Friday, June 12, 2015

The Last Goodbye

 
Dear Tachae,
you always hated saying "Goodbye".  It was too final, and you never knew how to handle grief.  Instead, you always said "Goodnight" or "See you later".  In ornery opposition, I have long resented the term, "See you later."  It implies that I can foresee and/or control the future, which is not true.  So, being compulsively honest, I would respond with "Goodbye" or, in a more empathic mood, would compromise with a less final-sounding "Goodnight" or "Have a good day" (depending on the appropriateness of the timing) or, with increasing frequency over the last few years, "Take care of yourself," and more recently, "Please don't die".  I might as well have stuck with "See you later" for all the honesty it evoked in our relationship, because taking care of yourself and not dying were not promises you could keep, and I knew it.  

You were terrified of and resolutely avoided so many of the things that could have healed you, and so many of the things you stubbornly strove for were the things that killed you.  You were always intensely determined to do things your own way- it was your greatest strength and your greatest weakness. 

"You have lost much of your muchness"- the Mad Hatter, Alice in Wonderland.  As external, internal, and physical crises took over more and more of your attention, I felt like I was saying a slow, silent series of goodbyes to you.  Goodbye to your hope of marrying and being loved by someone who understood and cherished you.  Goodbye to your trust in the basic goodness of most people.  Goodbye to your hope of being accepted and valued as a member of a warm, supportive family.  Goodbye to your confidence.  Goodbye to your hope of becoming a strong, exasperated, adoring mother.  Goodbye to your faith in a personal God who was present with you.  Goodbye to your sense of curiosity and adventurousness in the world.  Goodbye to your mischevious grin, full-out laughter, and sense of humour in all things ridiculous, including yourself.  I mourned those losses.  I mourned the losses of those pieces of you multiple times each, as they would sometimes gasp back to life for a brief, unexpected period, before fading away or being buried alive again.  Maybe they weren't ever fully dead, just MIA, like someone who enters the witness protection program and must remain in hiding for years while the mob boss who is faced with being testified against finds innumerable creative ways to stall their trial. 

I missed you.  I missed being able to just be your friend instead of feeling like your incompetent therapist.  I kept hoping those MIA pieces of you would come back, and we could do things together we used to do: "walking" your dogs in Nose Hill Park (we'd walk, your dogs ran); swimming at the Village Square Leisure Centre; having living room picnics of wine, chocolate fondue, and fresh fruit; driving to the mountains to breathe fresh air and beauty (okay so the letting you drive part freaked me out, but I liked it once we were walking on solid ground); watching children's movies; exchanging music we identified with (I wish I had appreciated the depth and beauty of Plumb when you first introduced me); sharing delicious smoothies; horseback riding at summer camp; having random adventures like taking a bunch of silly photographs and using them to make up a story about parachute-pants-wearing-fairies and evil tumbleweeds.

I wish we had gotten to do the things we'd planned to do: like visiting Ireland, and growing old together and annoying everyone at our seniors' residence by wearing obnoxious purple outfits with a giant red hat that doesn't go.  There were some things we never talked about that I secretly wished we'd do together, like discussing books we were reading.  We exchanged books sometimes.  But more often than not, we didn't talk much about what they meant to us.  Sometimes I would see a quote from a book I had given you that I hoped would change your life posted on your blog or facebook page years after I had given it to you.  It was always kind of a surprise what stuck out to you, and always a mystery to me how much of that stuck with you. I wish that seeing others' children didn't hurt you so much- I really wanted to introduce you to my neices and nephews, to Sindy's little girl.  I know you would have liked them, and your heart would melt into mush or dance with pure joy at their excessive cuteness the way mine does when I'm with them.  I always believed that one day you would face your demons and see a counsellor long enough to actually work through the attachment issues that wrought so much damage in your self-esteem, emotional regulation, and relationships.  I was looking forward to being your maid of honour at your wedding to a sweet Christian man who treasured your beautiful, fiery heart, in a cute country church surrounded by good friends that you love and whom you know without a shadow of a doubt love you.  I was going to proudly read out a toast to the amazing person you are, regardless of how much my hands and knees would shake from being subjected to public speaking.  It wouldn't have been a boring wedding speech.  Nothing about you was ever boring.  I may still get the chance to do the toast, just not in the scene I dreamed of.

There were some pieces of yourself you never lost, and I clung to those bits.  You had a fierce sense of protectiveness towards vulnerable others- animals, the elderly, those with disabilities, children.  Nothing could raise your wrath more quickly than witnessing injustice.  Admittedly, sometimes this led to incidents of road rage or smashing things, but it also gave you powerful resolve to do things you believed to be right, like following through with a childhood promise to never allow your grandma to be put in a care home against her will.  The people you really loved were the ones you seldom spoke of on social media- they were your magical treasures, things you kept hidden safely in a secret pocket because you were constantly afraid they would disappear.  People didn't always see it, but you could be very tender.  You maintained enduring compassion for and loyalty to others, even while raging about their betrayals.  On the miserable living allowance that is income support and incapacitated with physical pain and social anxiety, you would find the will and way to do things for others you couldn't do for yourself. 

I miss you, Tachae.  The other day on Bloor Street I saw a Nascar race car balanced on 4 porcelain tea cups on a fine dining room table.  It just seemed like the sort of thing you would appreciate, maybe because it was a little like you- powerful and fragile, dangerous and beautiful, and a little bit preposterous.  I wanted to send a photo to you, only to remember there's no way for me to do that anymore.  God alone knows where you are now.  I sure hope you're in heaven.  If you are, please send my greetings and salutations to your grandpa and give a hug to my mom and your Caleb on my behalf.  And when I die, and have finished that one-on-one judgement of my life/therapy session with God, I'll look for you there.  I expect heaven has some pretty rockin' dance parties where you could be the disco queen, and where even introverted, self-conscious people like me can dance uninhibited, and nobody needs drugs because they're free to feel pure joy and love, uncontaminated by pain or rejection.  There's no death in heaven, no more permanent separations among those who already live there.  But at least for now, you have gone away where I can't follow.  So to you, friend, this is my last goodbye. 

Friday, January 23, 2015

I Hate Skinny Jeans



My name is Faye, and I hate skinny jeans.  Do you hear me, women's clothing fashion designers?!  I HATE SKINNY JEANS!!!  And for the love of donuts, can anyone out there explain the difference between skinny jeans, jeggings, and curvy jeans?  Because I tried on dozens of pairs of each today and I still can't discern what reasoning justifies putting them into separate categories of jeans.  Just call them "walking wedgies" and be done with it.  I also hate the fashionable "alternatives" to skinny jeans, including "boyfriend" style jeans, which appear to be androgenously baggy jeans stolen from the 90s, distressed, pant-legs rolled up, and then paired with platform shoes; leggings, a nightmarish ghost of potential material pilling from my elementary-school age years come back to haunt me; and parachute pants, which are baggy, pocketed variations of sweat pants.  I made a pair of brown parachute pants once accidentally in Jr. High while attempting to create cargo pants.  They were hideous. In shame, I eventually buried them in the gigantic pile of "clothes to be mended" in the laundry room where they could never be found again (except maybe by Melanie and Dad, who I heard are actually sorting through that room and getting rid of all kinds of other forgotten objects).  It never would have occurred to me in a million years that I just needed to sell them with neon-pink fishnet shirts.  Silly me. 

That rant established, you are probably now wondering why, if I hate skinny jeans so much, I was trying on dozens of pairs of them today.  That is a good question.  An even better question is why I eventually bought 2 pairs of said hated clothing.  The answer my friends, is blowing in the wind.  Or rather, the answer is what will be blowing in the wind soon, since 2 of my 4 pairs of jeans have sprouted rather large holes in the crotch-area, and the other 2 pairs are looking as though they may soon follow suit, the traitors. 

I knew this would happen eventually, of course.  Even really good quality jeans only last me a year, maximum.  Typically I replace the most tattered and essential portions of my wardrobe in the week following Christmas (after Boxing Day- I don't have sharp enough elbows for Boxing Day sales on Boxing Day itself).  This can usually be done swiftly and within $200 on a solo trip.  That is all the clothes shopping I want to do for the entire year, though sometimes I'm forced to brave the malls for the end of summer sales if quite a few of my clothes are tattered beyond repair or respectability.  I hate clothes shopping.  I hate spending money on something I know was probably made by child slave labour and will inevitably start breaking down within weeks of my wearing it.  I hate throwing out old clothes- most can't be composted, and you know that they'll just petrify and take up space once they're sent to a landfill.  I found some solace in gifting old jeans and linens to my church's volunteer quilting group in Calgary, but I haven't found anything similar here.  I also now live on Toronto's mink mile, which is conveniently close to school, but not conveniently close to any thrift stores where I might go looking for some used flare jeans. 

And why do I loath skinny jeans so much?
(1) As I think I implied earlier, skinny jeans are uncomfortable.  I have never, ever thought to myself: "Today I would like to wear pants that feel like they are simultaneously giving me a wedgie and trying to sneak off."
(2) I am not a skinny girl.  Skinny jeans do not soothe my anxious ego because they do nothing to soften the bulges of my not-skinny image.
(3) The only way to soften the unforgiving appearance of skinny jeans on a non-skinny person is to exaggerate the size of their other features, for example by wearing giant boots (by the way, "Uggs" and all their knock-offs are exactly what they sound like), bushy neck scarves, and long baggy shirts.  This means that because there are no sufficiently warm & non-ugly alternative pant styles available for non-skinny persons such as myself, I can't just replace the jeans in my wardrobe, I have to replace almost the whole thing.  This is expensive and wasteful.  Plus, I hate scarves.  My neck almost never feels cold and things that wrap around it remind me of choking. 

Sigh.  I have tried to wait out the assaultive seige of the current fashion styles.  I kept hoping everyone would realize skinny jeans are ghastly and go back to more sensible clothes styles the next year.  But it has been 2 years of skinny jeans ruthlessly dominating the market and there is no sign of reprieve.  Alas, I bought 3 new scarves and 3 baggy sweaters today to go with my 2 new pairs of skinny jeans.  I did manage to hold out against purchasing a pair of giant Ugg knockoffs, but this was largely only because my hate for uncomfortable and poorly constructed footwear over-ruled my self-consciousness.  Darn this unending season of fashion horror. 

P.S.  A shout out of thanks and praise to whoever designed my abominable snow monster toque.  I don't know who you are, but I want you to know that I love it.  Everyone else in Canada also loves it.  Seriously, everyone.  The young, the old, men, women, rich, poor: complete strangers routinely stare at it with spontaneous joy and feel compelled to tell me that it's awesome.