Dear Canada:
It’s been a year and a half since we parted,
and I know I said some mean things in those emotional days toward the end. But
I’ve been thinking about you a lot today. I saw a photo of you on Facebook,
with that bright blue sky and sharp sunlight that I remember so well from the
days when everything was going right. And suddenly I was lost in a thousand
memories of the good times we had together.
Putting some distance between us has been
good for me. There were times when I loved your temperate spirit and tidy
habits, but I hated that 1000-yard stare you’d get in your eyes when the talk turned
to politics. There’s so much about you that’s amazing and good, but sometimes I
wonder if you even notice how time has changed you, hardened your heart.
But today, I’m missing you. I am
remembering you on the last July 1 we had together, when I sat on the shores of
Esquimalt Lagoon in the familiar chilled sunshine of early summer on the West Coast
looking out at all the red and white shirts, umbrellas, flags and beach
paraphernalia that people had brought to celebrate your birthday. I couldn’t
have loved you more that day. The truth is, I was already thinking about
leaving you, but that was the day I knew there were parts of me that would
always be yours.
I’m living with someone else now, as you’ve
probably heard. I couldn’t have picked someone less like you if I’d tried.
There you are with your squeaky-clean parks, safe roads and campaigns to stop
teens from using tanning beds, and he’s chucking his garbage out the window and
running around with guns and drugs. You’re stressing out over the FSA scores of
your well-educated young people in their fully equipped, competent schools, and
my new guy is shoving 90 kids into a dishevelled classroom with an untrained
teacher and counting it as a major win if they make it through Grade 6.
I admit, I do like a bad boy. There’s
something thrilling about being with someone who feels a bit dangerous, about finding yourself in situations that are right on the edge of
uncomfortable yet at the same time, leave you feeling completely alive. Today,
though, I’m missing your moderate ways, and how I always knew where I stood
with you. Yes, your predictability and need to control drove me completely mad
sometimes, but I knew you’d be there if I needed you.
This new guy – not so much. I saw a bad bus
accident last week and understood in a flash that if I were ever in an accident like
that, he’d ditch me in a heartbeat. He’d wish me luck and then throw me bleeding into the
back of a passing pickup truck headed toward the nearest broken-down, unfunded
public hospital, and that would be the last time I’d cross his mind. It shames
me to admit this, Canada, but I’d come limping home to you.
It’s
exhilarating to ride down scary roads in the dark in the back of a truck, with no idea what might happen next. But standing in your ample
wilderness, unafraid that the guy coming toward me is eyeing up my camera or
that I’m about to stumble upon an illegal dump or cocaine drop zone – well,
that’s its own kind of exhilaration.
Your political correctness got to me
sometimes, it’s true. But your heart is just and good, and I love that you were
out there with gay rights even while so much of the world continues to drag its feet
on such a fundamental fairness. I’ve overheard my
new man making homophobic comments, and I know I could never last with someone
like that, even if he does embrace life with a vigour and sense of fun that I
rarely saw in you.
O Canada, I wish I could lie down in your
cool, green lap right now, enjoying all the silence that coast-to-coast noise bylaws and
dedicated parkland can buy. I wish I was sitting down to one of your multicultural buffets, loading my plate with sushi, salt and pepper squid, lasagne,
baklava, pho, perogies, blintzes and French pastries.
My bad boy eats beans and tortillas pretty much every day. I admire his ability to get by on the things
he can actually grow. But today I am dreaming of your wildly ethnic palate and
generous food-import budget.
I’m a wanderer, Canada. I think you always
knew that. I don’t imagine you were that surprised when I left, what with the
problems we’d been starting to have. There’s part of me that wishes I could
tell you that I’m done with my dallying and ready to come home to you, but
there’s another part of me that has never felt more alive since I put you
behind me.
But you are in my soul forever. I had to
get away from you to appreciate your sheer functionality and all the green,
clean spaces and mannered cities you have wrought with your ordered ways. When
I think of “civil society,” I think of you. I love your banks, your hospitals,
your 7-day return policies. Your internet speeds are amazing.
Happy birthday, dear one. This new life is
changing me, and I don’t know if we’ll ever get back to being a couple again the way we once
were. But I’ll always sleep easiest in your arms.
4 comments:
Dear Jody. I too am leaving soon (October) for more exiting climes (middle east). Victoria, I love her but she's boring. I think it's that old Colonial hangover she has that gets to me, that fear and loathing, that correctness that creeps over us. I have had to travel the five years out of the ten of my retirement, looking for those tales and adventures where I can immerse my protagonist,Jonathan. If I can't get him into some kind of trouble or excitement, I will go crazy. I'll bring him home six months of the year, and 'out there' or the other six. The blog of Jonathan's tales and adventures:
http://rickthomasart.blogspot.com
Jody, I LOVE this letter. Very touching!
Barb
Beautiful, Jody, you have expressed your love of Canada and your desire for contributing to other countries. I will read this post many times.
I read every one of your posts and my respect and admiration for all that you do grows with each one.in
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