Showing posts with label childhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label childhood. Show all posts

Saturday, November 6, 2010

The Big Brown Chair


"Old furniture has ghosts," said the woman in the movie I was watching  this evening, and immediately I remembered it: the Big Brown Chair that sat  in my Grandma's small living room in her modest four room cottage on Christleton Avenue.

I couldnt find a picture of the exact chair on-line, but it was somewhat of this shape, only wider, and one color,  a solid fuzzy dark brown. And so comfy! The other furniture my grandma had was servicable, plain and uncomfortable. In those days furniture was built to last, to be  useful, to serve a purpose. One bought it, and used it for the rest of one's life. My grandparents would have been appalled at the idea of re-doing a room, when what was in it was perfectly serviceable. Or, even worse, of buying on credit an item that they couldnt afford to pay cash for. It never happened.

Before the Big Brown Chair, I had rocked back and forth in a wooden rocker in the afternoons, listening to my "stories" on the radio: Maggie Muggins, which ended every afternoon with the line "And I dont know what will happen tomorrow!" which I could relate to. I never knew what the next day would bring either. Or, more particularly, what might happen that night, when my parents took me home after work.

But then somehow  the Big Brown Chair appeared, wide and soft and comfortable as sitting in the lap of a big fuzzy teddy bear. I sat in it by the hour. I read books in it, I curled up in it just for comfort and it wrapped its arms around me.

My grandma looked after me a lot of the time back then. When the other grandkids came to visit, we all fought over the Big Brown Chair. I remember once I had possession of it and Teddy - my adored older cousin, who was a sophisticated eleven to my gullible four or five years - asked if he could have a turn. I said no and he pretended indifference, wandered over to the screen door and looked out with sudden apparent interest.

"Wow! Look at that!"
"What?" I asked, intrigued.
"There! Look! I see a bunny!"
"A bunny?" I hopped off the chair, ran to the door. Teddy ran across the room and leaped into the Big Brown Chair.
"Yes, a stupid little bunny who let me get the Big Brown Chair," he grinned.
Grrrrrr.

I sat in that chair through years of my childhood, snug in the safety of grandma's quiet cottage, the ticking of the clock on her windowsill the only sound besides the turning of pages of all the books I read curled up in its lap. I voyaged in that chair  to other lives, other places, other times, away from the life I tried to block out that was going on at my house, towards a future that lay golden and full of possibility before me.

One year the Big Brown Chair wasnt there any more. But when I was a young married woman, my aunt gave me a similarly old chesterfield and chair set built along the same sturdy comfortable lines. I passed them on to my sister when we "upgraded", but the new set was not comfortable - or comforting. It lacked soul.

 I have gone through other, cheaply made (but far more expensive) couches and chairs in my lifetime, but I'll bet somewhere that old brown chair and that other couch and chair set are still in someone's basement, still providing a lap for grandkids to curl up in in the long hot summer afternoons, or during Christmas vacation.

I have been on a search for years for a couch that is comfy and capacious enough to accomodate me the way those pieces did. They dont make them like that any more.

I should have hung onto them.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Childhood Days on Lorne Avenue

Florence and Wilfred on their 50th wedding anniversary in 1964. Behind them, left to right, are their children: Don, Audrey, Renee, Cecile and LaVergne. They were to make it past their 60th anniversary together. A good looking bunch of critters!

My mom, Renee. I cant imagine putting a baby on anything this tall and tippy!

Big brother LaVergne, with my mom, Renee, in the wagon. So cute! I wrote about LaVergne in July in Rose-Lip'd Maidens, Lightfoot Lads.


Renee - this was one of my grandma's favorite poses for photos. My mom epitomizes the innocence of childhood in this shot.



My mom was beautiful her entire life.


Cecile and Renee. I love this sequence of shots. Cecile suffered from rheumatic fever as a child, but it wasnt diagnosed. They discovered she had had it when she was an adult and began to suffer with heart problems. In those days of scarcity, visits to the doctor were rare.



This expression is classic Renee. I have a photo of her in her 60's looking exactly like this!
Big smile! Mom had such lovely long curls. At school, she was given the lead in the play Red Riding Hood because of her lovely locks. As life got busier at home, I suppose my grandmother decided that, to make life easier, she would cut off Renee's hair and she could have the old fashioned bowl-shaped haircuts the other girls had. The story goes that the nuns cried when she returned to school the day after her haircut!

Renee, seated, LaVergne standing behind her, Audrey perched on the chair arm and Cecile on the right. Audrey was always petite and had a sparkling personality all her life. She walked on tiptoe most of the time. My mom would fondly recall her tiptoing into the kitchen in the mornings, asking brightly "Everybody had their porr'dge?" If everybody had, she would proceed to lick up whatever was left.
Audrey was a reader, and would get deeply immersed in her books. Their two story house on Lorne Avenue, in Saskatoon, had a chimney pipe running up through the second story. One day, there was a chimney fire. The firemen came, dealt with the fire and left, and Audrey never budged from her seat. She was so engrossed in her book, she didnt even realize there had been a fire!

This is Don, the youngest, looking like a cherub. He came along when my grandmother was 40. My mom told me my grandma had been rather embarrassed at being pregnant at forty, in such strict Church-going times. My mom was twelve at the time, and said she helped look after Don a lot of the time, given all the work of the busy household.
One night she was putting him to bed upstairs and he was making quite a fuss, hollering and yelling.
Downstairs, Audrey looked up from her book to drolly comment, "It sounds rather like The Taming of the Shrew!"
This little lad is 80 now. It is hard to believe. He still has the same white-blonde hair. His wife, Donna, says it is frustrating that he doesnt have a single gray hair on his head!

Here he is at age five, the day of his First Communion, sitting with his Grandma Julie.

Here comes trouble! Still with the bowl haircuts, but they're getting bigger now. Left to right:
Renee, friend Grace, Cecile, friend Dot, Audrey, and LaVergne.


The other favorite pose for photos, and it looks like maybe they're putting a little Attitude into it:) LaVergne, Audrey, Renee and Cecile.
Family stories from these years are more familiar to me than my own, I heard them so often, told with such love. A family's evolutionary journey through the entire 1900's!

Sunday, August 15, 2010

My Grandmother's Garden

364 Christleton Avenue
My grandmother's garden,
round the modest little house
she lived her life in,
on Christleton Avenue
in 1950's Kelowna,
had wisteria and mimosa
and pinks,
pungent in the
slow decline of evening,
and bachelor buttons,
forsythia
and roses,
roses covering the arched trellis
above the gate
I used to swing on
through the slow,
sultry summer afternoons,
everything blooming
in all the summer gardens.
In the morning
the sound of water
hitting the side of the house
woke me
as grandma
hosed everything down
before the day got hot,
and lowered the canvas awnings
like sleepy eyelids
over the windows
at the front of
the little house.
In memory,
at my grandma's,
it is always summer,
mornings scented with
fresh lake breezes
and dry grasses,
bathing suits strung out
on the line
just waiting to be
pulled down again
for the next swim.....
all the childhood pleasures
live at grandma's
in my memory,
how we would sit
smiling at each other
in her back porch
listening to the thunder
rolling in the afternoons,
the smell right after,
just as the rain started
hitting the thirsty earth
Once I swam in the lake
during an afternoon storm,
metallic scent, strange silences
the world gun-metal gray
Some mornings
I'd swing in the hammock
under the weeping willow,
behind it
hollyhocks and
sweet peas
climbed wooden stakes
and string
back where
my grandpa
parked his car.
He'd come home for lunch,
gruff,
but with a kind twinkle
in his eye
and give me a dime for
the ice cream truck
when it came
Saskatoon berries bunched
beside the house -
the ladies at afternoon tea,
in hats and gloves,
all from the prairies,
ate jam mixed with memories
from the ripened fruit
In those days
there was no bridge
across the lake
When we went on a trip
my dad said
a ferry
would take us across
I was disappointed
with the big white boat
I had been expecting
a small magical being
with beating wings
and made my father smile
My grandma saved my life
when I was a child
and she did it
in the simplest way she knew:
by keeping house,
by tending her garden,
the same day after day,
routine and safe,
showing me,
child from a different world
of drink and poverty,
another way
that a life
could be.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

THOSE WERE THE DAYS, MY FRIEND.....

"those were the days, my friend,
we thought they'd never end......"

Those lyrics by Mary Hopkins totally sum it up.........In those days, my four children and I lived in a little cottage on Ethel Street in Kelowna. It was our only real home as a family. I planted a huge garden there, to feed my kids, and I had every type of fruit tree, (and planted fruit) imaginable....watermelon, grapes, cantelopes, strawberries, raspberries, plums, cherries........and veggies galore. We had no car, so we went everywhere on bikes, me in front with Stephanie sitting behind, the other three stretched out behind me. We'd sail through intersections like a mother duck and her brood and all the drivers would smile. They'd smile harder at me bringing home actual fruit trees on the front and back of my bike, me peering through the branches, trying to keep from toppling over. Hated those stop lights!!!! Getting back on such a challenge.

Jon was taking the photo above, Lisa is halfway out of the frame, Stephanie (otherwise known as "NODDA-baby!!!!") precariously hanging onto Mom, and Jeff on the right. I see Snacks in the basket. Gotta have 'em on a long bike ride.

Those days had the endless dream-like quality of childhood to them. It truly seemed they would last forever. But it all vanished way too soon. Thankfully, I have my memories, and good ones they are - and photographs to document that special time.

What was there to do in that little house? Why, everything!




Sit on the stairs for endless group photos.........so many
pictures in that house were on those stairs. You havent seen it yet,
but soon you'll meet The Hat. Every kid has photos of them in a big old leather Mexican hat.


Work in the garden..........it was HOT, weeding was BORING,
but we sure enjoyed the produce.









The squash were especially fine that year.




Maybe our favorite thing was hikes up Knox Mountain to fly kites. Here is Lisa
looking pretty in the grass.




















Jeff in his backpack.









Stephanie



This is my favorite photo of the kids and I. Jeff, plunging ahead into life with his big grin, Lisa hesitantly approaching her teens, Jon being Mr. Man, and me bringing up the rear with Steph on my hip. All of us have always loved the wilderness, and to this day all of my kids are happiest out in nature.













Even in winter, we could bike out to Gyro Beach for a picnic.


Jon: "Mom, can you hold my pop?"
Me: "No, that's what God gave you two hands for: one for a pop, and one for a sandwich!"
And they laughed.

Stephanie was pouting because I wouldnt let her climb the tree for fear she'd fall out.
If it was now, I'd have let her! Climb, that is. At least a little ways up.



Jon has been a fisherman since he was ten. On this glorious fall day, I let him stay home from school and we went fishing at Mission Creek out in the country - reached by bike, of course. He caught a fish, it fell off the hook and leaped back into the water and, while I was cracking up laughing, I took a series of photos of him looking for the fish, holding his hands up like "where's the fish?", spotting it, plunging after it, and finally catching it with his bare hands.





I have rarely ever laughed so hard,
in a lifetime of hilarity.



Here's that garden again - everyone looks happy. Must have been my day to weed!
(I did 99 per cent of the weeding, and I loved the peaceful hours in the garden, our big fat rabbit munching and dozing along the paths beside me........but every now and then I would decide the kids needed to learn about Chores. Remember On Golden Pond where the adults said "what's the use of having dwarfs if they dont do chores?" I tried that line on the kids once and they pointed out I was by then the shortest member in the family. Go figure! )

There was lots of music, lots of all-night sleepovers, lots of dancing!














Lots of love.




Lots of birthday parties!






And what better way to spend a summer day than going to the lake for a swim and getting a nice big cone?



Back on the mountain again. We loved that mountain which, sadly, now has
houses built all over it. All of the orchards we biked past are now condos............
Sigh.


Here is Jon happy on the mountaintop. His photo belongs up higher, but this blogging template has a mind of its own:)



Siblings in happy reverie.......



Baby Steph. Oh, sorry, I forgot.
"I'm NODDA baby!!!!!!!"
Hard being the fourth child. She wandered around singing
"Leave me alone, this is my life" at age three. It was
pretty funny. My mom did such a double-take!

Happy days. So glad we had them. We've all had rocky roads, but in those years our family felt fun, and safe, and happy. Some hard stuff safely behind us, some very hard stuff, up ahead and thankfully unknown........... the kids started growing up and scattering.................learning about life...............When I look back, it is these days in that little house on Ethel Street that I think of as home. And they were happy days.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

GRANDMA


"Floss" and Wilf Marr


My grandmother saved my life when I was a child. My parents were alcoholic and violent. The front room was forbidden territory, for Big People only, where voices started out happy and excited, and escalated to shouts and bumps and crashes in the night.

I remember when I was about four, standing outside my grandparents' back door as dusk was falling, looking in at them sitting in the comfort and warmth and light within. Already, I felt alien, separate, like I belonged on the outside looking in. I couldnt open the door into that warmth and safety - it had to be opened to me, I had to be invited in, out of the falling dark. I lived in a different world, one I already knew I had to keep hidden, and I didnt belong there either.

My grandma's house was so silent you could hear the clock ticking and tocking on the kitchen windowsill. A little yellow cottage on Christleton Avenue, surrounded by flowers and blooming bushes, it had a picket fence with a white trellis covered with roses arching over the gate, where I would stand, swinging back and forth, gazing out at a world stupified with summer heat. Bees hardly had the energy to buzz, and the only excitement was the tinkle of the ice cream truck coming down the street. My grandma hosed everything down in the morning, before the day got too hot, then pulled the awnings down like sleepy eyelids over the front windows.

We could smell the freshness of the lake two blocks away, and the scent of thetall grass in the fields around Grandma's house. Everywhere in Kelowna where there are condominiums today, there were orchards then. Almost every yard sprouted a profusion of flowers, so the air was scented with lilac, snapdragons, peonies and pinks. It was a small town then, picture pretty and provincial in its ways. It was another era, the end of the forties, and though my life with my parents felt like one long bad dream, life itself held an innocence and a goodness as fresh as the special way the air smelled just before the summer thunderstorms that Grandma loved. The sky turned dark and the reverberation shook our little cottage, sounding like the heavens were splitting in two. And then the sizzle of the rain came down, and the fresh scent wafted through the screened in back porch where we sat for so many hours of my childhood.

My grandma looked after me when I was little and when I got older I spent summers with her, and this is how she saved my life, by showing me existence could be other than what it was in my house. She is the one who baked me cookies, told me stories, pointed out fairies dancing in the flames of her fireplace. She took me to church and gave me standards to live by. Grandma developed conscience in me and I was more afraid of her than of God. She never raised her voice to me, but her quiet words of caution and her sorrowful disappointment felt like hot lava pouring over my head.

"I have magic glasses," she told me, "and I can see you even when you're far away." So I knew when I went back to Vancouver, she was still watching over me, which scared and reassured me at the same time.

When all her adult children were visiting in the living room, she would often retreat to the closed in back porch and I would join her there. I knew what was wrong. The sound of ice cubes tinkling in glasses was a sound we both hated.

My grandparents lived simply and frugally. My grandfather made a modest living selling herbal remedies in his little shop, Health Products on Ellis Street, years before you heard much about herbs and alternative health treatments. Shelves lined the back room and the shop had the foreign smell of the cardboard round containers full of herbs that went from floor to ceiling. Sometimes I helped count out pills, fill bottles and put the labels on. My grandpa was thin, silent and gruff but had a twinkle in his eyes and a very soft heart, especially for children. In years when men didnt cry, especially as he got older, my grandpa would often be silently overcome with emotion, when something touched him. "It's the French in him," the women whispered to each other. His mother, who died when he was very small, had been French.

The aunts and uncles adored my grandpa, but were in agreement that "Mother runs him ragged." They thought it unfair that he had to go into the pantry to snort back "a little nip", thought he should be able to sit in the parlor and bravely down glasses of the amber liquid like they did. They encouraged him to, when they visited. But when company was not present, most times he'd retreat into the pantry for stealthy sips and she pretended not to notice. It was their arrangement.

An often told tale was how Grandma had given away Grandpa's best suit during the Depression, to a hobo who came to the door. They said the house must have a mark on it, so many hobos came knocking. Grandma never could turn away anyone who was hungry, even though feeding her own five children was difficult enough in those lean years. One man needed clothing and Grandma figured Grandpa didnt need the suit in the closet since he rarely wore it, so he would never miss it. Turns out, it was his best suit, the only other suit he owned being the one he wore every day:) Must have been a well-dressed hobo! Another time, Grandfma found a roll of bills in a dresser drawer and merrily spent it, thinking it was extra money - it was their rent money!

My mother still told the story, in her seventies, of the time she trudged home in the cold of a Prairie winter evening, after a long day on her feet as a hairdresser, looking forward to the pork chop she anticipated was waiting for her at home. When she came through the door, she found a hobo sitting at the kitchen table, scraping the last bit of congealed gravy onto the last bite of pork chop - her pork chop! Her voice still registered outrage, some sixty years later!

Grandpa got his family through the Depression by doing books in return for a sack of potatoes, or a sack of coal, trudging from house to house to earn the bits and pieces that kept his family fed. Grandma washed the family laundry - dresses and pinafores and sheets for five children - by hand in the bathtub, in those years. She walked miles to the railroad station to buy over-ripe bananas so she could make desserts for her family. My mom used to say her best Christmas was the one when each child received a single orange and a small toy car handmade by Grandpa.

I lived with my grandparents during my final months of high school, and I remember my Grandpa, who always wore a suit and tie, every day of his adult life, skinny and vulnerable in his long johns, stealthily padding from his bedroom to the bathroom in the early morning. He was so much the head of the family, so respected, that it felt strange to see him frail and powerless in his underwear - our eyes would meet and he'd smile and shake his head ruefully, with his customary twinkle, and we'd both studiously ignore his state of undress.

Through my childhood, when I was in Vancouver with my parents, he would enclose a small envelope inside letters to my mother, and in it would be a shiny dime for me. In those days, a dime would buy a popsicle, some penny candy and some Dubble Bubble.

Grandpa went along obligingly most times with all Grandma's plans. The family jokingly called her The Brigadier. She was always generously volunteering his services to her women friends, if they needed to be picked up or dropped off somewhere. He silently chauffered everyone on endless drives in the country on dusty Sunday afternoons.

His one quiet protest was at mealtime. He never sat down at the table without "playing checkers" with the salt and pepper shakers, and the condiments. He always moved them a few inches to the right or left. They were never just right where they were. If he was feeling cantankerous or irritable, he would thump them down extra loudly. Thump! Thump! and the salt and pepper would go three inches to the right and the sugar bowl five inches to the left. Sometimes the women would try to set everything exactly perfectly, to see what he would do. And then fall into fits of giggling when he sat down, surveyed the table, and moved one item one inch, just on general principles.

My grandma was Irish and proud of it. Her favorite song was Galway Bay which she played over and over. When she got older and began to think of death, another favorite was Beyond the Reef. She told me marvellous stories, of relatives who had supernatural things happen to them, of fairies, of a perfect little girl called Vivian, who had impeccable manners and who was set as a model of deportment to us grand children. "Vivian would never do that!" she'd say, with smug conviction. We all hated Vivian!

Grandma would have tea parties in the afternoon, with trays of dainties, and fancy flowered cups and saucers. Ladies wore housedresses and aprons to do the housework in those days. For tea parties, they took off the aprons and donned nicer dresses, and often white gloves to the wrist. And hats! Going to Church on Sunday was an occasion for finery, and on Easter Sunday everyone sported new dresses and hats and gloves and shiny patent leather shoes.

Grandma tried to teach me manners. I remember her amusement when, at one afternoon tea, I got mixed up and responded to a question I hadnt heard with a dreamy, bemused, "Huh, Miss Hicks?" and how she teased me on the way home. "HAAAAAAAAAAHHHHH, Miss Hicks?" she grinned, fairly chomping with pleasure. (She and her friends called each other "Miss Hicks" and "Mrs. Marr", and Grandpa was always referred to by my Grandma as Mr. Marr, even after fifteen years of friendship.)

Grandma had a wild and zany sense of humour. She loved to play practical jokes, especially on her poor cat. She had a big black fluffy Persian called Beau with a kink in his tail. He got the kink by getting his tail caught in the screen door, with some assistance from my Grandma. When he wanted to go out, he was a torturous mass of conflicted desire. Grandma would stand at the doorway, arms akimbo, holding the screen door open invitingly. Beau would size up the situation: her holding the door, the memories of his tail connecting with the doorjamb, the inviting scent of the outdoors, the needs of his bladder.......Finally, no options left, he would bolt for the door and Grandma, timing honed to the split second, would let it slam just in time to connect with his tail. An enraged yowl, my Grandma's cackle, and Grandma serenely resumed her housework, while the cat plotted revenge. Grandma kept him confused as, most times, he would be let in and out without incident. But each time, looking through the open door, you could see him calculating, gauging, wondering: would this be the time the door let fly? Eventually Beau would sulkily come back inside, till bladder needs put him in the same predicament once again.

Grandma cleaned the house in the mornings. Sometimes while she was busy in the kitchen, I would be allowed to listen to programs on the radio, while I rocked back and forth in the rocking chair. This was very special, especially my favorite show, Maggie Muggins, that always ended with the line: "And I dont know WHAT will happen tomorrow!", which about summed up the story of my life (and the cat's!)

In the long and silent afternoons, with everything tidy and the wash on the line and the sweet peas watered, Grandma rested, to the peaceful and comforting ticking of the clock. I remember her climbing into the bottom bunk beside me to settle me for my nap, her soft womanly grandmother's body providing a safety and a comfort I never knew anywhere else. It was with my grandparents that I went for drives, had regular meals, went visiting, saw life as normal people lived it. Home was a battlefield, strewn with corpses that got up the next morning and fought again, where I retreated into silence, and watched with scared eyes.

I got to pay Grandma back for those early years when she was old and in a nursing home. I sat with her through many many hours and paid her back with time and love for the time and love she so generously gave to me when I was small.

Her life as she had known it ended with my grandfather's death, but she lived fifteen more years without him. Her spirit utterly rejected the nursing home. "There are too many OLD eople in here!" she, in her eighties, declared. She was unable to adjust to where her life had landed her. Grandma felt trapped for too long in a life she no longer wanted.

She would walk down Ethel Street to my little cottage full of children, and sit out in the yard under the grape vines and cvhat with me while I weeded my garden. Then I would walk her home, tears rolling down her face, back to her room at the Lloyd Jones.

"I'm still here!" she'd say disgustedly, when I popped my head around her door the next day or the next. "I'm just too damned healthy."

But sometimes she would talk about the Old Days, the stories of her time, when life was vital and whole around her. One day she put music on and started dancing lightly, a few steps, smiling, and I saw straight inside her, to the light bright smiling self inside the body that didnt work too well any more: the self that she had been as a young girl was still there.

Once she told me "I wanted to raise you, especially after your father died, but your mom wouldnt allow it. She thought people would think she was a bad mother if she gave you up. But I wish I could have - you never had a chance."

When she was moved to the extended care unit, she retreated increasingly into silence and sometimes we would just sit, not needing conversation. My presence was enough for her. One night as I wheeled her into her room I saw a purple sunset out the window and wheeled her closer. We watched in silence as it set.

She didnt want anything but to be gone from her body in those final years but sometimes I would talk her into coming and sitting out under the trees with me, just outside the hospital. I'd wheel her to where green branches arched overhead and we'd sit and listen, to the wind rustle through the branches, hear the birds chirping above us.

It was under these same trees that I told her I was moving away to the wild west coast, the move that had been my dream for twenty years. It was hard to tell her her most frequent visitor and supporter was going away. I was full of inner tears but also knew that I must go. I had already been waiting for the last five years and knew if I didnt leave now, maybe I never would. With her characteristic generosity Grandma encouraged me to go. "It's your dream, and you've had such a hard time. You deserve some happiness."

We sat in silence some more. I watched her turning her ring around and around on her finger. Her engagement and wedding ring were welded together, symbol of the love she and grandpa had shared for the sixty-odd years they were together. She was deep in thought, turning and turning the ring. The air turned electric and still.

Suddenly, she pulled it off and handed it to me. I started to demur, to shake my head but "No," Grandma insisted. "I want to be sure that you have this. It's never been off my finger, but I want to be sure that it goes to you."

I knew when I left Grandma that I would carry her with me, that she was so much a part of me that I could never really lose her. I went back for a visit later and found her much changed, not as aware of who I was or that I was there. But when I spoke of the ocean and the eagles and the beauty of where I lived, she smiled.

I went back to help her make the transition from this world to the next and spent a week at her bedside, listening to her labored breathing, wetting her lips with moistened Q-tips when she lifted her hand and pointed. In a moment when she was still aware, I leaned close beside her ear and told her: "Thanks for all the love" and watched a single tear slide down her cheek. I knew she wanted nothing more than to be released from her body and that hospital bed, to be with my grandpa once more, so I supported her with love in her dying as she had supported me in times when living had seemed too hard for me.

My mom broke down at the end of the funeral when the strains of Galway Bay began. And on the bus, heading home, through the mountain pass towards the beaches and the wilderness I love, I was looking out the window, remembering how the real parting had been when I moved away, but how I knew then that I would carry Grandma with me inside my heart forever. She was as much a part of me as the air and the sky and the trees and the wind, and so we would never really be apart. Just then, the strains of Galway Bay tinkled through my brain. I wasnt thinking of the music, it was playing in my mind. Instantly, I said "Hi Grandma, I love you!" and the music drifted out the other side and away. And I knew that it was Grandma, passing through.