What Does It Take?

I was beginning to think…what does it take? Another plane? A diversion? An emergency? Hitting the wall financially? What does it take to finally come home again and know that this is it, this time is the right time to settle down? A little faith is the answer. I am home now and I feel it, and I am going to dig deep. That is the direction that I am going to go further. Ontario was good, the timing of the visit to see my family was right. No one lives in Niagara Falls any more though. But I was happy to see the Niagara River again, to sit in the car and stare at the miles of river, ride alongside its banks until it’s swept over and disappears far below, only powerful mist driven upward by its force.

Above the Falls, not that far upriver, I saw the big, steel scow still lodged on the rocks. It has been stuck there since 1918. When I was a kid I was rivetted by the sight of it. There were two men in that barge when it got too close to the Falls. They were going to be swept over until they hit the rocks. We heard that one of the men was SO SCARED that his hair turned WHITE! Just like that! Before your very eyes. Fact or exaggeration?

(I thought of that years later, after a hair-raising birth at the Niagara Falls Hospital. I never wanted to go there, and I was heading up the highway, in labour, towards my hospital of choice in Hamilton, when my water broke. Knowing I would not make it, I turned back, only to arrive at Niagara Emergency unscheduled, where they did not believe that I was having my baby RIGHT NOW. (I’m so far into this story that I’ll have to keep going, it was never my intention…) When the medical staff finally got it that it really was happening, I was thrown (literally) onto a wheeled stretcher, raced down a hallway and then thrown again onto a delivery room table where my son was born immediately. After the birth I made my way to the washroom, leaned into the mirror, and stared at my sad, shocked face. I was 23, my hair was red. There above my forehead in the mess of curls, were a few strands of stark white hair, glinting in the harsh light above the sink. They had not been there before. So, I thought, it really could be true.)

We drove past a miniature brick house, our childhood home, that had been so spacious at the time. When it’s your whole world it never seems that small. Also, the house I had rented for me and my passel of kids years later, for the grand sum of 140 dollars. The reason being, it was dilapidated and top to bottom a very ugly, faded pink. (And, I am just lucky.) Driving past destination points: a swimming quarry, the oldest, tallest, widest tree that stood alone in a meadow, a favourite picnic spot along the river, the fine, white sand of Crystal Beach on Lake Erie that had thrilled me as a kid. I was surprised at how accessible and how short a distance they were from where we had lived. It had been such a big deal to go to these places with my parents. They had managed to do a great leap, from England to Canada after the war, but planning an outing in the car and driving 20 miles together as a family was one fraught with… anticipation? (Us kids.) Drama? Gloom? Resistance? Irritation? (My parents.)

All the small communities within townships between Fort Erie and Niagara Falls and Hamilton, all the signposts that announced the population and there at the crossroads would be a church, a hall, a post office, a general store, had a certain look. The repetitiveness of it was soothing. This was place, this was history, this was a certain constancy that hadn’t changed and wasn’t changing. The weathered buildings from the four extreme seasons, definitely different architecture from the west coast; squat houses, smaller, older, brick with porches and surrounded by the brown broken stalks of what would have been the gardens of summer.

I had been born here and had at some point gone down these roads or ones like them. I recognized them now for what had been my home, my past, my history, but the nostalgia I felt was not mine to own. Apart from the distinct, encapsulated and burnished childhood memories that I hold tightly, this was not my place any more. Having left long ago, these travels through my hometown, watching the river, and standing in a storm on that same beach at Lake Erie, were experienced now as a visitor, or seen through the long lens of memory.

So I sat again, on another plane, coming back to here. And I thought, I am 40,000 feet high, and I cannot touch the sky. Or the ground. And right now we are hurtling forward 500 miles an hour. I couldn’t touch my childhood, and I cannot touch the future. Forwards or backwards it all comes out the same. What’s it going to BE…HERE…NOW?

A little faith.

Good Life
diane

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