My Father the Outlaw

My father’s back in town. You may remember him from the days of his canary yellow hairdo that was one of the highlights of his visit last summer (obvious pun alert). Try as I might, my father is a very difficult presence to ignore – for reasons both mundane and, often, insane. Yesterday a bizarre car-towing incident occurred which I thought must be recorded.

After much humming and hawing about whether his hair was long enough for a trim, my father departed in his ill-fated car to see Edwin, his hairdresser. An hour or so later, I had an appointment to meet a friend outside his new place of work to congratulate him upon getting a job after months of looking for one (Why don’t you come see me after work? You know, where I work now. At my job. Did I mention I work?).

I spent about twenty minutes with my friend outside the blessed cafe of employment, watching his eyes all a-twinkle as he talked at length about his work schedule, days off, the cafe dress code and how he has “an apron and everything”. I was in the middle of asking him to join me at the library the next day just so that he could say “as long as it doesn’t interfere with my work,” when my phone rang with a desperate father on the other end.

“Alyzee, are you home? Go home. My car’s just been towed. What do you mean “again”? Stop laughing, this is serious. Stop laughing! Mum doesn’t have the keys and you need to let her in. And also I need you to go home and get my driver’s license and meet me at Pacific Central Station. Okay? Okay. Quickly!”

Goodbye vehicle (Photo by Digitalkatie)

The day before yesterday my father spent much more than he needed to on car servicing to the profound irritation of my mother. I wasn’t wrong in assuming she’d be even further provoked by my father’s latest auto antics. Turns out I didn’t get home in time to let my mother in, and I found her angrily boiling lentils in the kitchen, having climbed into the house through my bedroom window. I am often locked out myself and so have taken to leaving my window open a crack for such rainy days, and other members of the family occasionally benefit from my foresight. My mother’s mood was in no way improved by the fact that she had spent the day fasting as many Muslims do for the month of Ramadan.

“Here I was excited to come home early for once and then your father has to do a thing like this,” she fumed, muttering something about how she has to break into her own house like a thief just to make dinner. “Here!”, she snapped with obvious low-blood sugar as she handed me the forgotten license, and off I went to catch two buses and rescue my father.

Meanwhile the offending parent was killing time at the Pacific Central Station where a camera crew was filming. When I found him, he told me he had positioned himself strategically so that he would be a prominent member of the set background. “Good thing I had my hair trimmed,” he mused as we made our way to the Impound Lot.

Before we went in he warned me to look as solemn as possible when we went into the ticket office in case they stuck us with another ticket for not looking repentant enough.

When we had been safely repossessed of our car, my father gingerly began asking questions about my mother’s mood. When he learned that she’d had to climb in through the window, he thought it would be safest if he too, didn’t come in through the front door where he would be in plain sight of my mother and retribution. His idea was to get in through my window, shut my bedroom door, and lie in my bed quietly to delay his reckoning for as long as he could.

Narrow escape (Photo by Bonnie Natko)

I thought he had been joking until I he was climbing in through my bedroom window after me, with his shoes in hand to aid his silence. I thought that that was as far as the shenanigans would go, but he really did want to hide in my room to escape his fate, and wanted me to do the same so no one would know we were home. Now I’d been pretty flexible so far and didn’t want to be trapped in my room, so we argued in loud whispers until I decided that enough was enough.

I found my mother watching TV, looking all the more like a formidable movie villain as she was doing this wearing her sunglasses (having misplaced her clear spectacles, I assume). When I told her where my father was and what he was doing, she had a hard time containing her laughter, and marched in to my room to sort him out. I guess the comedy of the whole thing negated any “sorting out” that was to happen, as soon my father was persuaded out of his hideout to eat his stew, and the incident was forgotten.

My father wants to go to City Hall to dispute the towing, with me as a witness. I’m going to pretend not to hear him and change the subject next time he mentions it. Somehow I think relating the above story to the Municipal Court will make matters worse. Better let them believe we are quiet, law abiding citizens and leave it at that.

An Ode to Our Interns

I’m not quite sure why I have been feeling a sad sense of reflection this last week.  Perhaps it is that the days are cooling down and that the carefree days of summer are coming to an end (even if I didn’t get a chance to enjoy the carefree part).  But no question about it, as I read Alyzee Lakhani’s latest post, this time the tears catching in my eyes were that sad reflection, that with summer winding up, we lose the two incredible interns that I’ve been pinching from Ahimsa to school.

Bronwyn and Alyzee, with whom I imagine is the British accented drill Sargent barking orders at Alyzee in her head (see Alyzee's latest post for the reference).

I am really going to miss these gals.  Alyzee and her incredible gift with the quill.  Bronwyn, whom was born to have a spotlight shine on her and has an incredible gift for the audiovisual arts that I was only just beginning to grasp.

For all that I tease Erica, I do hope she agrees and we can find a way to keep these two involved, if only on those occasional moments that they have a breather between school deadlines, as I will greatly miss these two creative spirits.

Thanks Alyzee and Bronwyn!

Thoughts about Writer’s Block

Writing about writer’s block isn’t cheating. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it to the very end (so don’t bother calling my bluff.)

Being cornered by a writing deadline sometimes has a way of making one (or me, at least) speechless in the face of the blank page. I feel as though I’ve known a tiger that has been inching towards me across a field, getting ready to pounce looking more threatening day by day, and that I have stood staring at it motionlessly, racking my brains for an escape plan that keeps showing up a blank.

Photo by Marie Coleman

When I think about why I feel this way after having written more frequently than is usual for me this summer, I notice that today is my first attempt at writing after a 3-week long break. Compared to other times, I feel an intensified pressure to write remarkably well. “Now is the moment of truth,” warns my internal Editor and Sergeant Life Coach, “Do you have it in you? You better write a masterpiece or you can kiss your hopes and dreams to write well goodbye. The only thing worse than infrequent writing is insipid writing. Give me 20 fresh and amusing metaphors. Now! Can you think of any? I didn’t think so.”

I never use the term ‘writer’s block’ because I don’t want to believe in it. I want to imagine myself as prolific river of flowing ideas that knows no drought. I (or Drill Sergeant Life Coach, it’s hard to tell) think/s with derision, “this writer’s block they speak of is nothing more than a refuge for whiny writers that want to throw in the towel just ’cause they don’t feel like writing.” With her supercilious and British-accented words looming large and loud in my mind, I flinch a little anyone mentions ‘writer’s block’ as I try to shake it off as a problem that isn’t real, and nothing some quiet time to think can’t fix.

Photo by Inger Klekacz. Her caption: "I keep this typewriter in my bedroom, where it sits and taunts me. the bastard."

It’s becoming apparent to me that I do believe in writer’s block, insofar as I make such a concerted effort to avoid that which-must-not-be-named. Oddly, my barking internal editor, she that warns me continually of the dangers of not working hard enough, seems to be the source of this writer’s block (hey Epiphany!). So intimidated am I by the Sergeant’s lofty and Olympian goals for my writing that I decide to hang back and wait till I feel like a verbal Olympian, equal to the task.

I must credit this epiphany to my dear friend Sarah who told me this morning that she was writing 100 essays in 100 days, just to keep herself happily writing, in a blog she calls Essay Circus.  These are her words from essay 13.

Writing one hundred essays in one hundred days is like chemotherapy for writer’s block-it forces it out in the most aggressive way possible. Sometimes it has painful side effects (self-doubt, blank-page syndrome, obsession). Sometimes, it doesn’t work. I think that’s called writer’s block. While I was worrying about this creative dead-end and my goal of ninety-one more essays, it occurred to me that the only logical way to treat writer’s block would be to write about it.   (Sarah Elahi, Karachi, Pakistan).

Sarah’s project reminds me of Bronwyn‘s Summer Song Project (her description: writing one song a week, all summer. For fun).

Hm. Two people I think are incredibly talented are defying writer’s block by writing. The goal is to write, period. I know this remedy in theory, but have yet to apply it to my own practice. So starting now, I promise myself I will write every day (and to-do lists don’t count, missy) – without concern for the goodness or greatness of what comes out. I think that to do this I must accept myself as I am now: feeling much younger than I am, scared-er than I ought to be, and far from being a near-novelist or literary titan. So what if I am. Who cares? I wonder what I have to say. This is me, flawed, and moving forward. Wish me luck.

Shedding off the Funk

To kick the day off on the right foot, an uplifting video from a creative teen that Alyzee and Bronwyn introduced me to, to the tune of one sexy Van City cat with a beautiful voice – Hannah Georgas:

Thanks Shea and Hannah! I needed this this morning.

Caution: May Cause Pain

I don’t know about any other 30+ gals out there, but the older I get the worse that ‘time of the month’ gets.  And just to cause the men in the audience to cringe and wince – yes, this post is about your favourite time in a woman’s month – her period, when blood pours from her body and she feels damn moody and emotional (and yes I am currently there, hence the desire to cause cringing from my male readers – somewhat satisfying that).

So I don’t know if its cause its that time of the month, but I had a particularly irritable day today.  Won’t fill you in on all the gruesome details, because that would bore you, but I did think you might enjoy sharing the serenade that the upstairs neighbours decided to give me (these aren’t the actual neighbours, but this is a fairly good rendition of the wails that were emerging from their children’s mouths):

… for over an hour …. whilst I was trying to read and make notes on important documents … AHHHH!!!!

They were actually encouraging their kids to do this.  Wracking my brain to try and ascertain what Fuzzies or I ever did to them to deserve such a cruel and excruciating form of torture. ‘Eye of the Tiger’ and ‘Beat It’ will never be quite the same again. Shot my nerves so badly, that the deck is now covered in what is likely now a rancid morning smoothy.

At any rate, Jennifer reminded me in our session today that writing is my normal release, but as life’s been busy its been a week and a half since I last wrote. With any luck inflicting this pain on you will have helped.

Step #2:  Booze and Chocolate

Kisses,

Emme xoxo