Fa'Me'ly ...

For someone who proudly boasts 'communications' as a skill on LinkedIn, I am a piss-poor, crappy communicator. 

Don't get me wrong; I can be effective when I actually DO communicate.  The problem is, I don't do it enough.

I can go months without e-mailing my best friend in Canada.  Months without messaging my closest cousin.

I e-mail my brother individually about once a year.   A bit more if you count the group e-mail updates I occasionally wing off to him and my three sisters.  Horrible, I know.

I have two sisters I email on a more or less weekly basis, sometimes a bit more if something big is going on.  We skype every once in a while.

I don't even go on Facebook much anymore ... I always feel like my status updates read sappy or boastful ... I'm not one to air dirty laundry via broadband, so I figure a steady flow of positive, sentimental and inspiring updates on recent travels and accomplishments might lead to the mistaken assumption by 'friends' that either my life is miraculously trouble-free and zen (not the case), or I am entirely full of $h;t (won't say it's absolutely impossible! ...). 

As an expat, you'd expect me to be absolutely prompt, punctual, methodic and diligent with my correspondence, wouldn't you? 

I'm not quite sure why my communications are so sporadic.  Maybe it's because I grew up as an expat child, far away from most of my loved ones yet never doubting they would be there when I came back.  Maybe it's because the time difference is so inconvenient (in the morning in Qatar, my loved ones are snuggled deep asleep in their beds; in the evenings in Qatar, my loved ones back in Canada are at work).  Saturday's the only day we all have off in common, which is also the day virtually no one is home.  Maybe it's because my siblings were a generation older than me so we never actually lived together that long.  Maybe it's because I've always kind of preferred dealing with my stuff internally.  Maybe it's because I spent so many years wanting to escape the place I was in; sometimes a simple phone calls brings me right smack dab back. 

Or maybe it's just because I'm lazy.

Yeah, THAT.

Yet for the last year, I'd been calling my Dad every single day.  Just to say 'hi'.  Just to hear his voice.  Just to have him sing me a song. Just to repeat the exact same conversation every single day (if you've been following my blog, you might know he's battling small cell lung cancer and Alzheimer's).  Just to savor the moment, however fleeting, however geographically disparate we might be. Just to laugh at the same joke day after day.  Just to feel like I was breaking up what have become very mundane days for him.  Even though he would forget my call virtually as soon as I hung up.  Even though I knew our conversation would be nothing more than a slight itch at the back of his brain when he placed the handset back in its cradle.  Those daily conversations became a balm; if not for him, at least for me. 

That changed in July of this year.  I'd gone back to Canada in late May without Smilin' Vic and Kiddo, just to spend a few weeks with my Dad.  To have his eyes widen like saucers that first time he set them on me again after almost a year.  To hear his excited exclamation of joy as he uttered my name in amazement as only a loving parent can.  To see tears glistening in the corners of his aged eyes, making them bright with false youth once again as he shuffled towards me as quickly as his failing legs and walker would allow him.  To feel his once powerful arms wrap around me and hear him repeat 'aye, aye, aye, aye' over and over again ...  

Despite the Alzheimer's ravaging its way through his memories, he hadn't forgotten me.  And he knew it was a big deal that I was there.  And even though every day of my visit he greeted me with a hug and a kiss and a smile and excitement, I never once again got that same reaction as on the first day I arrived.  The disease is ravaging his brain, but it's not killing his smarts.  Somewhere deep inside, his emotional intelligence was telling him on those subsequent daily visits that it hadn't been that long since he'd seen me last.

When the July night finally came for me to fly back to Qatar with my husband and daughter, we had a last gathering at my sister's.  Two of my sisters, my brother-in-law, Smilin' Vic, Kiddo, my dad, me.  Just Fa'ME'ly.  We sat outdoors on the deck, enjoying the cool breeze and late afternoon sun.  The guys, including my dad, had beers. We all had pizza.  We laughed.  My Dad sang an old Hank Locklin song .... over, and over, and over again. My sister had bought a ridiculous amount of cherries, and my dad ate a huge bowl after dinner, followed by the most amazing jaw-clenchingly moldy Roquefort.  He truly seemed happy.

It was perfect. 

All but the part when I decided I should communicate honestly with my dad, treat him with the respect a parent deserves, risk hurting him so he wouldn't resent me the next day for not telling him the truth.

How self-centered my motivation.  How totally, totally selfish and unfair of me to not realize all my honesty would do was break his heart. 

You see, a person with Alzheimer's lives in the moment.  He totally feels anger, joy, sorrow, pain.  And yet, though the memory of what gave life to that feeling may quickly dissipate, the feeling itself will linger.  And so on that night, as I bade him farewell, I told him I wouldn't see him for a while, I had to go to Qatar, but I'd be back. 

He didn't latch on to that last bit. 

He hung on to the fact that I was leaving.  And he hugged me, and we both cried, and I felt horrible.  What a crap poor communicator I'd turned out to be. 

He shuffled away with my two sisters, turning one last time to raise his hand in his signature half-twist wave; almost like a baby's first fist-fumbling attempts at signaling goodbye.

When my one sister (I'll call her 'Mentor', because it's what she's always been to me), returned, she sat down outside with me and broke down sobbing.  I've rarely seen her break down.  Not that I think that she doesn't break down .... I've just never seen her do so.  

She told me that my dad was angry and stifled his cries all the way back to the nursing home.  He couldn't remember why he was angry when she asked him, nor why he was sad.  But boy, was he angry, boy, was he sad.  Because the feeling lingered.  My words to him were gone, the memory of our parting was gone, but the feelings .....

They lingered .....

And I looked at the mess I'd left my sister in.  Mentor goes to see my dad most every day after work.  She spends a few hours with him, gathers his dirty clothes to bring home to wash (even though the home would do this for him ... she just feels it's too personal to leave to others).  On nice days, when he is not having chemo, she brings him to sit down on the boardwalk, or to the restaurant.  Every Sunday, sometimes Saturdays, she brings him to her place for the afternoon.  They Skype me on those days, and my dad is bashful, week after week he is bashful, as he removes his ball cap to shamefully show me how the chemo has robbed him of his luscious white crowning glory.  And Mentor stands behind him, rubbing his shoulders, reassuring him that his hair is growing back 'very nicely indeed'.

Mentor was there when he first fell ill. She was there when they first told my dad he had a lump the size of a football engulfing his chest and wrapping itself not so coyly around his arteries.  She was there to endure the brunt of his anger ... and much as I love the man ... I know his wrath towards her was ugly and so, so unjustified. 

Just because she was always there.

She was there when they told him he could no longer function independently and would require full time care.  She was there when they told him he wouldn't ever drive his Cadillac again.  That very same Cadillac he'd driven himself to the hospital in.  That very same Cadillac that represented all his boyhood and manhood dreams rolled into one. 

She helped make all the arrangements for his transition and care.  Whenever I've gone to see my dad, she and her husband have opened up their home to me.  To me and my little family.  And she's never said a word.  She's just there.  Stoic.  There.

She's been there since the beginning; she's been through it all.  My whole Fa'Me'ly has been there, been instrumental, but Mentor has seen it ALL.  And she's never said a single word.  Never uttered a complaint.

So after that goodbye in July, I felt ashamed.  Ashamed that I'd made my dad sad, ashamed that I'd left Mentor to deal with his frustration.

I flew back to Qatar, and I didn't call every day.  It wasn't a conscious decision.  It was a subliminal selfish motivation.  I didn't want to have to hang up.  I didn't want to have to say goodbye again.  The less I called, the less I had to say goodbye.  Simple as that.  No sadness, no regret, no wondering if he'd end up frustrated with Mentor because I'd had to say goodbye again.

Especially, no concern that I might call him one day only to realize he'd forgotten me.  To realize that the sound of my voice would no longer be enough to evoke a memory.  Or worse, not even enough to make him happy.  Horribly selfish, I know.

Then I lost all my Skype contacts; a strange glitch brought about by an upgrade to a newer version.  Further motivation to delay a phone call or two ...

Last Thursday night, after a killer workweek, I sat down at the computer, fully intending to call my dad.  A rare night in Doha where Smilin' Vic was out for a few beers with a buddy and Kiddo was early to bed.  I poured myself a glass of wine, I called ...

No answer. 

"That's ok", I thought, "I'll call back later."

And I started to blog.  Got so caught up in catching up I forgot to ring again.  And then I got this message from Mentor at 12:40 a.m. ...

The call/message every child dreads ...

The call/message every child dreads ...

I called her, but being in the back of an ambulance, I guess it was kind of hard for her to answer.  So I left her one more burden to deal with ... my sappy, snivelly, four-year-old plea on voice-mail asking her to call me when she could and to text me ASAP. 

Then I tried to call Smilin' Vic.  I got a message telling me "the caller you are trying to reach is currently unavailable."  That's when the floodgates burst.  That's when I truly felt my 'expatdom', my degrees of separation. 

That's when I felt really, truly alone. 

I called Smilin' Vic's buddy.  He said SV's phone had died, but he'd gotten a cab back and was probably no more than fifteen minutes from home.  I texted Mentor  (my text in green) ....

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And bless her, she texted me back.  She's a great communicator.  She made my dad and me feel like we were actually sitting there together.

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My text in green ... 

My text in green ... 

Mentor got us to sing together, that old Hank Locklin song that has reverberated in my head ever since, the one that reverberates in my Dad's head daily.  

The song that says it all.  The one that says 'no matter what, I get you, and I love you', 'I'm there for you'.  And at first I thought he was singing it for me.  

And then I realized he was singing it for no one else but her. 

For Mentor.  

Because she is who she is. 

I hope she realizes that we were both singing it for her.  For us, and for her.  What a blessing she is.

She let us sing that song together ... in our heads, in our hearts.  Both of us, seated 6,000 miles away, singing together.  Holding hands.  In our hearts.  Because of Mentor.  Because of her.  

It was the call (text) I'd dreaded since childhood.  But Fa'ME'ly helped me get through it.  Thank goodness for Fa'ME'ly.

Thankfully, once again we were spared.  My dad fared ok.  They did some tests, kept him overnight, and then released him. 

I came away with renewed appreciation and a little less navel-gazing.  I came away more thankful than ever for Mentor, thankful for Fa'Me'ly.  For the Fa'Me'ly I've been given, the Fa'Me'ly who carry on without me there but keep me there as best they can. 

Maybe one day I'll call and he won't remember me, but I've decided that until then and as long as he can answer, I'll call every single day and sing that same song with him over and over again.  For Mentor, for him, for me.

Because the memory may fade...

But the feeling ...

The feeling will linger...


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from the album "BUMMIN' AROUND" (1967) guitar: Chet Atkins, Jerry Kennedy, Grady Martin rh.guitar: Ray Edenton bass: Bob Moore, Henry Strzelecki, Roy Huskey drums: Buddy Harman, Kenneth Buttrey, Louis Dunn piano: Floyd Cramer

The Pains That Are Withheld For Me ...

This is the post that blocked me.  The post that didn't want to be written but that wouldn't let me write anything else until it HAD been written.  Rarely have I felt so utterly uninspired.    

This post is about suicide and what it leaves behind.  And about what it doesn't leave behind. 

"A brave man once requested me,  to answer questions that are key, is it to be or not to be, and I replied 'oh, why ask me?'"

(Suicide is Painless, Johnny Mandel) 

I have no answers, only questions.  Please don't ask me.

****** 

Apparently the lyrics to the song "Suicide is Painless" were written by a 14-year-old.

The story goes he was tasked to write the song for the movie M*A*S*H, and told only that it must carry the name "Suicide Is Painless" and be humorous.  

It's been said it took him about 5 minutes to write the song.

His father was the original movie's director.  

And that's the mystery behind one of the most melancholy songs of all time.  

Rather anti-climatic isn't it?

 ****** 

Much like suicide itself I guess. 

Years of pain, suffering, and tortuous rumination culminating at the bottom of one big, black, empty, unromantic, anti-climatic hole.   Nothing left in the wake but questions.

  • "Surely there had to be more to it?"  
  • "There was some greater meaning behind it all, right?"  
  • "A legacy has to be more than a self-inflicted bullet hole or a final agonized breath, doesn't it?" 

Those are just some of the questions that have plagued me for the last year.  

www.gypsyintheme.com

www.gypsyintheme.com

I've spent the last year experiencing sporadic moments of overwhelming and gut-wrenching pain, wondering which signs I overlooked, which moments I neglected, which opportunities I missed.

I've spent the last year feeling guilty about feeling so betrayed; I've spent the last year feeling like I have no right to these feelings.  

Because he wasn't closest to me.  He had many buddies who were much closer.  He had life-long friends.  He had a beautiful loving wife.  He had the most beautiful, amazing, loving, lovable daughters.  He had brothers and parents who loved him so very much.

When he died, I hadn't seen him in almost a year.  We lived thousands of miles apart.  I can't say I ever felt I missed him, but I can honestly say that it was impossible to think about him or mention his name without wishing he were around.

He was just a great great friend.  He was just the guy who managed to light up any room he walked into.  He was just the guy who always made time for everybody else.  He was just the husband we'd all tell our husbands to look to for inspiration.  He was just the most amazing dad.  He was just a great human being.  

None of those equated to owing me a damned thing.  Yet I felt the treachery in his act as though it had been meant for me alone.  

I'm starting to forgive myself for feeling betrayed.  I'm starting to feel less guilty about the ache ... the first little while, I was ashamed to admit to it.  How could I complain of the pain in the face of his wife and daughters?  How could I burden his mother with my tears?  How callous to think I should deserve to grieve him.

I think I'm not the only one who's felt it.  I think all of us who loved him have felt guilty about missing him so much.  It's almost like we shouldn't have the right.

I think we've all wanted to lash out at him, but felt that would be unfair when he'd already obviously been suffering so much.  

I think we've all wondered at some point if there was ever anything we did or said that drove him to it, if there was ever one small act on our part that could have stopped him.  And I think all of us have prayed that the answer to both those questions is "nothing".

These are the pains withheld ... the ones that wouldn't be laid to rest until they'd been acknowledged. 

I've spent the last two days wondering if I could somehow be inspired to write something meaningful about suicide.  I was hoping that by doing so I might be able to bring comfort to three women I love so dearly.  Maybe I could inject meaning into those final moments for them.  Maybe I could conjure up a magical lyrical balm that would ease the pain, soothe the ache, remedy the ills.

I actually thought I could write something that would make things better. 

I can't. 

I wish I could, but I can't.   

I can't convince his daughters that he loved them.  I can't convince his wife that she was his life.  They know this already.  They don't need me to tell them what they must never doubt.

I can't make them stronger in all of this.  I can't make them want to carry on.  Their spirit, their courage, their bond, their love and their resilience have already far exceeded any tenacity I could ever hope to instill in them.  

Ironically, all I can do is look to them for inspiration.  

And maybe let them know that after a year I can finally say I'm sad, I'm mad and I'm glad.  I guess I've finally abandoned the futility of wondering about the last moment.  I guess I've figured out that whatever the reasons for suicide, there are no real answers.  Or more precisely, no answers that really matter.  And I guess I could tell them that I know that what really counts is the lifetime of loving, praying, giving, living, and learning that preceded that last moment.  

That's what's left behind.  

No questions asked.

****** 

P.S.  To my three ladies, I love you.  More than you will ever know.  

Flames Can Engulf, But They Cannot Extinguish

Last week I spoke to a Doha mom who lost all her material possessions in a house fire about two years ago.   

Tears welled up in her eyes and mine at the thought of losing those few belongings so precious to an expat that they've been packed and re-packed and carted halfway across the world, sometimes dozens of times. 

As one might correctly assume, the loss of photos was the worst.  Thankful as she might be that no one was harmed in the fire, she couldn't help but be devastated at those lost wedding photos, the first baby picture, the framed image of a long-gone grandparent, the stills of world travel that covered the walls, the videos of her kids' first words, first steps.

She knew she could have lost so much more.  She counted herself lucky that she and her family were far from the house when the flames took possession of all their worldly goods.  She knew it could have been so much worse, she knew.  But that didn't erase the void left behind by those mementos that had been preciously collected over the years.  

She was so grateful to family and friends who had joined together to amass a scattered collection of images for her.  Armed with her memories and this hodge-podge of photos, she was able to start rebuilding her family's private gallery in an effort to make her new house feel like a home.

But her pervading sense of loss was still palpable when she spoke to me that day.  A house fire is devastating to anyone, it is a cruel and merciless reminder of how quickly we can lose what we have earned, of how lucky we are to not have lost more, and of how powerless we are in the big scheme of things.

For an expat, it brings an added dimension:  that of being robbed of however slight a physical connection you may have to your past, to your home country, to your loved ones, to reality.   I'm not insinuating that it is harder for an expat than for anyone else; I'm simply recognizing that no matter how un-materialistic we may consider ourselves, many of us expats are intrinsically tied to our roots through those few belongings that we felt worthy to take along on our trek across the globe.

Sometimes it's nothing more than images on a computer.  It might be an old sweater.  Maybe some Christmas decorations, or baby's first shoes.  A locket of hair.  A wedding band.  Your child's first stick-man drawing.  Your diary.  An old rocking chair.   

Those few things that make your house your home, that make it unique, can be gone in the flash of an instant. 

When we moved to Doha a few years ago, we brought very few material possessions with us.  Pictures, Christmas decorations, favorite teddy bears.  A few years ago, we shipped over the few remaining things that had any value to us (a single crate of furniture that was costing more in storage in Canada over the years than the shipment fees). 

After speaking to this lady, I had a long thought about what things we have that actually make up our home.  The piano?  Nope.  The bar?  Nope*.  The l-shaped sofa set?  Nope.

The only piece of furniture in our home that I would be devastated to lose would be the hutch handcrafted by my father that now sits in our kitchen.  Initially constructed as a change table for Kiddo, we have long since lost the "table" piece, and the cabinet drawers that used to hold onesies now store cutlery.  LeCreuset pots and tins of Tim Horton's coffee (now refilled with some Arabic cardamom brew) today sit on the shelves formerly stocked with diapers, zinc ointment, baby powder and receiving blankets.  The latter are now only memories, but very vivid, poignant memories made sharper by the simple daily reminder that is that rather crude yet perfect piece of furniture.

The hutch my dad's hands made. Such perfection in crude carpentry. So much love and so many memories etched in that simple wood and glue. 

The hutch my dad's hands made. 

Such perfection in crude carpentry. 

So much love and so many memories etched in that simple wood and glue. 

I can't look at that basic piece of furniture without thinking of my dad working lovingly on it in his garage, cutting, sanding, staining.  I can't help but imagine him working tirelessly throughout the day at something he loved so, at something that would feed his brain before his brain started feeding off him.  I can't help but see the strong steady hands that would not stop until the day was done.  I picture his best friend dropping by to check on him, make sure he was ok, and admire his handiwork.  I picture them having a beer in that garage and talking about the rain coming down in sheets; a welcome relief from the scorching heat of that summer.  I feel his pride and his sense of fulfillment at the end of each day, as he went to bed knowing that he was building something beautiful, knowing that he was creating a memory, knowing that he had accomplished what he had set out to do for the day.

Every time I look at that basic piece of furniture, I am whisked back to a time when he still so loved his hobby, to a time before Alzheimer's took it away.  I remember that summer when Kiddo was born, and how he drove 16 hours to deliver his handiwork to us himself.  I remember when he first held Kiddo, how he said she was the only baby he'd ever seen who was prettier than I was as a baby.  I remember how it was love at first sight for the two of them.  I remember how she fell solidly asleep in his big strong arms.

I know it's material, but I'm quite certain I'd be devastated by the loss of that hutch.   The hutch, our photos, our Christmas decorations, Kiddo's first handwritten card to me. I'd be devastated.

But, like the Doha mom, as long as the flames took nothing more than things, we would dust ourselves off, regroup and rebuild.  We would nourish ourselves with our memories and gradually find other odds and ends to make our house our home.  Every once in a while, we'd look back longingly, but we'd be ok.  

So many things that make a home, but only one that really matters:

LOVE

 

 

P.S.  On a lighter note, I've included a few pics of silly and not-so-silly mementos that make our house feel like home.

P.P.S.  After inserting all these pics, I realized that we spend way too much time at the bar*! 

A gift from a Keralite colleague.  Memories of a lovely young woman.  I doubt she ever imagined the elephant's head serving as a bottle opener holder, but there it sits behind our bar.  We think the elephant head is great!

A gift from a Keralite colleague.  Memories of a lovely young woman.  I doubt she ever imagined the elephant's head serving as a bottle opener holder, but there it sits behind our bar.  We think the elephant head is great!

Mauritius Man and Bobble Babe.  Perhaps our tackiest yet best conversation pieces ever.The latter was a gift from a friend from Mumbai; you tap on her skirt and her hips, torso and head bobble.  If you've lived in the Middle East, the bobb…

Mauritius Man and Bobble Babe.  Perhaps our tackiest yet best conversation pieces ever.

The latter was a gift from a friend from Mumbai; you tap on her skirt and her hips, torso and head bobble.  If you've lived in the Middle East, the bobble head movement is somewhat of an enigma, and alway a good conversation starter.

Mauritius man was a gift from our Ukranian/Dutch friends.  He just has people wondering whether he is holding a rifle or a super huge doob.  The jury's still out on that one.

Mauritius Man and Bobble Babe also hang out behind the bar. 

More bar dwellers.Mr. and Mrs. Q. also hang out at the bar.  They are incense burners, given to me as a going away gift when I resigned from my last job.  They're easily found in the local souq, but these ones are special as they were give…

More bar dwellers.

Mr. and Mrs. Q. also hang out at the bar.  They are incense burners, given to me as a going away gift when I resigned from my last job.  They're easily found in the local souq, but these ones are special as they were given to me by some simply amazing Qatari colleagues.  

This elephant derrière hails from Phuket, Thailand. It is my favorite quirky souvenir EVER. After some time at the bar, the sight of this bottom will be a sure sign you've arrived at your w/c destination. 

This elephant derrière hails from Phuket, Thailand. 

It is my favorite quirky souvenir EVER. 

After some time at the bar, the sight of this bottom will be a sure sign you've arrived at your w/c destination. 

The wine glasses and a framed picture of the lake we lived on in Canada, given to us by some great friends (the wine glasses are one of very few wedding gifts we received - we didn't announce our wedding 'til all was said and done, and didn't want g…

The wine glasses and a framed picture of the lake we lived on in Canada, given to us by some great friends (the wine glasses are one of very few wedding gifts we received - we didn't announce our wedding 'til all was said and done, and didn't want gifts, but it's still nice to have something tangible to remember the day by). 

The bottle opener below was given to us by some good British friends who have since left Qatar ... 

And then, of course, there's bar cat (she's not a 'thing', but I couldn't put up pictures of all our other tacky/cool bar stuff and not include her.  She definitely makes our house a home.  And she hangs out at the bar!

And then, of course, there's bar cat (she's not a 'thing', but I couldn't put up pictures of all our other tacky/cool bar stuff and not include her.  She definitely makes our house a home.  And she hangs out at the bar!

How Kiddo Keeps Me Grounded ...

There is a blessed perspective and a bellyful of laughs that come from having an 8-year-old around the house.  Here are just a few snippets of conversation with her that manage to make us giggle and keep us grounded:

On Pilates

Me:  "I just did 20 roll ups."

Kiddo:  "They looked like regular sit-ups to me." 

Me:  "I've been trying to get these right for months."

Kiddo:  "You'll have to do a lot more if you wanna catch up."

 On My Blog

Me:  "Hey, Smilin' Vic, Kiddo, I have 4 subscribers." 

Smilin' Vic:  "Cool." 

Kiddo:  "What are subscribers?" 

Me:  "People who want to read my blog." 

Kiddo:  "Cool, then they can use your ideas." 

Me:  "I guess." 

Kiddo:  "So you only have 4 subscribers in THE WHOLE WORLD?" 

Me:  (heavy sigh)  "Yeah ... "

On Food Choices

Me:  "If you don't eat meat, it's hard to get all your protein and be healthy. "

Kiddo:  "Just because you want to eat something that was happier alive doesn't mean I have to.  Can I just have beans, please? "

On Boobs

Kiddo:  "How come women have to wear tops but men don't always?" 

Me:  "Because men don't have breasts." 

Kiddo:  "I saw men with boobs at the beach." 

Me:  "Are you done your homework?" 

On Death

Kiddo:  "Maman, how come people have to die?" 

Me (thinking hard):  "Because you start to get pretty bored of living once you're past a hundred or so." 

Kiddo (thinking hard):  "I'm pretty sure I'd rather be bored." 

On Desert Fashion

Kiddo:  "I'm happy you don't have to wear an abaya, Maman." 

Me:  "Why's that?"  

Kiddo:  "Because then no one would get to see your new bra."

Me (silently, in my head):  "Note to self:  Ditch the shirt ... apparently it's transparent in sunlight." 

On Driving in Doha

Me (in the front seat to Smilin' Vic):  "Is that driver crazy, blind, or both?" 

Kiddo (in the back seat):  "I don't think blind crazy people are allowed to drive in Canada, are they Maman?"

Smilin' Vic and Me:  sorry, this part was unintelligible through the peals of laughter ... 

Everyday traffic in Doha ...

Everyday traffic in Doha ...

On Driving in Doha, Part 2

Kiddo:  "Why is there always so much traffic in Doha?" 

Me:  "I don't know ... the roads are too small, there are too many cars, no trains ..." 

Kiddo:  "Maybe it's 'cause the crazy blind people drive really slow." 

Me (silently, in my head):  "Time to really start watching my big mouth around Kiddo." 

On Michelle Pfeiffer

Kiddo:  "Maman, that lady looks just like you." 

Me:  "And that, my child, is why you will go far in life." 

There's just something so crazy great about an eight-year-old's perspective. 

 

Believe in Me, Beliefs in the ME ... (Rod Stewart - It's Over)

As we often find ourselves doing on many an expat weekend night in Doha, Smilin' Vic and I sat f2f across the kitchen island, sipping on wine, gabbing, and "YouTubing" for a laugh, an inspiration, and a touch of home.

We caught up on some funny parodies of Gotye's "Somebody That I Used to Know", a few flash mobs (including one in City Center Mall, Doha) because they're always fun, and some awesome old and new Bruce Springsteen tunes (check out "Death to My Hometown" about the 2008 financial crisis if you haven't already ... awesome celtic stomp tune).  

By chance, Smilin' Vic clicked on a video by Rod Stewart, for old times' sakes.  We didn't even know he'd released anything recently.  Giggles stopped, conversation ceased, we couldn't do anything but watch and listen.  

"It's Over" ... Rod Stewart ... 2013 ... 

How the f*@& does a 68-year-old maintain an almost 50-year career music high?  Competing with 18-year-old hot bods with techno voices and choreographed routines.  Seriously.  How does he do it?

I'm a child of the 70's.  Smilin' Vic was born in '61.  We both grew up listening to 'Maggie May', 'Sailing', 'Do Ya Think I'm Sexy' and so many other Rod Stewart tunes that we sing to this day a cappella in the car, the shower, when dusting and whenever we think no one's listening.  We keep on thinking his last hit is the last.  

Yet somehow he always bests himself and stumps us. 

He always seems to manage to capture something that really speaks to the soul.  From a good place.  There's no anger, no regret, no bitterness.  He sings about moments in life, captured in their beauty and their unsightliness, simple fragments in a journey.  And he puts music and magic to it, in a way that simple words cannot.

I ache to capture that symphony of words that conveys the voice of the heart.  What a gift he has.  His gift is his talent - what he gives to us.  His gift is his prize - what he's been blessed with.  The ability to speak to nations of souls who simply want to be reassured that their pain and their joy is not their's alone.

As we watched and listened to this latest video, both Smilin' Vic and I once again found something in his voice, his lyrics, his music, his imagery that touched our souls.  

It's Over ... 

Listening to the song, memories come flooding back.

Our union is not the first for either of us.  Thankfully both of us have turned the page, finished that chapter, closed the book.   

All of us come with a past, with regrets, with doubts.  But we both look back and wish our former spouses nothing but the best.  Looking back on the past is almost like watching a movie, where you can love the cast of characters (of which you are a part) while calling them stupid, where you can curse the plot (reality) while relating with the storyline (emotional journey), where you can actually cry for the villain and curse the protagonist.

I use this forum to talk mostly about moments.  Which is why politics, religion and sex rarely rear their head in my discourse.  

But sometimes reality is more than a moment.  It is an accumulation of moments.

You come to realize that society is judging you on a moment, when in fact what you should be judged on is what came before, during and after that moment.  All of it.  The sum of all the parts.

Sometimes I want to scream out to this society that I am not 'loose'.  I am not a 'ho'.  I am not without values.  I am not without faith.  I am not without regrets.  And I am not without feeling. 

I did not take my vows lightly.  Not the first time.  Not the second time.  

I am a Western woman who cried and struggled and screamed and lost her mind as she saw her first marriage and her world collapsing around her.  

I am a Western woman who tried and cried and prayed to find the strength to make things right.

I am a Western woman who rebuilt her faith, her beliefs, her self-worth, her self-confidence, her love for life by renouncing the one person she'd built her life around.   

But she didn't stop loving him.  She didn't stop wishing him the best.   

She stopped living with him.  She stopped enabling him.   

She stopped letting him define her worth.

She walked away in the hopes that both he and she would find peace, fulfillment and redemption.  Because what they'd become together was toxic and painful. 

I am an Expat woman.  One who struggles with the adulation and judgement that comes when this society discovers that I am a Divorced woman.  One who struggles with the pain and self-reproach that comes from failing at what I'd committed a lifetime to.

I am a Human woman.  With feelings, and regrets, and memories, and hopes and dreams.   

I am a Human woman who is proud to call herself an optimist, a survivor.  I am a Human woman who is strong in her faith, in her values, in her beliefs.

I am a divorcee.  I am a wife and a mother.  I am a believer.  I am a sinner and I am repentant.  

I am a woman filled with dreams and hopes and desire.

I was married for the first time in the Catholic church.  Which meant I entered into a covenant wherein I would honor my husband 'til death to us part.  Breaking that covenant broke me for a while.  Made me question my ability to honor my faith.  Made me question my strength in the face of adversity.  

Until I realized that my faith and my strength could not be broken unless I chose to let them.  Until I realized that sometimes loving someone does not mean living with them.  Until I realized that sometimes alcoholism, mental illness, anger and despair can poison even the strongest person.  Until I realized that a covenant is not one-sided.  

And I walked away.  

"I don't stand here trying to focus the blame ...

It's over

What's the sense in pointing fingers? 

Who's the Saint and the Sinner? 

There ain't gonna be a winner. 

It's over ... "*

I don't believe I negated God.  I believe I honored him.  I believe I redeem myself every night as I kiss Kiddo good night, as I hold Smilin' Vic tight, as I thank God for all he's given me, as I pray for those in my past whom I may have hurt or who may be hurting.

I am a Believer.  I believe that I am worth believing in.  I believe that my beliefs hold true.  Here in the ME, there in the West, anywhere.   I stand firm.

I am not just a divorcee.  I am not just a mom.  I am not just a wife, a sister, a friend, a co-worker, a neighbor. 

I am a Believer.  I believe.   

Thanks, Rod Stewart.  Sixty some years old and you actually made me reflect on 25 years of internal struggle.   

It's over. 

 

P.S.  How the hell can Rod still be so sexy? 

 

*Lyrics from "It's Over", by Rod Stewart. 

 

Order 'Time' on iTunes: http://smarturl.it/dlTime Order 'Time' on Amazon: http://smarturl.it/BuyTime Official video for Rod Stewart's "It's Over" off the album 'Time' out now worldwide. Don't miss Rod Stewart on the worldwide Live The Life Tour 2013! TOUR DATES: http://bit.ly/LiveTheLifeDates Follow Rod: http://www.RodStewart.com http://twitter.com/RodStewart http://Facebook.com/RodStewart For tour information: http://www.rodstewart.com/events/