for her lady friends who didn’t have partners. 

The Defagos had an antique Bentley that was used to pick up guests at the train station. It sat regally by the front door of the Hotel.  Madame would hire Philippe to dress like a chauffeur and drive it down to the station to fetch and attend to her special invitees. This pleased her to flaunt Philippe in front of me like this.  

Philippe had an old clunker which he lent me one day to go to Lausanne, situated at the bottom of the mountain.  I knew the brakes were mushy, but I didn’t know they almost didn’t work at all.

The only way to town was down.  I started off with a bit of confidence in the car which didn’t last long, the confidence or the car.

The first thrill was when I was trying to brake for the train.  The brakes responded but not completely, at which point I had to make the decision to go over the tracks before the train did.  I decided to accelerate as I couldn’t count on the brakes. I did survive that one.  But I was still going down the mountain on the winding road gaining speed and trying to slow down using these tired old brakes.  There were a set of lights at the very bottom of the hill.  Unfortunately, I was blinded by the sun shining directly into my eyes. I couldn’t see the lights or the big truck coming into the intersection.

After the impact, I found myself spinning towards the river which didn’t have any barriers.  I thought I was pressing hard on the brakes, but realized at the last minute, in my shock, that I was on the accelerator. I stomped on the failing brakes and pulled the emergency and miraculously came to a stop within feet of the water’s edge.

Coincidentally, Philippe passed by in a car  just as the tow truck hauled away his injured vehicle.  I couldn’t quite understand why he lent it to me in the first place. It wasn’t fit for the road. It took me most of my wages to help repair it.


My parents visit from Spain
My parents came up from Spain to Champery for a couple of weeks on a ski holiday.  They stayed in a little Condo just down from the Hotel.  They met and enjoyed the Defagos, but aside from the odd meal in the hotel, they really didn’t see much of them.

Mom was called Nonna by the grand kids… Italian for ‘Gramma’.  She has passed on to the family what Brandon calls, ‘The Nonna Gene’.  What started out jokingly as an insult, it turned out to be our salvation, as whenever anyone in the family screwed up, they would just bleat out, ‘Oh it’s the Nonna gene!’  This would exonerate them from any responsibility of a terrible outcome of a situation, or of a stupid error of some kind.

The Nonna gene was healthy and well in my mother.  After all she was the original. I guess you’d like to have an example. I have a few for you, and we’ll start with this one.  Let me tell you about the day she was trying on ski jumpsuits in a boutique in Champery.

Keep in mind, I was establishing my good name in this small town as an ambassador to my fine country. Then along comes Mom. On this particular day she was window shopping on the main street. She stopped to admire a mannequin in a boutique window which was wearing a tight, fashionable jumpsuit.  It looked pretty good on it and Mom was sure that she was about the same size as the mannequin and proceeded to go into the boutique and ask the sales girl if she could try one on in that exact size. She knew it would be a bit tight, but that is what she wanted.

The sales girl dutifully took the requested size off the rack and led my Mother into the fitting room.  

So as not to take up any extra space in the jumpsuit, Mom tried it on without her ‘unawares’. Shortly, a helpless voice calls from the changing room, “Ian! Ian!”  Dad darted to her aid. Unbeknownst to the innocent shoppers in the boutique, Mom has got the zipper stuck in her nether region and they could only guess what she was referring to as her desperate cries filled the boutique, “Oh! Ian! Oh my god! Not so fast! Easy! Ouch!”

Dad came out of the curtained cubicle and humbly asked the sales girl for a pair of scissors. Once he successfully cut her out of the suit, we left the shop empty handed, with me wondering when I could get them on the next flight to Spain.

My mother was definitely special.


Liliane 
My dear friend Liliane came to see me in the spring at the end of my stay in Champery.  After a couple of weeks of sight seeing and enjoying the lodge we were staying in, it was time to leave. We planned to take a boat from Monaco to Spain and see my parents on the way home. 

The voyage was nondescript except that Liliane spent the whole time up on deck in the lounge as she was terrified to be below the water level where our cabin was situated. She smoked her nervousness away as we sailed across the sea.

I would always hold good memories of Champery and chalk up my experiences with Madame as, well, interesting.


Chapter 10

Friday 20 March 2015

1970-71 Toronto

This is the year I went to Toronto Teacher’s College and dated Tom.  I shared an apartment with Olga, who was a beautiful air line stewardess.  Tom and I became friends with Judy and Osa.  Judy was a vivacious blond at Teacher’s College with me and Osa was her Japanese husband who was already a teacher of Phys Ed. 

It was the buzz of the day at school that there were no teaching jobs for graduating teachers.  Olga suggested I apply to be a stewardess until I could get a teaching job.  So I applied and I was accepted.  I took my training in Montreal and worked for Air Canada for about five months until I got a teaching job offer in Ottawa.


1971-72, Ottawa

The Ottawa Board of Education offered me a job teaching French to grades 1-8 at two different schools for the following fall. I accepted and left Toronto,Tom and Air Canada, behind.  I would have accepted basket weaving just to get into the teaching world.  I moved to Ottawa and bussed my way through that school year, travelling with all my materials from school to school at noon hour.  It was a challenging job as I had to write the curriculum and make up all my visual aids. I shared a small apartment with Lorna, who worked for the government.  

I bought myself a white three quarter length sheep skinned coat which kept me warm on those winter days waiting for the bus. I just loved it.  It eventually wore out and I was chagrined that I could never replace it.

Susan
Susan went to Spain with my parents when they retired, as she was only 14.  They were settling nicely in Mijas and needed to find a good school for her.  They enrolled her in a private school in a town called Seville, a few hours drive from Mijas. She was very unhappy with this situation. She was disgusted with the flirty gym teacher who made passes at her. She never told my parents, but she threatened to run away if they didn’t give her her passport to return to Canada.

So the deal between them became that they would give her her passport and support her if she stayed in school. The school they thought was best was my mother’s old alma mater, Lisgar Collegiate in down town Ottawa. I was to oversee the situation; at one point Mom was suggesting I adopt her, but that didn’t seem necessary.  I had my apartment not all that far from Pestalozie College, the co-op apartment building Susan had ferreted out. She became a full fledged hippie.

Naturally we assumed she was at school doing famously with that brilliant brain of hers.  So of course I was surprised when I called the school to see how Susan Fripp was doing, and they replied, “Susan, who?” Apparently, she hadn’t been in school for months.

We had all tried our best, but somehow it just wasn’t good enough to curtail Susan’s ‘wonder’ lust. Well, that is another very interesting story.

1972-73, Toronto

The following  year the Toronto Board of Education offered me a job at Blythwood Public School teaching French.  I accepted  and moved back to Toronto. I saw a bit of Tom, but we were essentially only friends at this point. 

That summer before starting my new job, I took a course teaching French as a second language and it was there I met Bernard Jeudi Hugo, a bombastic, entertaining French man from France.  He just happened to be the teacher. We sent notes back and forth in class like a couple of high school kids, and by the end of the summer we were an item.

Bernard and I were actually engaged for a while, so it was quite serious.  For some reason, I got cold feet and slipped off over the horizon by Christmas.  

My Carleton friend, Shirley Keen, was in Toronto during this time and needed  a place to live, so I invited her to move in with me.  I had to sign her out of the hospital where she was getting treatment for her ‘mental health’ issues and promise that I would oversee her activities.  I didn’t really intend to baby sit her, but I became concerned when she secretly snuck out of the apartment to another place she had landed. She eventually didn’t come back at all.

Later that school year while I was still teaching at Blythwood, Judy and Osa, being caring friends, thought I should be dating and they suggested I go out  with Herb, a teacher friend of Osa’s.  I said no.  They became insistent and I finally gave in. I dated Herb, but with great reservation as he was far more interested than I was. Try as I might not to see him, he would be there offering to help me out, or suggesting  we take in an event.

Tom and I kept in touch over the months I was back in town and we visited a few of times over coffee, one of which I was being stalked by Herb.  I didn’t know of Herb’s jealousy until I was on a boat for a teachers’ end-of-the-year dinner with him.  He started talking about Tom and I realized he was jealous.  After the dinner, friends of Herb’s drove us back to his place en route home, where I was picking up some shopping I had done earlier in the day.

I was petrified when Herb broke out into a jealous rage, broke the coffee table and whacked me in the face with his fist.  I knew right away that my jaw was broken.  I told him to stop because he had broken my jaw.  That seemed to enrage him more. He called a friend to stay with me that night.  I returned to my apartment in the morning. Judy threatened to disown me as a friend if I reported him.  I couldn’t teach.  The headaches were getting worse and I couldn’t eat.

I went to the hospital for X-Rays and they determined my jaw was broken in two places. They wired my jaws together. I refused to tell them who did this and just explained I was caught in a fist fight between two guys.  

The pain killers made me drowsy.  My lease was coming due in my apartment. The school years was ending.  The School Board offered me another job teaching French at two schools for next fall. I checked the schools out and felt like Daniel going into the lion’s den. There were hate messages about French on the bathroom walls. So I declined the generous offer. I felt my talents could be better spent.

Shirley was in touch with Herb; she’d met him through me somewhere along the line and they become friends. It was at this point that she approached him to see if she could stay at his town house in the city.  It was empty, as he was living at his country home, so he obliged her.  She wanted me to stay with her which was out of the question at first.  But with my lease up and no where to go, I eventually reasoned, I could rest there until my jaw healed in six weeks and Herb wouldn’t be around.  He sort of owed me something at this point.

When I went back to the hospital to have the wires out, I felt like a rat in a lab. The doctor, flanked by half a dozen interns, pointed and poked at his specimen, talking  to the interns about my case as if I were an object, or at best, a mute.  

He cut the wires, explaining the procedure like some car mechanic talking about an engine part, and then yanked them out.  They ripped between my teeth and I felt like my jaw was broken all over again.  When the dirty job was done, they left the room and I lay there on the bed wondering what had hit me.

I was further bewildered when, once outside the hospital, I eagerly opened my coveted bag of potato chips.  I hadn’t munched on them for weeks and I was so looking forward to cracking them in my mouth.  But I couldn’t open my mouth.  It was stuck and it hurt to try.  I found out later that one is normally put under with anesthetic for this operation. I survived just fine but wondered who was making these decisions and why wasn’t I asked at least.

This was one of the most confusing times in my life. Later in that summer of ’73, after the wires came out, I got a job as a director of a travel agency.  The owner started to express unwelcome interest in me and my life.  He would phone the house and question Shirley about me .  Herb would call and talk to Shirley too, and she would give them all the details not only of my whereabouts, but what I said and what I was thinking. It was getting ridiculous.


Seeking some solace, I got on a plane and left the country for Spain to see my parents. It was the only time in my life I pushed the ‘eject’ button.

Chapter 9

Thursday 19 March 2015

Europe, 1970


Karen and I revisited towns we had seen as kids when we had travelled Europe with our parents.  We were getting familiar with places and feeling like citizens of the world. 

We went via air force personnel carriers, the scheduled flights, religiously purchasing our ten dollar lunch box.  We hopped from one spot to the next, often staying with the Commanding Officer of the base and his family. 

We started in Germany where we stayed with Amos Pudsey and his wife Shirley. Amos was the Commanding Officer at the time. They were close friends of our parents when they were all in 2 Wing in the 50’s They had four kids, Brian, George, Betty-Lou and Shawn. Shirley, Lois Langevin and my mother were to be known as the three musketeers as they had such laughs and fun together.

Cypress, Sardinia, Nice, Venice, Florence, Pizza, Rome, Vienna, Portugal, Morocco, Gibraltar, Spain, England were some of the places we hitch-hiked to.

When the weather got chilly and we realized we didn’t have enough clothes, we jumped on a scheduled flight home, got some warm clothes and then went back to Europe.  It gave us a chance to see our beaux.  Karen had Brian, whom she came back to marry, and I had Tom, a good friend of Brian’s from University of Toronto.  He was a sweetheart, but it didn’t work out in the long run because he was really married to the TV and that just didn’t cut it for me.

Hitch-hiking was something that was just done in those days, so we didn’t attach any danger to it.  But we did follow some rules. We only took rides with two people, usually couples, and we only hitch- hiked through the day.  We had a couple of incidents when men made advances, but between the two of us we’d just change it into a funny situation and any danger would dissipate. Karen was great at this.

Spain
One time in Spain we broke our own rules when we got in with a single man. He drove us to what looked like a deserted Hollywood set of an old cowboy town. We knew something was up.  He made attempts with me in the front seat. I got out, climbed in the back and Karen got in front.  He continued.  We spoke English. He spoke Spanish.  Somewhere along the line he lost his verve.  Probably because he felt like a fool.  So we drove back on the highway to our destination, Karen and I laughing and guffawing all the while and our driver remaining silent.

Portugal
In Portugal, we had no set plans.  We went to the ‘Algarve’ which is the stunning southern coast of Portugal.  We popped into a small shop that sold produce and tinned food.  We talked with a good looking young Portugese man, Carlos, who helped us find what we needed.  Then off to the beach we went.  Who do you think should come along?  … the young man we’d met in the shop.  When he recognized us, he plunked himself down on our towel for an unrushed visit.  

A German man came up to him and handed  him a key; they spoke in German.  Karen, ever inquisitive and outspoken, asked him what that was for and he explained he had a place up in the mountains that this fellow had used for a while and now he was moving on.  Karen continued that we don’t have a place to stay, maybe we could use it.  Carlos was very obliging, much to my surprise.

It was a hut.  Charming, way up high in the mountains, with a beautiful view of the ocean.  If I remember correctly, it didn’t have running water. Cows would pass by our window early in the morning.  This was a bit startling the first time we heard the ‘moooooo” so close.  

We stayed there for two weeks. The boys, Carlos and a friend, came and cooked us fish every night on the old grill outside the hut.  They were superlative.  After two weeks, Karen was ready to move on and to get back on our schedule.  I wasn’t. I could have stayed and enjoyed this for weeks more.  But I agreed to leave to keep the peace.

Nice
Nice was nice and so was the French Riviera.  I remembered the rough stones on the beach and wondered how we could ever have  pitched our tent on the rocks when we were camping there as kids. You couldn’t camp there now, however, as they had built a beautiful board walk all along the beach.  Intermittent piers lined the coast, jutting out from the sandy beaches.

One night Karen and I had a disagreement. I got rather hot under the collar, and had to leave to cool off.  It was night time in a strange town and I felt uneasy, but I was so mad that I threw caution to the wind and just walked. I ended up on the beach which had peculiar lighting. One minute I was in the lights of the boardwalk and the next, in the pitch darkness of the beach.  I saw one of those piers and I walked out to the end and sat down. As I was looking into the darkness of the ocean, simmering from hot to warm, I heard odd clanging noises behind me. My imagination started to twitch and I thought, “Oh no, its probably a gang of thugs with chains dripping from their belts.”  I turned to see that this was exactly right.

The four of them swaggered up.  I had the feeling they wanted the thrill of intimidating me. I thought, if I let them, I’m cooked. I started chatting as if we were old friends and that nothing was wrong, everything was perfectly normal… me on a pier in the dark with no way to get away, they arriving with chains on, dressed in black and big boots.  They reacted well to my natterings and slipped into easy conversation, in French. I slowly got up, still talking, and gradually inched my way off the pier with the four of them in tow.  As the lights of the streets brightened our world, the gang seemed to be distracted and they took off with other things on their minds.  I was left to figure out from whence I came and to make my way back to the hotel. 


Morocco
When we got to Morocco in Northern Africa, we only had our mini skirts to wear.  Heedless of their religion, the men would gawk at us, some, in their long gowns, would try and touch us.  We thought when in Rome, do as the Romans do, so we bought ourselves a jelabah.  Little did we know that the white ones we bought were worn by men after going on a pilgrimage to Mecca, so we drew just as much attention as when we were in our mini skirts.  Oh well, we tried and we did feel more respectful even if our jelabahs were white.


We took a bus to Tangiers.  The bus was full of locals; the roads were small and dusty.  We were hailed to a stop in the middle of nowhere by men in arm fatigues who  demanded we get off the bus and line up at the side of the road. They all had rifles.  If I had known then what I know today, I would have been worried.  But at the time I thought, they are looking for someone and he’s either here or he is not.  They’ll do their business and leave. What they could have done was much worse than that, but they did nothing but surmise the group and order us back on the bus. It was an unnerving experience.


Zermatt
It was around this time that our parents were settling in Spain with their real estate mogul friends from Halifax, N.S.  We decided that we would meet in Zermatt to ski.  We only had vague dates and no particular meeting place. These were the days before cell phones. 

Miraculously Karen and I did meet up with them, and then we all met up with Lois Langevin, who was there with Shirley and Amos Pudsey.  They were sipping on some hot gluvine outside a Swiss cafe.  It was all too much of a coinky-dink, but that was the luck of my mother! She had made similar arrangements with them ….vague.  Karen and I said she’d never find them; but she did.

A couple of things stick out in my mind of that trip.  Three things actually.  One was that my father managed to make it into the country without any ID.  He had left his wallet at home in Spain.  How he managed to talk himself into Switzerland, I don’t know. 

Then, Karen was skiing one day in a blizzard and her face almost froze.  I recall we went up the mountain in a swaying cable car which hung precariously over the rocks as we climbed the mountain face.  When we got to the top, the guide asked if we wanted to go back down in the cable car or ski down.  I started to laugh hysterically as both options were out, but Karen decided to ski down. I went back into the cable car, thinking my odds for survival were marginally better than Karen’s.  We both survived the trip, but neither of us thought we would at the time.

An avalanche hit the town a few days before we were planning on leaving. We were trapped.  My mother didn’t like this at all. I remember yet, the first day the train was able to pass, she was the first one at the train station.  She looked like Elizabeth Taylor in her mini beige leather and fur coat, her head topped with a matching fur hat.  With the determination of a pit bull, she had my father push her through a window of the train.  She thereby guaranteed herself a seat.  I’m not sure she was very worried about any one else, but, in any case, we all got on.

Karen and I continued on to our tour’s end in England where we caught our last scheduled flight home, home to the boys.


Tuesday 17 March 2015

Saving for Europe/ Folk's Retirement in Spain

Saving for Europe, 1969

I had decided to go hitch-hiking around Europe with my sister, Karen, so I had to save some money.  For the next few months after the B&B Commission research, I worked at a nightclub, ‘The Riverside’ in Ottawa.  The waitresses there had to wear bunny outfits.  Many of the girls had artificial tails made of cotton but mine was a real ones that was rabbit fur. At some point, it got stolen.

It was there I met Liliane.  She became a life long friend.  She was very  straight and overly cautious, and never dated the customers.  I found no need to, so I didn’t either.

Liliane had a heart of gold.  She never had much money, always worked hard, and gave away the best of what she had. She was a darling.  The only thing with Liliane was that she had the bad habit of smoking. She was in my inner circle of close friends and I missed her terribly after she passed away just before her sixtieth year, of lung cancer.

I was a bunny until I saved enough money to go to Europe the following January with  Karen. During that brief time, I lived in Ottawa with a dear friend of my mother’s, Lois Langevin.  

Lois had two kids a bit younger than I whom I adored, Robert and Liane.  Robert was adorable, and I knew as long as I was on the planet, he’d never be lonely. [just kidding] 

I realized that I loved people easily, I didn’t judge anyone.  I accepted them just as they were and for me they were beautiful packages with bows on. They were all gifts. This seemed like a nice quality to have, but it interfered with my ability to separate the wheat from the chaff. This partly explains how I got mixed up with some genuine ‘characters’.


Folk's retirement and Spain 1969

My mother went to Spain with my dad in his retirement in 1969.  They were off to make their fortune in real estate during ‘El Boom’, as mom liked to call it.

They settled in an authentic Spanish town, Mijs, in the mountains of the Sierra Nevada. It had small narrow streets lined with stark white walls of the stores and homes of the locals.  They made and sold straw baskets, hats, mats.  Their goods were hanging all around the diminutive door ways. 

There were small grocery stores and material shops.  The bars had the doors open and elderly people sitting outside on caned wicker chairs. They used donkeys and carts to go to market.  It wasn’t uncommon for a donkey to stop in the middle of the road, out of sheer stubbornness, I guess, causing his owner to yell out loud in Spanish.  

Mom and Dad rented a beautiful villa with a swimming pool from which you could see the cascading valley to the Mediterranean. They were way up.

Mom didn’t like living there, but my father loved it. She felt the booze was too readily available and with all the socializing, she was sure to become an alcoholic. 

My father acquiesced to my mother’s desire to return to Canada, and they moved everything back home.  It lasted for  a year.  My father was so miserable that my mother conceded to move back to Spain. She lasted two years before returning to Canada for good, leaving him in the mess he had created.  

During those 35 years Dad lived in Spain, Mom married twice more and provided all of us, myself and my sisters, Karen and Susan, a base and family headquarters.  We all admire her for her independence, dry wit, charm, support and that marvellous ego. Dad stayed isolated and incommunicative.  He was unhappily remarried for 30 years.

I always thought my father could fall off the planet and I wouldn’t care. But that was all about to change 37 years later.