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| In memory of my best friend that passed away Easter Sunday 2022 TAKEN: AUGUST 28th, 2021 |
| #meanpeoplesuck |
One of my best friends passed away on Easter Sunday. Though we were separated by thousands of miles, we spoke on the phone at least once a week. He was mere fifty six years of age.
My avid readers will recognize his name as well as his photo, as he has appeared in several journal posts over the years (even has his own label). All very raw and still in shock, I am struggling to deal with the loss.
As a result, I have decided to share what his oldest and dearest childhood friend "Howie" posted for him on the exact day my letter S was due.
I think it paints a perfect picture of this wonderful man. The words brought me to both tears of laughter as well as deep sadness. Words can not describe how much I will miss him.
Rest in peace Smartie. Keep my seat next to you warm and your wit razor sharp....Until we meet again.
Love you always xoxo ~ Rhondi
I miss my buddy
He’s gone. That’s
what his ex-wife said to me when I answered the phone the evening of Easter
Sunday.
All who knew Brian entered a new world in that moment.
So far, that world is one of shock, disbelief, boundless
sadness and equally boundless gratitude; feelings all common in the wake of the
loss of loved one. The shock, disbelief and sadness will settle. The gratitude for all he brought to my world,
will remain forever.
His laughter was matched only by his ability to make others
laugh.
At the end of grade 7, we went on a class camping trip to
Bass Lake Provincial Park. As far as we
could tell, our teacher, modeled his classroom management style after Joseph
Stalin. From the perspective of a bunch of dumb, gangly 12-year-old boys, he
was mean.
The camping area was a large, rectangular field. Perfect to
ensure boys tents lined the perimeter of one side, girls on the other.
In line with our teacher’s overall approach, there was a
seemingly endless list of rules. Among them, very precise direction as to when
all were required to be in tents and very ominous threats of consequences if
not.
As 12-year-olds we had yet to develop much in the way of
foresight and probably worse, we had yet to develop any awareness of our limits
in that regard. Despite the dire
warnings we came up with, what we believed at the time, was an airtight plan.
Immediately after sunset and tent check, we’d leave our tents, bolt across the
field under the cover of darkness and visit our classmates with the utmost
confidence that none of this would stir even a hint of suspicion.
Once darkness set in, tent checks complete, the zippers of
16 tents rang out and the charge was on.
Almost instantly the flaw in our planning was exposed. Who would think that teachers would patrol
the tents after dark? Clearly 12-year-old boys didn’t.
Thankfully almost every one of us detected the flaw
immediately, dove back in our tents, with adrenaline surging but safe from
suffering the wrath of our teacher supervisors.
Everyone, that is, but Brian.
Peeking through our tent doors, there he was. His silhouette
like a gazelle, bounding on an open plane, all on his own, in the dark, cool,
damp, spring air completely oblivious to his solitude.
It turns out that teachers must develop an extraordinary
capacity to identify 12-year-old running boys in the dark of night.
But as Brian’s luck would have it, that wasn’t his biggest
problem.
In a highly predictable twist of fate, the world’s most
fearsome teacher spotted him immediately. We cringed as we heard him yell:
“Smart, where are you going?”
At that moment, the magnitude of Brian’s initial mistake
compounded significantly. For instead of
responding with something like, “I’m just running to the bathroom”, he chose
instead to announce, with a completely misplaced sense of sarcasm, at the top
of his lungs, “I’m going to an orgy”.
And to make matters much worse, as he was sometimes known to
do, he added, “where the fuck do you think I’m going, you asshole?”
It was too much for 12-year-old boys. We spent years
laughing about it.
And that’s what he did more than anyone I know. He laughed a
lot and he helped other people laugh a lot.
Equal to his ability to make people laugh was his ability to
build big friendships. He had more best
friends than anyone I know; he did it effortlessly, sincerely and happily. He was as comfortable with his 3-year-old
grandson as he was with the 93 year olds he was working with as part of his
studies to become a healthcare aid.
I will always be proud to call him my best friend as I know
many others are too.
The span of his musical taste was broad. Together, we saw
John Lee Hooker, The Clash, Peter Tosh, Black Uhuru, Talking Heads, The Police
(actually more than the musical kind), the English Beat, Flock of Seagulls, Eric
Clapton, the Hip, Nash the Slash, lost some/most of our hearing watching the
Headstones at the Rivoli and watched some dude throw a banana 125 meters and
land right at the feet of Joan Jett - an act of athletic prowess I have yet to
witness again.
But his greatest achievement is undoubtedly his family. His son, daughters and his wonderful grandson; they featured prominently and lovingly in virtually every single
conversation. Each of his kids inherited his greatest attributes.
Among the many things uniting the human experience is our
frailty. None of us live perfect lives. We all deal with challenges.
All of us, in our own way, do the very best we can to
accommodate those challenges.
We love our families and friends and care for our
communities, our country and the planet.
We count on those we love in our time of need.
This was especially true of Brian.
I am grateful for every second he lived his life.
I will miss him for as long as I live mine.
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| The last thing I did before I left Key West was tour the Hemmingway House. TAKEN: APRIL 9th, 2022 |
'I decided that I would write one story about each thing I knew about.'
~Ernest Hemmingway
When you have the luxury of something and you decide to let it go, naturally you miss it. Some things more than others, yet I feel great childhood memories always linger and ultimately stay ingrained in us forever.
Being the youngest of four, ideally I got to spend the most time at my Uncle Louis Camp on the beautiful shores of Lake Temiscaming.
Built in the mid-fifties, the shelter was a mere 650 sq.ft. but the shoreline and property were perfect. It was never used very much, that was until I entered my 'tween' years and my parents began using it in the summer; rather than renting two weeks in the Ottawa Valley.
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| I remember the day Auntie Andy took this photo. A great weekend and us so very happy. Not quite pregnant with the twins... NOR had I discovered need for quality hair care products! TAKEN: MAY 1991 |
My last couple of summers in high school, we lived there every weekend.
The rents would pick me up at the rink in North Bay and we would head east across the border into Quebec. (My mother’s brother had a camp next door and my father’s sister was just a wee bit further up the lake.)
I believe it was those amazing summers that helped shape me into who I am today.
We always worked through the day as there was no television, and some Saturday nights there were at least ten of us playing a board game around Auntie's table next door. My mother was as fiercely competitive then, as I am today.
Over those years, my cousins next door evolved into my sisters, and to this day I cherish all of their children, as I have watched them marry and raise their own families.
As an aside, we did offer to buy my dad out in the late 1990's (he was welcome to stay until he died) and he turned us down. Less than two months later, we bought in Muskoka.
Just fifteen minutes from our home, we were blessed to offer our children the same shelter I had been given surrounded by loyal friends. To this day, we still own it but that doesn't stop me from reminiscing.
... About the first summer we had propane lights, the summer we hand drilled the well with a sledgehammer, or the first time I didn't have to jump in the lake because Poppa put an indoor shower in. Oh, and the fact that we conceived our children there.
All, such amazing and truly vibrant, life long memories!
As I have written here before it takes more effort to frown than smile.
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| Christmas morning fun - seven years ago. Look how little my beautiful Annie is? TAKEN: DECEMBER 25th, 2014 |
Like a lot of people I know, I have previously struggled with depression. It first appeared and was identified post-partum after Jukebox was born but as the years went on and I conquered the worst of it, I am always aware it could be lurking around the corner.
As a result, I have always been very open in our home about the importance of personal mental health, and as my children entered adulthood and
real-life struggles appeared, I was always asking if they wanted to speak to
someone outside our core.
I believe advocacy is critical because I had about a year and a
half of extensive psychotherapy when the children were small, and during that
time, my Psychotherapist armed me with a toolbox of solutions that I still use
today. As a result, to this day I am forever grateful to her.
I know in society today that medications usually win as a solution over
root cause analysis, but for me, I wanted to understand why I didn’t feel like
myself so I took a deep dive and have never been on any type of medication except
Advil since leaving her sessions almost twenty years ago.
Photographic proof that we truly are all aboard the mental health MERRIMENT train.
It's just how we love to roll!!
I truly believe that if I threw my life problems into a heap with everyone else’s that I’d quickly scramble to get mine back.
Not because I wouldn't have preferred to get rid of them, but I feel that being surrounded by the mound of everyone else's, mine would seem pretty insignificant.
The point of my post?
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| Much happier times on a Mommy/Daughter trip to New Orleans. TAKEN: June 2019 |
Life is forever full and evolving
of lessons. You either learn from them, or you don’t.
I understand that everyone is different and what may seem like a boulder in front of some (stopping you from moving forward) may only feel like a simple pebble in someone else’s shoe.
For
me, I always try and draw on life experiences and understand what I have learned.
I try to use those lessons to help me push through the noise and crap and keep moving
forward.
That last bit of advice is based
on personal experience. Though it may seem simple, life in general is tricky.
Some lessons offer relief, as if you've only scraped your knees. Some feel as
though they've truly broken your heart and spirit; while others, bring and
offer wonderful opportunity.
I'm a simple gal, that was lucky
to marry a man that makes me laugh. As we look toward retirement, we know one thing
to be true. We have raised our three children to the best of our ability and wish
all of them the nothing but the best. Truly hoping they all find happiness.
So you can understand that it just breaks my heart that almost seven years to the day, history
repeated itself. Personal choices were made and once again we were blamed.
With regards to the latter instance, I have resigned myself to the fact that the current situation is just LIFE!
Sad, yet completely and totally acceptable from where I type... and absolutely fine with the second round of estrangement.
I am going to revisit this letter with a better explanation. I am just too upset to share the horrible experience in Grassy Key at this time.
At more than $800 for the night, we had to share the place with cockroaches.
Thanks for understanding ~ Rhondi
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| The KEY was as old as the cockroaches that were staying in the room with us! TAKEN: ARPIL 8th, 2022 |
There are so many words I could have selected for this letter.
Justified, joyful, jaunt (a very long one) yet I ultimately chose JOVIAL.
I picked it because it was how I felt when my spouse and I reconnected with my brother (pictured below) over a fifteen hour phone call. Which is truly amazing, considering the three of us hadn’t spoken in as many years.
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| My big brother in the downstairs room where he first played me Hotel California on his new stereo. TAKEN: 1983 |
Growing up, I was the youngest and he the eldest of four.
Though I have many vibrant memories, my mom making him sit with me to go through the Sears Wish Book catalogue when I was about seven stands out; I can see us sitting at his desk.
That specific exercise was to help her establish what I was hoping Santa was going to bring, which must have been a drag, because as my senior he knew the real deal.
All these years later, I know he did it because he was made to, but I think he will be surprised to read that I still remember our very first Christmas in Ontario at 190 Shier Street like it was yesterday.
Growing up, I was always in awe of him. He had cool friends, played in a band, did well in school, and always seemed to have a very specific direction. I'm sure the latter had something to do with my mother but I can’t say for sure.
In our clan, he was the first and I the last. Bookends per se, for all the family adventures and stories the others grew up with. He was closest to our mother before her death, me to our dad before his.
As I share the photo I do tonight, you can see I tore it trying to take it out and scan it. So once again this challenge, I share another Kodak moment that is a picture of a picture. Funny how times have digitally changed.
As my big bro sent a text in song for my birthday, I giggled and smiled from ear to ear.
Not just because we’d reconnected…. But because he’d become my newest electronic friend, as well as he has always been one of the very few people I have always enjoy talking on the telephone with.
Who’d a friggin' thunk it? Not this cat!
After a whirlwind long weekend, I
am back in Canada, browsing the bazillion photos I took and realizing how
much I loved staying in Islamorada.
One never knows what to expect when planning a road trip with Google Chrome and Trip Advisor. In this instance, both those knocked our first night stay out of the freaking ballpark.
The Chesapeake Beach Resort was a total shot in the dark for us and we got lucky!
Our least expensive night of the lot and we had a blast!!
Not because of the night life or five-star restaurants in the area, but simply because of the vibe. Completely laid back, which was exactly what we were hoping for.
... Because regardless of everything we did and enjoyed on this bucket list trip, Islamorada was by far (most unexpectedly) the high point in the overall experience department.
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| Made it through the car rental process and we are on our way down Hwy 1! TAKEN: APRIL 6th, 2022 |
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| Checked into the hotel and over to Wahoo's for some seafood! TAKEN: APRIL 6th, 2022 |
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| Our view as the incoming boats settle in for the night. TAKEN: APRIL 6th, 2022 |
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| Chilaxin' by the pool which is where we stayed until it closed. TAKEN: APRIL 6th, 2022 |
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| Enjoying our 8am sunrise as we prepare to head to to Margaritaville TAKEN: APRIL 7th, 2022 |