Showing posts with label memories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memories. Show all posts

October 20: Gala

Joining a black-and-white fundraiser gala for free is more than enough fun. Especially when you forget your dress at home and your friend helps you coordinate an outfit (which you may or may not have successfully pulled off, seeing as jeans were a part of the ensemble). So, what to do with the spare cash? Why, throw it into charity fundraising, of course!

Our winnings included
1. Gift certificates,
2. Fancy dinners, and
3. Manicure packages.

The trip to Italy eluded us, despite everyone's best concerted efforts to concoct a win, but we got a great return on our $20 bills nonetheless... and the drinks just kept flowing.

September 26: Words

Drowning in boxes upon boxes today,

1. kind words from Spain,
2. kind words from Venezuela, and
3. kind words from England.

Life really does change overnight. Yesterday, here I was. Tomorrow, new circumstances, moments with my parents never to be recaptured. Four months with mom and dad. Did we find our utopia? Hell, no! Perhaps something virtuous, instead, in our time shared together.

May 7: Pensive

Today I was witness to a woman, poor thing, the moment she received news of her husband's sudden death. There was nothing good about it. It was so powerful, it erased the day's memories.

If anything good came of it, it made me pensive. Thoughts of my family. Here are some highlights. (To my sibs, special post for you three forthcoming...)

The men:

1. My dad taught me the value of a straight line. Years in a darkroom with a papercutter, or metal rulers + X-Acto knives, have rendered me scissorless for life. This was of utmost importance when I eventually ended up in art school.

2. My uncle always gave me beautiful gifts wrapped in ugly packaging. The meaning was not lost on me. Then he'd say (and still does), ‘You got it, Pontiac.’ A North American car thing?

3. After stopping at a Ukrainian bakery on Sundays after church to get rye bread (always sliced), my grandfather and I would sit on a bench in the park overlooking the Humber River, watching subway trains coming and going at Old Mill station far below.

The women:

3. Močiutė (grandmother) and Aldona would often take two of us on weekends. In between Lithuanian dictations, housecleaning and classic films on TV, repeated reminders: ‘Don't read good books! Read the best books.’

2. Aldona (my great aunt) always brought us Time magazines. A very matter-of-fact lady, she and Močiutė had no time for our snivelling. ‘One day you'll have a reason to shed tears.’

1. I better save some for Mother's Day. But what is it Mothers always say? Yup, ‘Life's not fair.’