Y'all Come Back Now ...

Nothing prepares you for the loss of a parent.

There is absolutely nothing you can do as a child to steel yourself against the inevitable moment when you realize you have lost the one who whispered soothingly into your ear when you were afraid, the one who kissed booboo's better, the one who taught you how to sing, the one who showed you how to love, the one who introduced you to life and all the world has to offer. There is nothing ...

We know we will lose our parents. There is a law written under the stars that says it must be so. We don't know when, we don't know how, we don't know where. But we know ....

In some cases, we will lose them to death; in others to anger. Drugs or alcohol may have robbed you of a parent, or perhaps they were taken from you before they were ever yours, victims of a desire to remain free, of an inability to truly ever take on the parent role.

In my case, I am losing my father to a veil of forgetfulness, to a quagmire of muddled thoughts and confusion. I am losing him to a spiteful and unforgiving disease of the mind that is slowly robbing him of the knowledge, dignity, independence, skills, and talents he spent a lifetime accumulating.

But I steadfastly refuse to believe it will rob him of his spirit. We're not there yet.

I still refuse to fully accept that he will not come back to us of full body and mind. Even though deep down I know. I know...

I know intellectually that it will come to that if the cancer does not take him from me first.  But my heart banishes the thought.

As I watch him dozing in his lazy boy recliner, I drift back in time, thirty-odd years, to afternoons where we would sit in this exact same way. I was a child, he was at the peak of his career. He would come home exhausted, pop open a beer, sit back in his chair in front of the TV and just doze off. And I would watch him. He seemed so big then; larger than life. I would wait for him to wake up and break into a rendition of Kenny Roger's "Lucille" or other such country tunes of that era. He always woke up smiling.

We were expats. My mom and my dad were pretty much my world. I lived for those moments when he would wake up from his 20-minute snooze, refreshed, and then we'd go into the kitchen where we'd take out some crusted rolls, cucumbers, kalbasa sausage and cheese, and set about making a snack and talking about nothing and everything. There was such wonder in exchange. He was invincible. He could make everything make sense. He could make everything better.

He thought everything I did was so great. He would get me to talk in a British accent, a Texan accent, a French accent. He had never known a 10-year-old who did accents so well. He would listen to me play the organ. Oh, my, wasn't I amazing? Surely I had a gift?  He would watch me practice ballet; how did I ever get to be so good? This mountain of a man made me believe I had it all going on. He helped me believe in myself. He gave me a thousand little gifts; some that were obvious, some that I am discovering now as I struggle to come to terms with this filthy illness. Some that I am sure he will leave behind for me to discover once he is gone.

He never, ever, not once let on that he might not be invincible. Not a single time. Damn him.

As I sit here watching him doze in his lazy boy chair, I think back to earlier this afternoon.  There was a birthday party downstairs. There was music, and old country tunes, and dancing. And I sat next to this big bear of a man and let myself be transported back in time, I was just his little girl again. And I asked him to dance with me. And he tried; it seems we both still don't realize he's not invincible. He was the first to admit defeat. His legs couldn't bear his weight unassisted by his walker. And so we sat back down, and listened wistfully to the old French Canadian songs being sung. Every once in a while, he would remember a few words and sing or hum along. Every once in a while I would feel the tears well up and I would stifle them as quickly as I could.

I let him write on my i-pad to distract him from his inability to dance, and he loves it; like a child discovering a new talent. I watch our roles reverse, as I encourage him in his newfound computer skills, egging him on past his frustration at not getting it right the first time around.

After the party is over, we come back to his room. He is exhausted. He sits down in the lazy boy, has a small glass of wine, spreads a blanket over his knees and falls asleep. And I watch him sleep. He doesn't seem so big anymore. His body and his mind are betraying him. But he is still larger than life. I am still an expat. In a way, so is he, I guess. An expat in his homeland. And this time around, the unknown land is within himself, and there is no fibre optic cable, no Skype to keep us connected across the ocean of disappearing memories.

I continue to live for that moment when he will wake up.

He wakes up and he is hungry. I go to the grocery store on the corner and buy crusted rolls, salami, cheese. And we set about making a snack, talking about everything and nothing, jumping back and forth sporadically across this disjointed time continuum vortex.

And I think everything he does and says is so great. I listen to him explain to me how he is having trouble remembering. How his frontal lobe is affected, and how this makes distant memories seem recent, and recent memories seem distant, or even inexistent. For a while, he is so very aware of his shortcomings. So very insightful. I think he is amazing. Surely there has never been a victim of Alzheimer's so brilliantly aware of his circumstances?

And we eat and talk about nothing and everything. After a while, the same questions come up over and over again. I give the same answers over and over. Where do I live? Do I work? Do I know that beautiful kiddo staring down at us from a picture hung on his wall? Yes, I explain, she is my daughter. Ah, yes, he remembers ....? "But did I adopt her?" No, she is mine. He remembers I was told I couldn't have kids but he doesn't remember that some divine force intervened and gave me the gift that is Kiddo.

He remembers that I am married to a good man. But sometimes he forgets that good man's name. He knows that I am only visiting Montreal, but can't remember that I am staying at my sister's. He knows he is full, but can't remember that he had breakfast. He knows he is nauseous but forgets he is getting chemo treatments.

Nighttime comes too quickly. I have to go. He is tired, sitting on the edge of his bed, ready to let sleep have its way with him. He is still big, but he looks so fragile. He is singing an old song, and he is happy; it is a sad song about betrayal, but he remembers every single word. How very 'à propos'. He doesn't want me to go, so he repeats the chorus again ... he's still sound enough of mind to know I would never leave mid-tune.

I fight the urge to say "dance with me, Daddy", I stave off the damn tears. I lean in gently to give him a hug and a kiss. And he says, "You don't have to be afraid to lean on me when you kiss me goodbye ... I would never let you fall."

Still wearing that unshakeable invincibility cloak. Damn him.

He asks me to turn off the lights as I go. I do. I turn to say one last goodbye, and I see him still sitting on the edge of the bed, surrounded by nothing but shadows. It seems his eyes are closed. And as I pull the door shut behind me, I hear his voice - an echo of the boom it used to be - whisper "y'all come back now".

I think he'd be proud. I hold it together, I stay strong. I walk away with the bearing of a woman who believes we are both invincible.

I get to my sister's, lay my head down on the pillow for the night. I think of him sleeping in that faraway place of everything forgotten.

The floodgates open.

The hand that will not let me fall ...

The hand that will not let me fall ...

If You Asked Me Today About That Yesterday, One Year Ago ...

I started writing this post at 1:00 a.m. today, just another Wednesday here in Doha.  

May 29, 2013.

I started writing it today because I couldn't bring myself to write it yesterday.

Even today, I had to put it aside.  

I couldn't 'not' write it ...  and yet I couldn't quite 'write' it.  

I felt I had no 'right' to write it.  Maybe because I didn't own the grief.  Yet I shared in the grief.  We all did.  All of us, this nation of expats.​

It's now 11:35 p.m.  And I had to write it.

But please know that I couldn't write it right.  Because the whole story is just too wrong.

If you asked me today what I felt just yesterday, I would answer you this ...​

"Grateful"

  • Grateful that I was able to spend the morning shopping for party favors for my daughter's "fake" birthday (since her birthday is mid-July, when all expats and their kids are gone, no one is ever around for the actual 'day', so we're celebrating in May).
  • Grateful that my daughter got to spend the afternoon at her "first friend's" birthday party, laughing and dancing, and swimming and eating cake, and just being a seven-year-old.
  • Grateful that Smilin' Vic walked through that door after a day's work and that both Kiddo and me were here to hug him tight.
  • Grateful that I was able to spend the evening talking and sharing with fellow expat friends.​

Grateful because I am one lucky parent and expat.  

But I didn't start writing this post because I was grateful.  

I started writing it because I was

sad, mad, insane, grief-struck, guilty, angry, confused, frustrated, powerless, indignant, fearful, crazy, distrustful, ashamed.

I started writing because I couldn't shake the urge to cry; I started writing because I didn't feel like I was the one with the right to cry.  I started writing because today there was ABSOLUTELY NOTHING ELSE I COULD DO.

Because on that yesterday, just a short year ago, ...

it seems like only yesterday ...

I was at work when I got the news that a fire had broken out at a nearby mall, where my daughter's "first friend's" birthday party was to be held.  The mall was evacuated, all activities were cancelled, but the public was assured that all was well.

Shortly after, the rumors began circulating that all was not well.  

But surely it was all rumor and conjecture ...

My best friend, the "first friend's" mom, was the first to inform me that all was most definitely NOT well.  Lives, not flames, had been extinguished in the fire on that fateful day, that yesterday, one year ago.  Nineteen in all.  Thirteen children among them.  Precious souls, each and every one.

It most certainly couldn't be true.  I hung up the phone on my friend that night.  Told her that we couldn't spread false rumors.  I simply couldn't conceive that what she was saying was true.  We'd been told IT WAS ALL OK!  

And then I checked online.  And misguidedly clicked on a YouTube link.​

And saw an image I will never be able to erase from my mind.  Not if I live to be one thousand years old.  ​

The image of a seven-year-old girl being carried out lifeless.  ​

She could well have been mine.  

If you were an expat parent in Doha prior to May 28, 2012, chances are you had left your child in the play area in that mall where this beautiful, beautiful child drew her last breath.  

You had left them there for a birthday party, or to enjoy a peaceful hour of kid-free shopping, or just because the kids so loved it there.  They loved the soft play area, they loved the staff, they loved the fun and the giggles.  They felt safe there...

That beautiful seven-year-old girl.  She, and all the 'mall' children, and those who stayed with them, and those who tried to save them, are forever engraved in my mind.

On that yesterday, one year ago, too many Doha expat families grieved.  On that yesterday, one year ago, an entire nation of expats grieved.  ​

And yesterday, the grieving continued.  Publicly for some, privately for others, but all of us, without a shadow of a doubt, at some point yesterday, remembered that day, one year ago.  And then, yesterday, we carried on.  

But that yesterday will forever be today.  For the parents, for the loved ones, and for this nation of expats ...  

May 28, 2012

is forever etched in our minds.

Children, spouses, parents, friends and the misguided illusion of safety were taken from us that day, that yesterday, one year ago.  

My heart goes out to all the families and loved ones today.  May you all find the strength today to survive that yesterday, one year ago.

I pray you know that because of that yesterday, one year ago, a nation of expats will forever feel guilty about feeling grateful today.

I pray you know that a nation of expats are with you in spirit, supporting you, struggling to make sure that that yesterday, one year ago, never becomes someone else's tomorrow.​

I pray that you know that we all realize your child could have been our child.  Your children could have been our children.  And as we grieve for you and your loss, we feel horribly, horribly ashamed and guilty that we are grateful that our children were not there on that yesterday, one year ago.  We all know they could well have been.  

I pray that you let us carry the shame and the guilt.  Completely.  Let us at least carry that.  I pray that you relinquish the guilt forever, and leave yourself that space solely to grieve that yesterday, one year ago.​  

That yesterday, one year ago, has become today, tomorrow, and forever for all the families who lost their precious, precious loved ones in that fire at the mall where we all left our smiling, happy children.

I pray I have not hurt or offended with this post.  But I'm allowing myself to be grateful today, and I'm accepting that I feel ashamed about it.  I'm ​allowing myself to grieve today, for that yesterday, one year ago, and I'm accepting that I feel guilty about it.  Because I don't really have the right to grieve, do I?  Or do I?

The fact remains that if you ask me today about that yesterday, one year ago, all I can say is this ...

"I grieve..."

​N.B.  The words below are not mine, but I thought they conveyed really well the thoughts shared by many fellow expats yesterday.  We cannot forget, and every day we are reminded.  Please know that we remember.  The words were retrieved at http://www.memorieshonored.com/?page=non-denominationalprayers

We Remember You

At the rising of the sun, and its going down,
we remember you.
At the blowing of the wind, and in the chill of winter,
we remember you.
At the opening of the buds, and in the rebirth of spring,
we remember you.
At the blueness of the skies, and in the warmth of summer,
we remember you.
At the rustling of the leaves, and in the beauty of autumn,
we remember you.
At the beginning of the year, and when it ends,
we remember you.
As long as we live,  you shall live too will;

for you are now a part of us, as we remember you.

Grey smoke blowing to the song "I Grieve" from the 2002 album "Up".

ASD - Show of Compassion - May 31, 2011(teachers and parents of the American School of Doha encircle students in a moment of silence for the lives lost and those who lost loved ones in the May 28, 2012 fire)

ASD - Show of Compassion - May 31, 2011

(teachers and parents of the American School of Doha encircle students in a moment of silence for the lives lost and those who lost loved ones in the May 28, 2012 fire)

Desert Expat Kids Set Seasonal Fashion Trends in the ME

As I stood sizzling and sweating in the glaring sun outside the school gate on Monday afternoon, a fellow expat mom posted the temperature reading from her car (pictured below).  In typical haughty seasoned Doha expat fashion, I thought to myself "Nice spring weather we're having, eh?"​

Talk to me again in July when it's 50C with 90% humidity ...

Talk to me again in July when it's 50C with 90% humidity ...

Like any typical Canadian child of the seventies, I stood there in my jeans and closed toed shoes, reminding myself that nothing, but nothing, would detract me from the seasonal clothing etiquette rules that ban white footwear, gauzy dresses and spaghetti straps before Memorial Day (as a Canadian, that translates to Victoria Day, or 'May Two Four Long Weekend').​

No matter that my thinking dates back 4 decades or that I am now sat square on the equator and not at a latitude several inches south of the North Pole.  For the sake of this post, let's not let ourselves get bogged down in such minutiae.​

I gained comfort in my resolve by reminding myself that I've seen the documented proof that many Doha expat children are like-minded to me and appreciate the value of simple traditions such as wearing winter apparel in winter, despite the fact that the thermometer here rarely, if ever, dips below 15C.  

​Yes, this younger expat generation seems to find nothing strange at all about donning a Canadian snowsuit manufactured to withstand -40C temperatures simply to protect oneself from a vicious clawing 1.5 kg cat in their living room.  Really, how many chances will you actually have to get good wear from it?  Take advantage of every opportunity, says I.

"Because it just makes sense."Desert expat kids ... missing out on donning snowsuits and getting kicked outdoors to play in the snow 'til suppertime.

"Because it just makes sense."

Desert expat kids ... missing out on donning snowsuits and getting kicked outdoors to play in the snow 'til suppertime.

Even better was the picture I received today from another Doha friend of her daughter dressed for an afternoon of shopping in Doha. 

Because if I'm not going to where it in 47C weather, then "when", Mom, "when"?​

Because if I'm not going to where it in 47C weather, then "when", Mom, "when"?​

More interesting still was the accompanying text.  

​Not a single one of us commented on the 47C temperature.  Of course she would want to wear a tuque; it's not summer yet ...

​Not a single one of us commented on the 47C temperature.  Of course she would want to wear a tuque; it's not summer yet ...

Note that not a single expat mom responding to the original text found it even slightly odd that a 5-year-old would insist on wearing a tuque to the mall in 47C weather.  Of course not.  "Because it's not Memorial Day yet Mom, THAT's why!"​

As I reflect on it all, sitting here with a hot cup of tea, typing away with frozen fingers, I really wish I'd brought some mitts from Canada.  Oh well, at least my toes are toasty in my woolen socks.  They're forecasting a cool night, with temps dropping as low as 29C.  

And just in case anyone thinks I've gone completely stark raving mad, the pizza delivery boy just showed up on his moped and unravelled a wool scarf from under his helmet before handing me two steaming pepperoni pies.

How far I've come from -42C in January on the North Shore of New Brunswick.​

It's not quite summer yet, folks.​

This is Fashion Forward Gypsy, signing off 'mitt-less' in the ME.


Take Me With You .... !

Not many words; the image says it all.​

There was J. from daycare, L. from Grade 1, M. her neighbor.  And now T.  

T. is special.  She's one of the BFF's.  

So many tears were cried tonight.

We often don't realize how much the first hello means until the last goodbye has been said.

The life of an expat child .... a thousand goodbyes.​

The life of an expat child.  Goodbye from a 7-year-old ...​

The life of an expat child.  Goodbye from a 7-year-old ...​