Blog #136…December, 2022

The pandemic has turned into an exhausting marathon, forcing us at the best into a quieter and more solitary mode and at the worst into bankruptcy and homelessness - or  some people, despite the evidence, are ignoring it and pretending it's over…so many stories to tell and so many ways to tell them.

Memorizing 200 lines of poetry every year in high school made me recognize a poem’s ability to capture emotions suddenly and accurately. From Robert Browning’s sight of My Last Duchess to the musings of J Alfred Prufrock, poets have always amused and delighted me. We’re heading into a dark time in many ways (can't pretend that away) I’m tempted to get into bed and emerge in April! It’s a good idea to have some brighteners - a poem a day to keep the bleakness away?

Covid’s imposed seclusion got poets moving and The Friendly Spike and The Secret Handshake, both longstanding groups offering creative opportunities to people concerned with mental health, have gifted us with Poemdemic. Beginning with Helen Posnos and concluding with Treese Flenniken, 45 poets contribute their lived experiences during 2020-21 in poetic form.  Conceived and produced by Honey Novick, Ruth Stackhouse and bill bissett, it's intended as a historic document as well as an artistic one, recording examples of of pandemic lives.  Find out more about  these two great organizations at: thesecrethandshake.ca and friendlyspike.org

Banoo Zan calls herself a war correspondent in verse and uses a nom de plume in Persian (Banoo is a respectful title and Zan is woman) hoping  it will keep her and her family in Iran safe. Banoo came to Canada over ten years ago, leaving a successful career as a literary critic and teacher of English in her home country. Settling in Toronto, she joined the feminist caucus at The League of Canadian Poets and began a monthly reading series called Shab-e-Sher (Poetry Night).  Since arriving here, she’s published two books of poetry: Songs of Exile and Letters to my Father.  When twenty-two year old Mahsa Amini was arrested and killed in Iran for wearing her headscarf incorrectly,  Banoo was beginning her role as Writer in Residence at the University of Alberta. She continues to give voice to the experience of exile and has joined in spirit, the protests {Iranian officials admit to 300 deaths so far!)  fighting for women’s rights and democracy in Iran and all over the world.

Poetry has always offered us beauty and inspiration, but poets have also spoken out on injustice and pain.  In the last century, Rupert Brooke agonized over the horrors of World War 1, WB Yeats reflected on the brutality of the Irish struggle for independence and TS Eliot described loneliness and alienation.

So the brave and clever people I’ve mentioned above are holding to that tradition, pointing out inequity, standing by marginalized groups and individuals and giving us hope that the world has the potential to be a better place if we stand together.

Have a peaceful and restful holiday season, give the gift of kindness to yourself and those around you. See you in 2023.










 

Blog # 135…November, 2022

In a recent New Yorker piece by Jonathan Rothman, he wonders “Are you the same person you were as a child?”  and “What can we learn by asking if we’ve always been who we are?”   It's the old game of nature vs nurture.

I'm thinking about the past and my childhood these days...and also, lots about that baby woolly mammoth discovered on June 21 as miners dug for gold in the Yukon (sidetrack to Robert Service!).   

              A life interrupted 30,000 years ago!

Nun cho ga
She’s a month old female, perfectly formed, preserved and named Nun cho ga (Big Baby Animal) by the Tr’ondek Hwech’in who rejoiced when she was found, recognizing a spiritual link with ancestors. Resembling a baby elephant, she was noticed by a keen eyed place miner who stopped digging immediately when he moved a large piece of permafrost and there she was! What followed was an amazing collaboration of scientists, Indigenous people, miners and politicians (who hadn’t always agreed on matters in the past to put it mildly) each playing a role in getting the precious baby  respectfully into a safe place. One of the scientists acknowledged how the spiritual implications were equally as important as the scientific facts.                                    
And the discovery was made on Indigenous Day!

Kent Monkman is also looking back in his latest show Being Legendary, just opened at the Royal Ontario Museum. Not sure if it's intentional, but the entrance passes through a display of medieval armour and I felt myself taking off a layer of emotional armour as I went into the exhibit hall - where Miss Chief  Eagle Testickle waited to take me on a journey through time.  Monkman's familiar alter ego, the glamorous trickster Miss Chief  (get it) shifts the colonial gaze and casts Indigenous people in familiar historical scenes.     

Miss Chief  Eagle Testickle

Monkman imported objects from the ROM's collection to illustrate points in several stories...a giant dinosaur rests in a glass case and he points out that they were discovered on Indigenous land, then brought to be displayed in cold halls in museums. "Our people read the stories of the land in the giant bones of long ago" 

In a conversation about taking down monuments, Murray Sinclair said " Let's create monuments to our own heroes." Monkman has done just that and presented hope for the future with Shining Stars, paying tribute to Indigenous artists, activists, academics and knowledge keepers in a series of portraits.

There's a movement to encourage museums to return objects to their rightful owners. A technical firm in the UK has produced replicas of the marbles that Lord Elgin pilfered over two hundred years ago and offered them to the British Museum. They're shown in their original perfect condition and would give visitors Museum a better idea of what they looked like... more important, the originals could be returned to Athens where they have a huge significance for the Greeks and democracy.

Makes me hope that Nun cho ga will be cuddled up somewhere near Dawson city amongst her spiritual protectors, and a cleverly replicated version will introduce her to us,                                                                                                                                                  

One review of Monkman's show said that he "tried to do too much." He admits at the start "There's too much to say and so much I can't say." Maybe I tried to say too much in this blog too, sometimes it's a good thing to do.


 Blog # 134...October, 2022

About fifty years ago I was dating a doctor who ran a medical service for indigenous communities across northern Ontario. Our dates consisted of him coming here (Toronto) letters and phone calls, and more significantly, me visiting there.

With so much attention on indigenous matters, and how they matter, I often think back to those visits, how uncomfortable they made me then and how I now have a much clearer idea of why.

As I’m putting this together, the CBC is dedicating its programming to the Day of Truth and Reconciliation and I’ve just heard a piece on reclaiming and preserving languages that the residential schools attempted to extinguish.

Language contains and reflects our culture, it also presents us and has a lot to do with our perception of ourselves…if you’re learning to speak  a new language and having to operate in it, you know what I mean. It’s the frustration of saying what you can rather than what you mean, feeling stupid at not understanding, and at a loss to find and get what you need. Removing language from the generations exposed to residential schools was one of many ruptures in relationships, families and culture. 

Going back to my time in the north, visiting Indian (as they were called then) communities, I was struck by how disengaged many of the Settlers (we weren’t called that then) were from nature, seeming to prefer sitting inside playing bridge. Our direct confrontations now with nature’s disruption of our lives highlights how important it is to regain that connection…hard for those of us who live surrounded by concrete!

But, look at this - Indigenous Tourism Alberta promises that you’ll  “Discover once-in-a-lifetime nature experiences that you will carry with you always. Look nature straight in the eye. Hear legends and tales over tea around a campfire in mystical heritage sites." 

Seems that areas of the country west of centre are doing a bit better in recognizing and giving indigenous people their due - Wab Kinew, broadcaster and author leads the provincial NDP in Manitoba. Anaesthiologist Dr Alika Lafontaine, newly elected  president of the Canadian Medical Association, of Cree, Anishinaabe, Metis and Pacific Islander descent, was born in Saskatchewan and practises in Alberta.

And, internationally, museums and galleries around the world are beginning to return artifacts to their indigenous origins…most recently, the Buxton Museum in the UK returned a number of important pieces to the Haida Gwaii Museum in BC. “It seemed the right thing to do,” said the curator.

I've just been reminded that the Maritimes too, when they're not dealing with climate devastation, are making a number of efforts to right the wrongs of the past...and in the centre also, we're all in this together.

So, although it seems that we’ve not accomplished enough in telling the truth and reconciling, taking the long view back to 1972, I can see a lot of changes. I wish I'd had the idea for indigenous tourism 50 years ago...and btw, the doctor and I didn't get married but are still good friends.                                  A la prochaine...



Blog # 133...September 2022

I like to think that rue du Quatre-Septembre on the right bank in Paris recognizes my birthday. It also commemorates the founding in 1870 of the Third French Republic that lasted until 1940 - that's only seventy years...I'm still around.

Birthdays bring reflection. Maybe that’s what inspired artist Ed Pien's current show - Present: Past/Future at the Art Gallery of Ontario. Although he'd never been to Cuba (born in Taipei, raised in Toronto) and didn't speak Spanish, he was approached by guest curator Catherine Sicot who had long admired his work. She'd visited Cuba and fallen in love with the country and the people (as many of us have) and felt they would collaborate well to explore her ideas about Cuban society. 

Starting in 2014, Ed visited San Agustin, a middle class neighbourhood close to Havana, twice a year interviewing on video 13 elders in their homes and gardens as they went about their routine activities.
They spoke of many things, ambitions, memories of dances and parties, feeling about aging (one was 104!) and...the revolution - life both before, when they felt exploited by capitalism, but didn't have enough to eat and after, when some things were better, others became worse. 

Here's Ed Pien sitting amongst pieces of furniture from the apartments of the elders - in the background is a mural of a typical building in St Agustin. 
I sat in the same chair when I visited the show.


Two idols

Dionne Clementina Anyo Reyes


Several of the elders passed away during the project and Pien chose to mark their deaths by panning around their empty houses or apartments. We were moved to tears, feeling we'd lost friends we'd come to know on the screen and remembering the many Cubans we'd met over the years.

Another Torontonian, Haley McGee's show Age is a Feeling attracted lots of attention at this summer's Edinburgh Fringe. A one  hander, McGee observes life from her perch high on a life guard's chair. The audience gets to choose each vignette  that dives into our relationship with mortality at various ages and stages of life. There's a chance that she might bring the show to Toronto, we'll be watching for it

Ed Pien and Haley McGee are unique artists using their particular form to explore our world as we move through it over time.

We've all had different experiences over the past couple of years and two groups that I love are treating us to a look at different views from different folks.
The Secret Handshake and The Friendly Spike have both been supporting people with mental illness for many years by making a range of art forms available. Here's their latest initiative...

Reading of POEMDEMIC! a collection of poems based on lived experience of Covid on September 20 and 27 at 7pm EST..register at friendlyspike@primus.ca.

So, there's lots going on that's good as well as too bloody much that's not, be sure and take some time for the good stuff and I'll be back wi
th more in October.

Blog # 132...August 2022


There's a  wonderful new mural in my neighbourhood, showing some of the beautiful imagery of indigenous culture and involving a spirit of collaboration...that's the indigenous way. 

The mural was conceived and created by 2021 Toronto Arts Foundation Indigenous Artist Award finalist Joseph Sagaj with contributions from artists Denise Aquash, Sonja Clarke, Larry M. Holder, and Mike Rowade aka Ron Wild. Sagaj also consulted with and sought the support of Elder and Knowledge Keeper Jacque Lavallee aka Jacqui Lavalley, Grandmother Donalda Ashkewe aka Winnie Ashkewe, Innu Consultant Naulaq LeDrew, and the AKIWIIDOOKAAGEWIN (Earth Helpers).

So the visit of Pope Francis last week to three sites of residential schools in Canada leaves over 80 recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission still to go. He was welcomed with generosity and warmth - it’s the indigenous way. He responded with his own personal warmth and as much generosity as his office allows. Acknowlegement of the horrors of physical and sexual abuse that occurred in the residential schools and apologies for the actions of “individuals” was a small step, an important beginning - we’re not sure of what yet. 

What was missing, was much mention of the reason for the schools in the first place. The Papal bulls, in particular the one issued in 1493 by Alexandre VI (a Borgia!) dismissed indigenous people as savage and needing to be deprived of their language and culture in order to become “civilized”. Their behavior, in the main, throughout the past few days, the time throughout and since the TRC and even before has shown us what civilized really means. 

Francis did say the word genocide and referred to the cruelty of cultural extinction on the plane ride back to the Vatican, too bad it wasn't in front of the thousands who waited hopefully for that recognition.

I can’t help comparing the grace and sensitivity (mostly)of indigenous people over the past few days as they spoke of deep and long standing cruelty and injustices -  to the self centred  and unfocussed anger of members (again mostly) of the truck convoy that occupied Ottawa last winter.

If by any chance you haven’t been moved by the events of the past few days, try and take a listen to  CBC’s The House, hosted Saturday by Winnipeg journalist Niigaan Sinclair; it includes a great conversation with his father Murray!

It's a miracle that indigenous culture has survived concerted efforts over centuries to eradicate it.  That's hopeful and it's not just important to them, but for us. Elders' relationship with the land is already being consulted by scientists, considered valuable in coping with fires, floods, excessive hear and other climate crises. Their oral history tradition and story telling will survive the next Rogers shut down when our version - podcasts are silent. 

We have a lot to learn from their spiritual practices, and their sense of family, community and nature that sustain and nurture them and their culture. 

Thanks, merci, miigwetch!


Joseph Sagaj

See you in September.

 

Blog # 131…July 2022

It’s wonderful to be outside so much these days, especially when there’s refreshing and original art to see -  sometimes in surprising places. I’ve missed most of it, but thanks to my friend Google, have been able to catch up online.

I discovered Ed Burtynsky many years ago in a photo exhibit of the devastation caused by the Three Gorges Dam in China at a small gallery on Hazelton. He works in large format, kind of the Imax of still photos, continuing to record industrial landscapes and their impact on nature and on human existence …”capturing the underbelly of what humans accomplish,” as he puts it. Once you’ve seen these sights (and there’s a certain compelling beauty from a distance) you can’t unsee them. There’s a cruel irony in rich dudes spending billions flying into space rather than caring for the space where we live, sort of like getting rid of a car when the ash trays are full.

Ed’s had a series of thoughtful and thought provoking works in the years since the Three Gorges, His latest show, In the Wake of Progress, an immersive experience now housed in The Canadian Opera Company Theatre had a spectacular preview earlier outside on all 12 screens in Dundas Square.


 

Another open air piece of a very different sort came with the return of Judy Chicago  (remember The Dinner Party at the AGO in 1982?) Her Tribute to Toronto, a new work commissioned by the Toronto Biennale of Art, illuminated the waterfront from a barge off Sugar Beach with environmentally friendly, non toxic coloured smoke one evening early in June.

Seeking to soften and feminize our surroundings with an impermanent approach, merging colour and landscape, Judy hoped to  increase our awareness of the beauty of our natural environment.

 

And, adding a note of whimsy to my neighbourhood and giving new meaning to the elephant in the room, is Matt Donovan’s 1999 student thesis for OCAD. Resting on the lawn of a house on Yarmouth Road, Sally had an overhaul and face lift in 2013 and continues to dispense prosperity, longevity, intelligence and good luck to the house owners and all who pass by…that’s what elephants do.

 


 Hope you're having a calm and peaceful Canada Day, be back in August. 


 

Blog # 130…June, 2022

Wordl…are you one of the millions caught up in its challenges (and chance to exercise your competitive muscle) or maybe you do crosswords, play scrabble or engage with any of the other games, puzzles and brain teasers involving words – they're fun, distracting and reputed to ward off cognitive decline.

Words, words, words!  In the past few years, we’ve imported them - hygge,  schadenfreude and brio from other languages, woke and bespoke from  corners of our own.  And who knew that someone who took a picture of themselves with their mobile phone would coin a word that we hear dozens of times a day? Words change meaning - a thong used to be a rubber sandal coming up between your toes, an app was a shrimp cocktail, coke was a derivative of coal or a fizzy drink and a mouse was – well you get it.  We avoided anything that was viral and rap was what we did on the door.

Iceland has a noun and pronoun for non-binary people. The Inuit have many words for snow but not one for depression…they call it “thinking a lot and crying.”     

If like me, you’re interested in words and language, I bet you’d welcome The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows… sort of a weird title John Koenig chose for his collection of new words for emotions. As he puts it “to capture the delectable subtleties of the human experience…to shine a light on the fundamental strangeness of being a human being.”  Here are some of his creations:

Sonder:  the realization that each random passerby is the main character of their own story, in which you are just an extra in the background.

Kenopsia:  the atmosphere of a place that is usually bustling with people but is now abandoned and quiet.

Des vu: the awareness that this moment will become a memory.

Nemotia:  the fear that you’re utterly powerless to change the world around you…which makes the act of trying to live your own life feel grotesque and self indulgent.

Ironsick:  feeling hollowed out by excessive exposure to modern technology, which is so fast and stimulating that it makes everything else feel drab and messy by comparison…even though your life may be as peaceful and predictable as it’s ever been.

There’s something oddly comforting about having words put to experience,“The tiger named is the tiger tamed” a thought that comes to me from the recesses of memory – there must be a word for that.

Words are also being joined together in new ways…vaccine hesitancy, replacement theory, fake news and a host of others. Then there are the acronyms used by tweeters…LOL, LMK, BTW, BBL, WTF and my favourite, DILLIGAS*- a more nuanced version of whatever.

BIPOC, which I think in Canada should be IBPOC

And those precious, brave, suffering Ukrainians say рашизм to describe their enemy attackers, impossible to translate into English, the closest we can get is a combination of Russian and fascism - ruscism

All these words, phrases, acronyms, in an attempt to capture and understand our turbo world, we'll be back in July with more of them.

*do I look like I give a shit?

 

Blog # 129…May 2022

April was poetry month and in case you missed it, I’m here to celebrate poets and those lyrical forms that capture moods, feelings, sights and sounds like nothing else can.

I’m forever grateful that our high school English class required memorizing 200 lines of poetry every year…and being randomly chosen to recite in front of our mates.  I remember cringing as 13 year olds  monotoned their way through Ode on a Grecian Urn, dreading my turn. I probably wasn’t much better but the snatches of Browning, Wordsworth, Shelley, Milton and many other British poets that float up all these years later give me immense pleasure.  Rupert Brooke's nostalgia for home as war approaches " some corner of a foreign field that is forever England"  still brings a lump to my throat.                                   

In my twenties, thinking I was hip in my black stockings and turtlenecks, I loved the romance of Shakespeare’s Sonnet XXX with its lines on friendship,"But if the while I think on thee, dear friend/All losses are restored and sorrows end."  I discovered that poetry could advance activism with Allen Ginsberg and confront racism with James Baldwin. I found  Canadian poets  - Irving Layton and Leonard Cohen. And women, Dorothy Livesay, Miriam Waddington, Karen Mulhallen.

Karen captures the anguish in our northern communities with these lines from her poem Pikangikum:                                                                                         "Ask ourselves, "our first world"/with no game for hunters/no food, no shelter for birds, fish, animals/no clean water, no elders with stories/children take their rite of passage/journey to adulthood, sniffing gas."


I read poets who experimented playfully with form, words, sound and humour.  Ogden Nash delighted me with:                                                                                      "The turtle lives twixt plated decks/Which practically conceal its sex/I think it clever of the turtle/In such a fix to be so fertile.  

I loved the acrid wit of Dorothy Parker "Oh life is a glorious cycle of song/A medley of extemporanea/And love is a thing that can never go wrong/And I am Marie of Roumania."                                                                                                                                                  

Today, on a somber note, Warsan Shire, a refugee herself -  Somalian, born in Kenya, raised in London, now living in Los Angeles - is in a prime position to express her feelings in Home, a poem with achingly poignant lines:                                                             

 No one leaves home until home is a sweaty voice in your ear saying leave, run away from me now./I don’t know what I’ve become but I know that anywhere is safer than here.                                                                                                             And... You have to understand, that no one puts their children in a boat unless the water is safer than the land."   

                                                                       

Poets show us how to hear - if we can bear to listen, they open our hearts and our brains to the joy and beauty, the tears and sorrow around us. Verlaine, Lorca, Rumi...and poetry can be found in the voices of the 90 million refugees displaced around the world. One who had lived in a camp for over 8 years was heard to say "My home is the people I live with now, the ones I wake up with, I have nowhere to go home to, home is not land but people."              


And if you're in Toronto on Sunday May 15th, you're invited to meet four Canadian poets who collectively, have been challenging and delighting audiences for over two hundred years! The special guest of honour will be Arlene Lampert, first and founding executive secretary of the League of Canadian Poets (1971-1979) who continues to love and support poetry and poets in Canada.

                    Poetry on Markham Street

                     3pm,  n/w corner of Markham and London Sts.

                                              Featuring

           bill bissett, Robert Priest, David Bateman and Honey Novick

 Funded by the Canada Council for the Arts through the League of Canadian Poets                                       Masks and distancing are suggested                      



Please keep yourself and those close to you safe and well, and remember how lucky we are to be able to stay home to be safe rather than have to leave.

See you back here in June


                                                                                                        


                                                                                                          


        























                       


                                             

                                                            

                                                      



                                                   


                                                      


 

 

 Blog # 128...April 2022

Now that Toronto's winter is on its way off to wherever it spends the rest of its time, we’re left with the candy wrappers, masks and dog crap that was hidden by the beautiful white snow…yuck!



But there are some lovely images to distract our attention. In the alleyway behind our house, Max, a golden retriever who lived next door when we moved in over 40 years ago, is immortalized, larger than life, on a garage door. It’s festooned with graffiti and says in tiny letters at the bottom -  "I love dogs."  So do I!








Last year, when we badly needed to smile, a neighbor, Martha Davis, created Panda Land on a nearby school yard lawn. It began on a small scale with one or two pandas sitting quietly and gradually expanded into a glorious celebration of what pandas might enjoy…sitting at the movies, eating in cafes, generally cavorting around in amusing ways.









My cousin Cindy, florist by day with a side hustle creating cakes for special occasions, sends us photos of her inventions. Happy Bassday is one of my favourites - maybe to open the fishing season or to celebrate a sportsperson's birthday.



Hanan Abdu, artist and occupational therapist, makes black muslim women feel important, portraying them as strong and fashionable. Using her personal and professional identities as well as her creative energy, she gives us a view of herself and other women as unique and beautiful,





And finally, the cover of The New Yorker always delivers a message, capturing what’s going on in that city and in the world - sometimes trenchant, sometimes funny and last week, heart wrenching. Artist Ana Juan’s Motherland evokes Madonna and child…with artillery accompaniment.



I’m having to extend my cognitive therapy inspired worrying time to handle all that’s going on! But, we'll be back in May, when the only certainty is that things won't be the same. I spoke too soon about winter being out the door though, and it wasn't an April Fool!























 

Blog # 127…March, 2022

I don’t particularly like the term differently- abled. It’s a bit clunky, but it does convey a better sense of how we all are…well, abled differently. Just as we’re gradually opening our hearts and minds, and books and films to include people of various colours, shapes and sexual definitions, we’re also accepting that we all hear, see, walk and talk at diverse levels of competence. Some of us may not walk up stairs as well or hear as clearly, but can sing Broadway musicals or knock off a great omelette.

I worked with children, most of them in wheelchairs, many years ago and found them thoughtful and unusually expressive…energy that other kids expended running around was available for thinking and talking to me. Alan who was 11 couldn’t walk unaided but he could beat me at chess. Eight year old Vancel came every day on his elbow crutches to take me to lunch in his taxi, making very realistic sounds of the doors opening and closing, the noise of the engine, the traffic’s honking and squealing brakes. Nancy, who was only 5 arrived when I was on crutches from a skiing incident, asked me who my physio was when I was little, which still brings tears to my eyes.

Ivan Illich (remember him from the 60’s?) had interesting ideas and wrote about  Disabling Professions. One of my greatest heroes, Oliver Sacks introduced me to the notion of hurling people at their deficits, as professionals put people through endless assessments from positions of power and authority.

Art can be an equalizer – think of the brilliant jazz of Jeff Healey; Daniel Laurie who plays Reggie Buckle’s Down Syndrome in Call the Midwife so touchingly because he lives there himself. Watching dance smooth out their tremours, we feel the music along with people with Parkinson’s and TV's Fashion Dis challenges traditional norms that lack inclusion in how we dress. An initiative to help people with disabilities achieve an MBA has been launched by a group of young people in Toronto...so things are happening in all sectors. 

And, coming up in a few days in Beijing – the Paralympics, launched in England after WWll at the Stoke Mandeville Hospital which specializes in spinal cord injuries. I always find it more interesting and inspiring to watch a blind speed skater or a skier missing an arm. How do they do it, and what courage it must take!

We’re being moved, sometime slowly but definitely surely into accepting and valuing difference, whether it’s in how we look, act, move or love....makes the world more vibrant, and also more accepting and less lonely for us in our uniqueness.

Here it is, another March... International Women's Day approaching, Spring and an unknown future. We've had enough surprises lately, and now the horror of the attack on Ukraine! And speaking of  unrecognized talents, we all wondered about the Ukrainians electing a comedian as president...now Volodymyr Zelenskyy is reminding us of George Vl staying in London during the blitz...and responding to offers to get him out with "I need ammunition, not a lift." Loving him for that as well as his brave leadership.

But wait, one more thing...actually two things that have made my spirit soar, at least temporarily, reading Indian in the Cabinet by Jody Wilson-Raybould  and watching season 10 of Call the Midwife.

Back in April with some beautiful images.

 

Blog # 126…February 2022

Quite a few years ago, I enlivened a job I’d taken in a hospital, out of financial necessity, by involving art students…it was a win/win situation. By bringing in artists, I enhanced their lives, broadened their experience and influenced their practice as well as my own. Oh yes, it also enriched the environment and the people there, brought smiles to both patients and staff who felt less isolated and focused on illness.

There’s a natural relationship between art and science – dancers need to understand the physics of movement, painters depend on chemistry to get the subtle effects in their work and musicians and mathematics work hand in hand. And scientists often use imagination and creativity in solving problems

Over the years, I’ve seen art and artists appear in a variety of roles in unique settings, collaborating with other specialities and putting these connections into practice. Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto employed poet Ronna Bloom who ran workshops for staff to help them process their experiences. The late and wonderful Priscilla Uppal was  in residence at the Rogers Cup for tennis, the Vancouver Winter Games and the Summer Olympics in London, rendering the spirit of sport in lyrical and moving poems. 

The latest initiative involves palliative care doctors at Toronto Western Hospital and the Art Gallery of Ontario. The stress of delivering sad news to families and friends can be overpowering and the opportunity to have a close and thoughtful interaction with art in a group helps provide some relief and room for reflection and mindfulness. Equally important is talking about what they’ve observed and felt, bringing the group members together and enhancing awareness of others' thoughts and opinions, deepening their capacity for empathy and making them better doctors.

As we struggle with the isolation of the pandemic, it seems to me there’s a big role for artists, many of whom have lost their livelihood. Mental health issues abound in schools, workplaces and long term care facilities…how about actors recording stories to read to kids and elders, dancers leading movement groups, visual artists introducing sessions on observing form and colour  in the world around us. I know it’s a leap, but a hopeful one -better than some of the stuff on screens -  and important things often begin with a small thought. Maybe if even a couple of you who read this blog take a step to include art in your lives in some way, and talk about it with your friends, some ripples will expand.

Remember that we look more attractive when we smile, so search out some reasons to do it, or better still to have a laugh...here's one from a recent New Yorker.  

We'll be back in March, look forward to those longer days and a more controlled pandemic!


 

Blog # 125…January 2022

Here we go again, launching a new year with high hopes in the face of grim circumstances…never more important to take refuge in the joys and sorrows of a good story. And what a wealth of stories our Canadian writers have to tell!

They live in every corner of the country and come from every corner of the globe…they’re old, young and in between and from a range of ethnicities and genders. They tell true stories, their stories, and the stories of others, real and imaginary, set here and elsewhere. If you feel like a laugh or need a cry, you’ll find it in between the covers of a book. And Bruce Cockburn has some advice ”Pay attention to the poet, You need him and you know it”.

I’m grateful to books that have helped me process personal emotional conflicts over the years. My name in the front of The Alexandria Quartet is written in a tentative small script that reflects the way I felt in my early 20’s, when it helped me understand that the world is full of very different people and no one really fits in.  More recently the Mummy Noir genre has given me a sense of the real joys, but also the hard and ugly feelings involved in motherhood. I’m still struggling with understanding life and each book I read urges me along.

I haven’t taken up bread making or weaving or learning  a language this past year and have spent most of the time reading…here are some of the things I’ve enjoyed. I now give myself the luxury of abandoning something I’m not liking, so this is the cream of the crop.

First, although I love fiction, some nf sometimes creeps in…I was intrigued by an interview with Kamal Al-Solaylee, a writer and professor at Ryerson (wish they’d get that name change going) about the notion of returning to home. He left Yemen as a teenager and has lived in Egypt and England, settling in Toronto several decades ago, losing his fluency in Arabic along the way. Recently, he’s started thinking of leaving Canada’s safety, health care (and winters) to return to a cabin that he knows is really a figment of his dreams. Prompted to examine other returns, real or imaginary, he speaks to individuals who have gone back to Jamaica, the Basque counties, New Zealand, Ghana, Taiwan, Israel and the Palestinian Territories, discovering the unique qualities of each return (the book's name btw).

And the fiction I’ve loved: Watching You Without Me by Lynn Coady; And Miles to Go Before I Sleep by Jocelyn Saucier; Fight Night by Miriam Toews; A Town Called Solace by Mary Lawson and Louise Penny, punching above her weight with The Madness of Crowds.

Books by Canadians looking at life through the lens of another culture: Scarborough by Catherine Hernandez; We Have always Been Here by Samra Habib; What Strange Paradise by Omar Al Akkah: Butter, Honey, Pig, Bread by Francesca Ekwuyasi and How to Pronounce Knife by Souvankham Thammasonga.

A nod to two American women, Samantha Power for The Education of an Idealist and  Stacey Abrams for a great thriller - While Justice Sleeps  - the latest in about a dozen books - when did she have time for politics…and a life?  

This is a partial inventory rather than reviews and this year I have no intention of learning a language, baking bread, weaving or doing anything other than reading more books!

HAPPY NEW YEAR, see you in February when it’ll be lighter later.