Tom Jones Rocked Doha ...

This is wayyyyyy past due.  But I thought it was worth posting.  Just in case there are any "true blue", "tie-dyed" Tom Jones fans out there. 

Here is a pic from the evening in Doha from Yours Truly ... 

 

Waiting in line ... proper polite British cue ... no shoving!

Waiting in line ... proper polite British cue ... no shoving!

Unfortunately I couldn't upload my clips because they are incompatible and too big for SquareSpace and I'm too un-tech savvy to fix the problem.  

But here's the YouTube link to "Tower of Soul" ... which is just one song that makes this man the legend that he is.

All I can tell you is that it was more amazing live....

The man stood on a sweltering beach stage in a turtleneck and blazer belting it out like a teenager.  He was ... 

AMAZING! 

 (And yes, women DID throw their undies at him in the ME!!!!)


 

Wrestlers in the ME

I just lost an entire blog post ... about something entirely different than this post ... and I got over it.  

Quick.

No use bleeding all over the carpet about it, is there? 

I called Smilin' Vic, who's out with a Canadian friend visiting Doha, and he commiserated as I described the horror of losing a 2-hour diatribe to the viciousness of a Safari Shutdown.

And he was duly empathetic.  Smilin' Vic is the biggest GypsyInTheME supporter ever.  I have to love him for that and so much more.  

After losing all that, after the first time blogging in a while, I didn't feel much like putting any effort into writing. 

I started YouTubing ... and came across "The Wrestler" by Bruce Springsteen.  

And realized that sometimes I'm gonna "leave with less than I had before".  I remembered that doing what I love isn't always about winning.  Sometimes you write well; sometimes you write crap.  Sometimes you lose everything you write.  Sometimes you're just a 'one-handed' writer.

Once in a while, people will like what I have to write.  

And tell me, Friend, "can I ask for anything more?" 

It's so much like our life here. 

We're in the rink.  It's a fight.  We've left everything behind.  We're a 'one trick pony' and we're here to earn what we can off of it.   Every once in a while someone smiles when our "blood, it hits the floor".  But we can't ask for anything more.

We work day in and day out like a "one-armed man punching at the breeze" in the hopes that one day the bruises we display will bring us to that place we want to be.  

We are "the one legged man" he sings of.  Some days we are broken, but we refuse to be defeated.  At the end of the day, we are doing what we know.  Broken bones and bruises we display.  A one-legged duo trying to dance its way free ...  

Sad, but true.  

Not so sad, actually.  We're doing what we know, what we can, to make a life, to make a living, to wrestle our way to freedom ...

"Have you ever seen ... a one-legged dog makin' its way down the street?"   That's us, slightly broken, but making our way home ...

We've pushed away the comfort ... we proudly display the broken bones and bruises, and one day they'll bring us home.

One lost post won't break me .... nor will life in the ME ... 

Our blood will hit the floor, we'll be bruised, we might not be graceful ... but we'll make it.  It's the wrestler in us, wrestlers in the ME... 

 

OFFICIAL SONG - HQ WINNER OF BEST SONG @ THE GOLDEN GLOBES Snubbed from the 81st/2008 Academy Awards/Oscars... Bruce Springsteen wrote it as a gift for Mickey Rourke, in Darren Aronofsky's THE WRESTLER. **I cut out some of the opening because it goes on for a while.

Giving Thanks as a Canadian in the ME ...

I'd actually forgotten it was Canadian Thanksgiving.  Forgotten to say thank you.  Forgotten to appreciate.  That happens sometimes, when you're far away, thinking about yourself, about your reality.  When your view of the world, your perception, becomes your reality. And you forget about the rest.

But I've remembered now (thank goodness we had a Canadian friend visiting to remind us)!  And I'm thankful for that friend.  Thankful for him being here, thankful for him reminding us. 

We didn't have a turkey dinner.  We had pork ribs and potatoes in front of TV watching Home Alone with Kiddo.  I'm thankful for pork in Qatar .... I'm thankful for Kiddo.  I'm thankful for family.  I'm thankful for movie night. 

I called my two sisters.  I reached one on Skype.  I'm thankful for Skype.

I called my best friend in Canada.  She wasn't home.  But I discovered video messaging on Skype and left her a message.  I'm thankful for video messaging on Skype.

I just kissed Smilin' Vic good night.  He's been working about twenty days straight.  I am so thankful for Smilin' Vic. 

I called my Dad.  He has a bad cold, but he's ok, and he remembered me.  I'm thankful for that.

I found a kick-@$$ pair of heels on sale today.  Thankful for anything strappy that adds inches to my legs!

There's no traffic right now in Doha because it's Eid, so roads are empty.  Soooo thankful!!!!

I got time today to catch up on my favorite blogs ... You know who you are!  So thankful for my blogging buddies who keep me entertained.

Watched my kitty cat snuggle with anyone who was willing today.  Thankful we decided to be irresponsible and get a pet in the ME!

I'm thankful for health, happiness, good jobs, good school, good friends, good laughs, good times ...

Sat down and started to blog ....

Thankful.

Just thankful in the ME.

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

Crazy Makes Me Come Alive; Constants Keeps Me Sane

Wow, it's been a while ... 

Sitting at my computer, clicking on my blog ... it almost feels like I'm stepping back in time, like I'm visiting my childhood home.  It's been too long.  It feels good; feels like home, feels comfortable now that I've wriggled my butt back into the familiar imprint of my office chair.

Life is crazy right now, but that's ok.  It's sometimes the crazy that truly makes us come alive. 

A lot's been going on these days, but some things are constant ... The constants are what keep us sane. 

September 1, 2013

September 1, 2013

Take, for example, my very Canadian habit of commenting on the weather EVERY DAY.  That hasn't changed.  After seven years in a country where it takes months for the mercury to budge one single degree, that HASN'T changed.  

I still Google the weather every day, step outdoors to check the weather early every morning, and comment to Smilin' Vic on the weather EVERY SINGLE DAY.

It's in my blood to live my life according to the weather.  I hail from a land where the weather can shift 20C in the space of 24 hours.  I remember one specific Saturday in May on the North Shore of New Brunswick where we basked on the deck in shorts and sandals.  

 

 

The next day, Mother's Day, the second Sunday in May, we headed outdoors to find the BBQ buried under a foot of snow.  That's the year my mom had Mother's Day stew instead of BBQ.  

September 5, 2013

September 5, 2013

The next morning, after the snow had melted, a good twenty minutes were expended griping about the weather by the water cooler.  It's just the Canadian thing to do ... talk about the weather.  We lament the rain on a friend's wedding day, we celebrate the snow on Christmas Eve, we rejoice about tulips blooming early in spring, we take in every single moment of heat and sunshine we get.  It's how Canadians break the ice, it's how we bond, it's how we make up ... We simply talk about the weather.  The constance of talking about the crazy keeps us sane.

In Qatar, the weather barely changes.  Though I check the weather daily, it would be pushing it a bit to actually "talk" about it.  

The conversation in July would go something like this: 

Me:  "So, what's the weather looking like tomorrow? 

Nameless/Faceless Person:  "Uhmmmm, hot and humid?" 

In November

Me:  "Soooo, what's the weather forecast for tomorrow? "

Nameless/Faceless Person:  "Uhmmmm, hot and foggy?" 

In March

Me:  "Sooooooooo, what kind of weather are we expecting tomorrow?" 

Nameless/Faceless Person:  "Uhmmmmmm, hot and dusty?" 

In May

Me:  "Sooooooooooooo, what's the weather looking like tomorrow?" 

Nameless/Faceless Person:  "For goodness sakes woman, it's been a year!  Nothing changes.  Get over it.  It will be hot, hot, hot, HOT! .... ... ... and maybe windy..." 

September 10, 2013

September 10, 2013

Yet I can't get over my fixation with the weather.  It's an almost superstitious conviction that if I stop thinking about the weather I will forget who I am and where I come from.  It's as if my obsession with the weather keeps me grounded.

It's felt even more so over the last few weeks when dropping Kiddo off at school.

Every weekday as I make my way to the school gate, I make sure I take a moment to stop and look the crossing guards and security guards square in the eyes to wish them good morning.  Why?  Because I've checked the weather.  I know it's already 34C at 7:00 a.m.  I realize that my daughter is the reason they must stand there for over an hour in the scorching heat and glaring sun with beads of sweat glistening on their ebony brows.  And while many drivers are cursing them out for slowing traffic and some parents grow frustrated because they make everyone cross 'exactly' at the crosswalk, I remind myself how very very hot and miserable they must be under that safety jacket and smile.  

That's when Canadian fixation with the weather translates into

empathy.

September 11, 2013

September 11, 2013

Every week when I go fill the car up with gas, I leave a big fat tip for the gas attendant.  He stands there, day in and day out, breathing in nauseating petrol fumes and enduring not only the heat from the sun and the pavement, but also that which is reflected off the hood of my car, and that which is pulsating from the revving, overheating engines that file by endlessly throughout the day.  I look at that gas attendant and see an old man whose bones ache, whose heart aches for the family he's left behind on the Subcontinent, whose spirit is broken by the blaring horns of drivers impatient to get on with their day and oblivious to his suffering.  On really hot days, my tip might equal the cost of my gas (gas is very cheap here ... as is labour).

That's when the Canadian fixation with the weather translates into

compassion.

September 23, 2013

September 23, 2013

Every day as I battle the Doha traffic congestion brought about by a massive municipal road construction project, I urge myself to be patient.  Because as I sit there fuming in my air-conditioned SUV, police officers stand at the roundabouts that pepper the downtown for hours on end, directing traffic, inhaling the fumes of thousands of vehicles, enduring the toxic stench and defying the heat.  I've yet to see one collapse or go postal (guaranteed I'd be doing so after 15 minutes under that sun).

That's when Canadian fixation with the weather translates into

respect.

September 24, 2013

September 24, 2013

 

 

Every day that I see the weather edge down a single degree, I thank goodness.  Every day that I see the humidity going down, I say a silent prayer of thanks (and not just because the frizzy hair season is almost behind us).  Pool temperatures are dipping below 35C, a day at the beach is almost fathomable, morning runs are almost pleasant, evenings in the back yard sipping on wine are just around the corner.  A matter of 4C and 30% humidity variance.  Yet it makes all the difference in the world.

That's when Canadian fixation with the weather translates into

appreciation. 

That's when it doesn't seem so silly to be so concerned with the weather. 

September 26, 2013 (a.m.)

September 26, 2013 (a.m.)

I'm not a great person.  I have many failings.  Too many to count.  But somehow being a weather tracker makes me want to be a better person.  

That doesn't mean I'll be chatting about the weather 'round the water cooler at work any time soon.  Nope, when I go into work on Sunday, my first twenty minutes will be spent around the water cooler talking about

traffic. 

Because we're in Qatar.  Where traffic is crazy;  where conversation about traffic is constant. 

 

 

Crazy makes us come alive.  

Constants keep us sane ... 

September 26, 2013 (p.m.)  Actually sat outside wearing a hoodie!  How far I've risen (from an all-time low of -41C + windchill to an all-time high of 50C + humidity).

September 26, 2013 (p.m.)  Actually sat outside wearing a hoodie!  How far I've risen (from an all-time low of -41C + windchill to an all-time high of 50C + humidity).