Saturday, January 2, 2010

Sign of the Times

A few weeks ago I was addressing Christmas cards, and was again faced with the fact that I have the handwriting of an old lady.


Actually, that's not true. I am selling the elderly short. Well into her eighties, my surviving grandmother had handwriting that was measured and controlled, demonstrating a manual dexterity learned early and exercised over a lifetime. Only in recent years has it faltered.


I feel self-conscious sending her cards. Even when I use my best pen and try to carefully shape my words, the letters "h", "m", and "n" still come out squashed, and "b", "v", and "w" are misshapen. A few years ago she admonished me for my barely legible scrawl, and since then I've made occasional, half-hearted attempts to improve it. When stuck in meetings I sometimes practice: aaa, bbb, ccc, ddd.  But then I get bored and I forget about it until the next time I sit down in front of a blank birthday card, pen in hand.

I do have a special skill, though: I can write backwards with my left hand. It's not something I ever set out to master. It's just something I can do. With my right hand, sentences move from left to right. But with my left hand, the letters all flip and flow in the opposite direction. My right hand passes everything it knows to the left and while the script is shaky, it's still legible when held up to a mirror. If there's anything I should practice, it's my mirror writing. It makes for a decent party trick. 



I've always struggled with handwriting. I remember trying to make the transition from printing to script. The teacher had us use pencils until she deemed us skilled enough for ink. I was one of the last to advance beyond lead, and I suspect I was given a pass only because my teacher couldn't extend the restriction past fifth grade.


For years my writing was long and thin, slanting to the right. I would angle the top of the sheet to the left while writing, and from that perspective it looked okay. But when I straightened the paper again I was always disappointed with the outcome. Nowadays my writing is less slanted, but it's disjointed, alternating between print and script. If handwriting is indeed indicative of personality, then I am inconsistent and difficult to read.


High school typing class was the beginning of the end of my already weak penmanship skills. While slow to develop, I am now a crackerjack typist. I type fast, and I type hard. Childhood piano lessons likely had something to do with this. When completing a sentence that pleases me, I lift my right hand from the keyboard as though playing the final note of a concerto.


I couldn't imagine going back to writing everything longhand. It takes so long and makes editing such a sloppy process.


Still, handwriting can come through in a pinch. Back when I was doing my MA I was one of a half dozen students to volunteer at a communications conference being held here in Montreal. Our job was to register attendees. We worked with a computer system set up to automatically print nametags, and the printer would frequently malfunction. I remember watching one of my fellow volunteers curse and fight the machine, until the waiting attendee leaned over the desk and asked "Wouldn't it be easier if you just used a pen?" Appropriately enough, the man asking the question was Neil Postman, a well-known critic of society's increasing dependence on technology. It was the perfect quip from the perfect source, and it made my day. We handed him a writing utensil, he wrote out his name, and went on his way.


Postman's question came to mind on my last day of vacation in France this past July. My gracious hosts Guy and Mimi wanted to give me a jar of fresh homemade jam. Mimi scooped jam from the pot and into a jar, and Guy tasked himself with creating the label. He went to the computer, called up a word processing application, entered "Confiture de Peches, Mireille et Guy 2009", and initiated the print job. When the label came out, part of the text along the top was cut off. Guy fiddled with the word positioning, tried printing again, and again it came out incorrectly. So he tried again. And again. And again and again and again, his frustration mounting with each failed attempt, ruined sheets of labels littering the floor. After a half hour's struggle, he got it. The result was lovely, but the effort and waste involved was ridiculous.


Wouldn't it be easier if you just used a pen?


Such instances aside, I don't have much call for putting pen to paper nowadays. Aside from greeting cards, the only things I write out are grocery lists, the occasional cheque, and my signature on credit card receipts. Now that my credit card is chip-enabled, the opportunities to practice signing my own name will continue to dwindle.


And once Grandma Diggins passes away, there will be that much less incentive for me to try.


In the years before my Grandma Berube's death in 2001, her decline was visible in the cards she sent. As her motor control and mental faculties weakened, her letters became more spidery. This year my aunt Cathy wrote out Christmas cards on behalf of Grandma Diggins.


I've kept some of what they've sent over the years. The sight of their script means as much as the messages they convey.




(Note: Both cards are from 1995. The first is from Grandma Diggins, and the second from Grandma Berube.)


My awkward handwriting is not indicative of a loss of mental faculties. Not yet anyway.


But it does signal a certain kind of forgetting.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Lee, Elton, Ethel, and Orson

As the seasonal festive frenzy peaks, I invite you to pause a few moments and enjoy the following bit of holiday cheer:



Happy Merry!

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Notes from the Trenches

[One cannot be expected to be productive at the office every day of the year, right? Especially with a company Christmas party coming up. The following is an excerpt from an instant message exchange with co-workers. Light editing was performed to clean up spelling errors and pare down personal details.]

Kim says:
It's tiring being cool and gracious all the time.

Kim says:
So I'm going to pick on Jess at the xmas party tonight.

Kim says:
Make fun of her airline hostess scarf.

Marvin says:
I can see why you might have wanted me to come though... Jess certainly would have dodged a bullet.

Kim says:
Exactly. You're a great punching bag.

Marvin says:
I thought so. Ask J for some salted peanuts and another pillow for me will you? (flight attendant reference)

Kim says:
Will do.

Kim says:
(snip)
Kim says:
Hey there, Marvin says he'd like some salted peanuts and an extra pillow when you've got a minute.

Jessica says:
Oh, hilarious.

Jessica says:
Marvin is only getting a slap in the face when I have a minute


(snip)

Marvin says:
OMG... you started the whole thing!

Jessica has been added to the conversation.

Marvin says:
Kim started the whole thing and prompted me to add something to the conversation. She should get the slap!

Jessica says:
You're both getting slapped

Jessica says:
that way it's even

Kim says:
Hee!

Marvin says:
Given the amount of things about me that I have to be bugged about (pear shape, hair loss, etc...) - don't you think I know to keep my mouth shut? Kim is evil... pure evil.

Kim says:
I never said you were pear shaped!

Jessica says:
Also, that's not even true

Jessica says:
you flap your lip all the time

Kim says:
Also, when I make fun of your hair it's because of its shape.

Kim says:
And yeah! You're a lip flapper!

Jessica says:
pear-shaped?

Marvin says:
No hang on that wasn't an invitation to start bugging me.

Kim says:
His hair you mean?

Jessica says:
yeah, what shape is it?

Kim says:
Sometimes astro boy, but lately it's like a triangle.

Marvin says:
Besides, Jess don't you have to prepare for arrival and crosscheck?

Jessica says:
there you go, flapping your lip again

Kim says:
I want her to point out the emergency exits.

Marvin has left the conversation.

Kim says:
Fine. He's left the conversation. What a wuss.

Jessica says:
I know, can't take the heat

Kim says:
And so he's out of the kitchen!

Jessica says:
sigh, what now?

Kim says:
Meh, I dunno.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Waxing Nostalgic


This candle is a family heirloom. He's been part of my Christmas landscape for as long as I can remember. And although more than thirty years old, Santa is as sprightly as ever.


Look at him: part of his left mitt was chewed off sometime in the late 70s, so he seems to be patting his hair coquettishly rather than waving. His cheeks and mouth are red, his eyelashes long, his wick still erect.


He is one of a set of three: two Santas and a Frosty the Snowman. Mom gave each of my siblings and I one when we moved out. She's funny like that. Every year I get a Christmas decoration in my stocking, be it a plastic penguin on skis, or a glass ornament purchased as part of a community fundraising effort, or a stuffed bear sporting a festive tuque. In the old days, mothers would collect linens for their daughters to prepare them for when they had households of their own. My mother does the same but with ornaments, as though a house is only a home at Christmastime when it contains a porcelain set of St. Nicks from around the world. I don't think any of us will ever burn our bequeathed candles. After seeing them lined up on side tables for a few dozen Decembers, setting fire to Santa and watching him melt would feel like sacrilege.


When I was growing up, my parents only lit candles that went on birthday cakes. Holiday pillars kept their white waxy tips from one year to the next, and this didn't seem unusual to me. My parents are not mood-lighting people. Although never stated, I think they view candle burning as an extravagance, and the flickering light an impediment to properly viewing the contents of their dinner plates. When we were young they probably also worried that one of us would accidentally burn the house down.


A few Christmases ago I took the train for the yearly trip to see my family. I arrived in the evening and mom picked me up at the station. When we got home I opened the front door and was greeted by loud music and a blaze of light. I can't remember whether carols were playing or if dad had simply put on some Dire Straits or Springsteen or Beatles or what. In any case, he was dancing, the tree lights were on along with all the overhead lights and lamps, and every single decorative candle in the room was lit. My sister and brother were already there, enjoying the show.


"He's been into the sauce," said Heather.


Dad looked over at mom and I and froze, making a mock show of fear. "Uh oh, now I'm in for it. Your mother's gonna kill me." Then he resumed his dance, throwing his head back and his arms up in the air.


"I did it, honey! I lit them! I lit them all!"

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Mutual Admiration Society

It seems I've actually inspired someone.
Neat! This makes my day.


Thanks Amanda!

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Cottage Life

I haven't thought about the cottage in a while. Or cottages; in my immediate family there were three.

The first two were on Clear Lake, located in the Rideau Corridor (http://www.rideau-info.com/canal/ecology/article-ecology.html).

Cottage #1 was a cabin that my parents bought when they were young and cash-strapped. Green rug in the living room, plywood floor leading to a bathroom with a porta-pottie, and gas lamps for light.



My brother and sister and I shared a room crowded with a bunk bed and a fold-out cot. In floor corners we'd dump oversized hobo pouches made of bright, patterned 70s fabric. Mom fashioned them for us to pack our weekend gear, labeling each with our names in marker. Leftover material was used for bedroom curtains.


Daytime activities were varied. Picking wild blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries. Seeking out frogs, turtles, mink, snakes, mice, and chipmunks.



Observing the beaver dam. Fighting over binoculars to better view the blue heron or the loons on the lake. Swimming, canoeing, and riding to Chaffey's Lock in the red motorboat. And though I never got the hang of the windsurfer, dad did. On gusty days he was something to see.


Blackflies, horseflies, mosquitoes. Damselflies and dragonflies.


Patches of trillium and the leaning cedar tree.


Large indentations on the hill around the bend that I hypothesized were caused by dinosaur or meteor.


At night we read or played games like Boggle or Dominoes. Or cards. Christ, I sucked at cards. My sister kicked my ass every time.


Then there were the chores -- stick gathering comes to mind. I was probably a real pill about it too. Yup, idyllic as it was, there were times I moped about having to go to the cottage with my little brother and sister when it would be much more fun to stay in town for sleepover parties with friends. And use a real toilet.


Cottage #2 was built on the same piece of land. A bigger construction with a wood exterior. My parents had the frame built, and then tasked themselves with finishing the interior.



I recall it being a lot of work.


The old cabin was hauled away in wintertime after the new one was erected. I didn't miss it, but it maintains a more prominent place in my memory than its successors.


A few years later my parents sold the second place. I don't know why. Money problems? Stress over keeping up a second property? Irritation at having to listen to children complain that they'd rather be playing video games or hanging out at the mall?


Whatever the issue, they must have resolved it for a time, because a year or two later they bought cottage #3. It was in the same general area. Two stories, a few bedrooms, fully finished. But I was only there sporadically. My weekends were being given over increasingly to summer jobs and to my high school social life, such as it was. After a while, my parents sold again.


The constant during the first twenty years of my life was my grandparents' cottage, located about 45 minutes away from ours.


I had more fun there. My parents didn't view their surroundings through a filter of to-do lists, and there were usually lots of people around to distract my siblings and I from our bickering.


Details of that cottage on Higley Lake are still vivid: the screened-in porch where we'd have lunch, old framed photographs, floral-print sofas, blue upholstered rocking chair, party-line telephone, and the smell of something that I can only think might have been old books. There was a big window that overlooked the lake by day, and provided an entomological showcase by night. And the lake itself was great. It wasn't overtaken by weeds, and it was deep enough that you could do jumps off the end of the dock. We'd spend hours down there.



Back inside, granddad would serve us ginger ale, and we would place our glasses on pastel aluminum coasters.


Theirs was the site of many extended family dinners.


Rub-a-dub-dub, thanks for the grub, yay God.


My grandparents sold the cottage in the mid-nineties, I think. They were getting older and having trouble keeping the place up, and with new constructions popping up along the property line, the sense of seclusion was spoiled anyway.


During my late teens and early twenties, the cottage experience faded. After years in the suburbs I was enjoying life in Toronto, and then Montreal. It was urban and it was exciting. At the time I couldn't get enough of it.


But lately there's been a shift. Getting out of town to a cottage is a treat that doesn't happen often enough for my liking. Granted, it's different now. My friends and I usually rent a place near St. Agathe. Or we take advantage of the Elkin family cabin near St. Sauveur. Our meals are fancier, the booze flows freely. We have Double Dominoes instead of Dominoes, and the best evenings include a few rounds of Celebrities.



But the nighttime absence of city hum and light is the same as it ever was, and the air smells just as good.


And while I may be all grown up, competitive dock jumping never gets old.


Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Sick List

I have been remarkably healthy this year. I think I came down with a cold back in February, but the fact that I can't quite remember suggests that whatever it was couldn't have been that bad. 


Every now and then, I feel my body flirting with illness. I go to bed wondering how it'll play out overnight, and then more often than not, wake up congratulating my immune system for another job well done.


Tonight I have that flirty feeling again. Maybe I'm just a little run down or experiencing a deep animal need to hibernate. Or maybe it's something more. H1N1 is all over the news and I've got friends currently suffering from viral slapdowns, so I'm particularly wary.


Finding yourself sick without the proper supplies sucks. There's nothing like having to haul your fevered ass outside because you're out of canned soup.


And do you think I can count on this chucklehead for any Lassie-style assistance?



"Cammie! I have been felled by the flu! Here, take this letter that I have laboriously scrawled in my weakened state and get help! Run, Cammie, run! Swift like the wind! You are my only hope!"


Nope. I'm on my own. So tonight I got organized and ensured that I have everything on my sick list:


- hot toddy ingredients**

- soup

- throat lozenges

- cold meds

- books

- movies

- Gatorade



To all the germy germs out there: bring it on.



**Digginteresting Hot Toddy Mix

Serves 2


- 4 cups water

- 4 inch piece fresh ginger, peeled and thinly sliced

- juice from 1 lemon (or to taste)

- 2 tbsp honey (or to taste)

- 2 shots brandy

- lemon verbena leaves, fresh or dried (optional)


Add ginger to 4 cups water, and bring to a boil. If desired, add lemon verbena leaves. Lower heat and simmer, uncovered, for 5 minutes. Strain liquid into two mugs. Divide fresh lemon juice and honey, then add a shot of brandy to each mug. Serve immediately.


Note: Don't go overboard with the brandy. In a sickly haze a couple of years back I dribbled too much hooch into the brew and have a distinct memory of being incapacitated on the couch, thinking: "Great. Now I'm feverish and I'm wasted." Trust me, it's less fun than it sounds.