I bid farewell to my uncle yesterday. He flew back to England, tired and looking after a few weeks to be happy to be going home again to his familiar routine.
Somehow in the inevitable fate of the universe, the relatives I like the least live the closest to me and the relatives I love the most live overseas. My uncle Fred is hands down best uncle I’ve ever had. I first met him when I was 12 and wished like hell he could be the uncle I could see every week. He took me out to soccer games, walks, to the seaside. We did more stuff in those 3 weeks I was there than my dad and I did in our whole childhood. And no, I’m not exaggerating. I hate to say this, but I wished Uncle Fred was my father growing up. He’s a naturally charismatic man, charming and impish. He’s kind of like Benny Hill without the creepy, pervy sense of humour.
We spent a week travelling around the province, soaking up some of the local flavour, but as nice a face as he tried to put on it, I could tell by the end of it he was bored to tears. Manitoba doesn’t have a lot to offer between winter and fishing season, summer festivals and beaches. Most small towns are farming communities full of extremely nice folks, but not really a lot to do and see. We hiked in Riding Mountain National Park, but his back prevented anything too strenuous.
We had pints in many small towns and posed for pics in front of local large-sized attractions – ‘the world’s largest (blank)’. And that was fun in and of itself. I taught him the finer points of hockey as it played on the barroom television and he thought I was soft in the head for playing goal for so many years with hard rubber being shot at you at breakneck speed. He taught me the finer points of soccer as well, especially playing the back. We cheered our beloved Newcastle United to two straight losses and them missing the Champions League. Out of all the soccer we've watched together over the last 25 years, when we're together our teams never win. Not once. Not even a draw.
And he was gracious enough to kick around the soccer ball with Nick and Gerry, albeit for a short time as his back was acting up. But I could tell he was wanting to do more. He indulged their roughhousing until I had to gently step in and tell them enough was enough, and their great uncle can't do too much more.
While he was here, he didn’t ask about my divorce, and I didn’t ask about Grandma and Aunt Tara’s deaths. In the space of three months he lost his mother and his wife and it hit him HARD. It’s not that I don’t care. I do, and immensely. Aunt Tara was my favourite aunt and I loved her very much, even though I’ve only met her a handful of times in my life. But I think he needed family who wasn’t constantly tiptoeing around how he was feeling all the time and just cut loose and have some fun. Which we did in spades.
But he’s not as young as he used to be, and at 3 weeks he was ready to go home to his son, daughter-in-law and his grandchildren and the pace and life of Northern England. He could not get over how isolated he felt in Winnipeg, how cut-off and far away it was from other major cities, where the closest major city is 7 hours away in another country. Driving around southern Manitoba and it becomes apparent that 90% of it is farmland. Important, obviously… but not necessarily aesthetically pleasing, at least not for the long haul. That’s not a cut on rural living or anything, it’s just the way it is.
We spent a last night at the pub, having a few more cups than we planned on having, shooting pool (he is REALLY good, while I am not really good), watching hockey, and not wanting the moment to arrive where I won’t see him again for a good long while. But that moment came and went, we shook hands and promised I’ll be over the pond again soon. He was a little teary and so was I, but we held it together okay.
I’m planning a trip over in a few years with Nick, all things willing and then later on with Gerry when he’s a little older. It’s funny, because I’ve only been twice in my life, but I feel its incredible draw. I’ve always felt I’ve belonged there and not here in Canada. I feel like I’m home when I’m in England.
That was
a busy set of weeks, I gotta tell ya.
But I've been around, periodically checking up on you all and seeing how
you've been. For my part, I've been
putting in some overtime at work, going to Nick's soccer games twice a week,
taking the boys out to the park one weekday evening, taking them every other
weekend, playing soccer & practice twice a week, doing a laundry list of
jobs for mom and dad and maintaining a sort-of relationship in my spare
time. Probably not as busy as some of
you experience, but definitely busy by my lazy, shoe-gazing standards.
I've also
been half-jogging/half-walking home from work - about 10 kilometers a day. Not every day, but close to every day and
that's good enough for me. My goal is
the 10k run on Father's Day - about 6 weeks away. Doable.
But I'm not forcing the issue. If
I feel good and motivated enough, I'll go for it. If not, then I'll do another run on another
day.
The ankle
is swollen and grumpy and aching - playing soccer has pushed it around a bit
and it does not like it. I'm fine when I
play, but I have the icepacks ready to go when I get home. It's nothing serious, and the orthopedic
surgeon told me to expect this. It's
still a little frustrating though.
And yes,
I've been seeing someone. More
accurately, I've been having sex with someone, as there is really no other
dimension to our relationship. I met her
at a local pub my friend was playing music at, chatted, hit it off and have had
this Friends With Benefits thing going ever since. It hasn't been without its bumps, but she's fun
and steady and uninhibited and a free spirit, which I think is what I need
right now. But while what we've had is
fun, it has the feel of winding down now.
She wants marriage and love, while I do not.
Did I
mention she’s 51?
I suppose
that’s none too shocking anymore.
Intergenerational hook-ups happen all the time (as they probably always
have), and thanks to the Internet, it’s really no big deal. I’m fine with it. She’s a little iffier about it, but she was
attracted to my maturity and my masculine nerdiness so her defences were
breached, so to speak, as she assured me that I was normally and emphatically
not her type. As for me, this isn’t even
my first hookup with a woman in her 50s.
I had a fling with a 52 year old when I was 24. No, I don’t have an older woman fetish or
anything. Sometimes things just work out
that way.
My uncle
is in town from England, and as it works out, all of my English relatives are
the ones that I wished lived here instead of the relatives who actually do live
here. We’re doing some real nerding out
over Newcastle United as they make their last concerted push toward the
Champions League. We’re also planning a
three day road trip around Manitoba, and I’m really looking forward to it.
I had my first soccer practice in 9 months
this week and I am sore. Sore in a good,
righteous way, not in a ‘my formerly shattered ankle joint is not liking this’
kind of way. Actually, that pain was
mostly muted during the 60 minute kick-around and I scarcely thought about
it. My teammates seemed more concerned
about it than I was.
My concern is the beer gut I’ve accumulated
in my 9 month layoff. It’s not big, or
even overly noticeable, but it’s there. It doesn’t keep me up at night, but it
bothers me. And then it bothers me that
it bothers me. I feel silly and vain
when I shouldn’t. I walk lots and begun
tentatively running since the snow has suddenly vanished, but the gut doesn’t
seem to be shrinking much. Soccer will
sort that out, I’m sure. Soccer has a
habit of pushing and pulling you in all sorts of directions, demanding more out
of you than you ever planned on giving, with teammates to potentially let down
to keep you honest in a way that solo running doesn’t. The trouble is I really like a glass of beer
at the end of the day. When I stopped
drinking beer six weeks ago, I dropped a bit of weight. But I really miss my beer. And this boy ain’t drinking diet beer. Few things in life top the pleasure of a
loaded hamburger with a pint of frosty brown ale. Whatever happens will happen.
My love of soccer has been a slow burn,
simmering for over 20 years. Like any
good Canadian boy, I loved my hockey, and football (CFL football, that is) but
nothing prepared me for the intoxicating buzz of watching Newcastle United play
at St. James’ Park. How could a sport
that on the surface seemed rather slow and dull enrapture 50,000+ people? It didn’t make sense to me. The crowd cheered, booed and chanted on every
play and even though they lost (1-0 to NottinghamForest)
not one person left their seat.
Two years later was World Cup ’90 and Paul
Gascoigne’s heartbreaking yellow card and penalty kick loss to West Germany. And the 90s saw witness to Newcastle United
storm the league while managing not to win anything and nearly spending their
way into bankruptcy while doing so. They
were heady, if ultimately unsatisfying and heartbreaking times. I got married, and stopped following soccer,
and it was probably just as well. Underwhelming
performances by England
in Euro 2004 and World Cup 2006. The
so-called Golden Generation led by David Beckham was anything but. The biggest memory I have of WC 2006 is Becks
throwing up on the pitch in a match against Ecuador (which he scored in) in the
grueling German summer heat. And let’s
not even talk about Newcastle United.
They faded out as the bills piled up, the lowest point where they were
relegated to a lower league a couple of years back. And especially don’t mention World Cup 2010,
and the worst performance by an English team ever. Tied the United States. Tied Algeria (!). Narrowly beat Slovenia. Got destroyed by the Germans. Ugh.
Things are getting better though. Newcastle United are within a whisker of
playing in the Europe for the first time in a
handful of years, and on players they paid a song for. England
went undefeated in 2011 and went down, but gamely against Holland, probably the best or second best
team in the world right now.
I’m probably labeled a soccer fanatic, even
though I don’t really feel like it. When
non-soccer fans ask me why I like soccer so much, I tell them it’s a
ridiculously easy game to learn. You
attempt to put a ball in a goal using any part of your body except your hands
and arms. There’s the offside rule,
which seem to hang people up, but otherwise you can’t get much simpler than
soccer. It’s a lot like chess. You can teach a four year old how to play
chess. Just like you can teach a four
year old how to play soccer. It’s pretty
accessible.
The beauty of soccer (and chess) is its
near infinite strategic complexity combined with an artistic imagination. Much more so than any other sport, even
American football, with its militaryesque playbooks. Newcastle’s
manager Alan Pardew trains his squad with GPS tags on them, which tracks every
movement, which is then crunched into computer data. A little sterile, but players’ movements can
be corrected with surgical accuracy.
Couple that with a human flourish, a poetic turn that makes fans gasp. Lionel Messi or Christiano Ronaldo can move
with a ball at their feet in ways that put ballet dancers to shame. David Beckham can strike a ball that seems to
defy physics, so breathtaking that ‘bend it like Beckham’ has entered the
popular lexicon.
Soccer, like life, has its ugly side. It’s a side that shouldn’t be ignored, but
sometimes it is overemphasized. Diving,
making simple challenges seem worse than they are to get a free kick or a
penalty is probably the one thing that makes soccer fans see red and non-soccer
fans scoff. It’s the one thing I cannot
deny when scoffers declare soccer to be stupid.
My solution is simple: caught
diving? Red card. Piss off.
Off the field. Let your team play
the balance of the game short-handed.
That pales in comparison to a much worse
and deeper problem in soccer, which an ugly form of tribalism exists,
particularly in Europe and South America. Racism is a rampant and recurring problem,
particularly in Eastern Europe, but in every
country (it is customary at some grounds for black players to have fans make
monkey noises at them and have bananas thrown at them). Many teams have ‘firms’, the division of fans
that engage of acts of violence, vandalism and intimidation. Usually, this ebbs and flows with the rise
and fall of unemployment and poverty.
This is what most people think of as soccer hooliganism. It is horrible, but thankfully it appears in
most places to be on the decline.
But I believe in the inherit goodness of people, and I firmly believe that the good drives out the bad. And most footy fans are the tops.
My muscles ache. But in a good, satisfying kind of way. Knowing that I’ve done something good. I’ve much more to tell in my two weeks of
silence, but I think this is all for now. I crave a beer. I think I'll have one.
I’m in a bring up the past kind of mood
lately. Not to say there isn’t a lot
going on in the present… there certainly is, probably more now than at any
point since my break-up. It’s just I
prefer to let the present unfold and I’ll talk about it after the fact. It’s been a busy, busy week with little time
to read anything, let alone blog or comment, but the pace should return to normal by next week.
Maria wrote in my last post that she
thought I was mature for a 19 year old.
I suppose in retrospect in certain ways I was, but I still have to
stifle a chuckle about that. The good
and bad thing about blogging is that I paint myself with my own brush. Good because I know the exact truth of my own
experiences and I can relay them to you as a way of releasing myself from my
past. Bad because I know the exact truth
of my own experiences and I can twist, distort and sidestep them as I see fit.
The truth as I remember it was that I was
probably about as mature as the average 19 year old young man is. I engaged in risky behaviour. I drank a ridiculous amount of booze and took
a ridiculous amount of various drugs to the point that I barely remember my
late teens. I never cheated on anyone,
but I jumped from bed to bed fast enough to make cheating virtually impossible
anyway. I fought. A lot.
So much so that I can barely make a fist with my right hand and my
knuckles and fingers look gnarled and twisted.
I cannot straighten my pinky finger and it throbs on cold days.
I look back on those days with an amused
embarrassment cut liberally with a lot of loneliness and emotional pain. But I totally get what Maria is saying
too. I did have a lot of maturity and
awareness back then as well, as contradictory as that sounds. Truth is I was always quite old for my
age. Part of it is makeup, I think, but
most of it is definitely environment.
And no one person took up more space in my environment growing up than
Dad.
I’ve alluded to Dad’s alcoholism before but
booze is really the defining thing in Dad’s life. He started drinking about the age of 14 and
never looked back. He is now 68, but in
reality looks 15 years older. He will
die soon, and alcohol will likely be a mitigating factor. It is only in the past year he has battled
his addiction to alcohol, and he struggles mightily with it, especially since
he will not resort to outside help.
Frankly, I am surprised he’s made it this long.
Next time you are at a movie theatre or a
play, and there is a stock ‘drunk’ character look around you. Most people will be laughing, but there will
be a few who are stony or clearly forcing a chuckle. Those are the ones who grew up or are married
into a destructive environment with a drunk.
In reality it isn’t funny. It’s
painful and all-consuming and hard to describe to someone who’s never been
there.
Dad was three people. Sober Dad, Tipsy Dad and Drunk Dad. Sober Dad rarely made an appearance. If you caught him early enough in the morning,
Sober Dad was quiet and thoughtful, usually reading the paper or doing a crossword
puzzle or watching the news on TV. Not
much in the way of formal education, but whip-smart and well-informed about
world issues. He was intensely curious
about all sorts of things, from mundane pointless trivia to more pertinent
stuff, especially science and politics.
He was left-leaning centrist, pro-union railway man who voted NDP and
detested the modern incarnation of big business and corporations. He was a deeply critical thinker and took
nothing at face value. A keen mind,
impatient with fools and hated hypocrites.
He was a dad in the way a lot of dads of his generation were. Quiet and stoic, not sharing a lot of
himself, but there when you needed him.
Tipsy Dad was the most common
incarnation. He wasn’t falling down
drunk, but he clearly had a few and usually had a vacant, glassy look in his
eyes. This was how he was most of the
day. He would be louder, ruder, and his
moods were usually all over the place.
He could have more positive traits like Sober Dad, but far more likely
he would be boorish. He had a tendency
to bully us kids unmercifully when he was under pressure. He would tease, poke fun, play mind games,
wind us up and explode if we didn’t take his japes with the appropriate good
humour.
Drunk Dad in a lot of ways was better than
Tipsy Dad, because he usually just brooded quietly and angrily, muttering to
himself and shaking his head. Once in a
while though he would become violently angry and would go absolutely ballistic. More than once he hit me. Once he strangled the dog by the collar in
front of me because I forgot to feed her.
I begged him to let her go and he did, but it was a gut-wrenchingly long
time. As a drunk, he was awful,
spiteful, hate-filled, and ground down by a persistent perception of failure and
worthlessness. It was like living inside
a pressure cooker that could explode any moment. I often wondered why he drank so much, since
it seemed to make him so constantly miserable.
Dad knew he drank too much but since he
figured he was functioning – that is, he went to work everyday and made sure
the bills were paid – it was okay. Mom
was on the verge of leaving him a lot of times, but did not want the stigma of
having to go on welfare. So she stayed. So we all stayed. And in staying, you learn to adapt to your
environment. You learn to read
moods. You learn to tiptoe through the
minefield. You keep your head down, your
mouth shut and never say anything that’s going to wake the sleeping dragon.
The children of drunks have to grow up in a
hurry, because they’ll never cope with the environment they’re in if they stay
the same age and maturity level as their peers.
Once I became old enough to realize not all households were like mine, I
stopped inviting friends over. It was
just easier that way. I spoke and acted
at home with the sole purpose of keeping the peace and maintaining an
impossible balance. It was like trying
to build a house of cards during a hurricane.
It bled into virtually every other area of my life.
Often in my younger years, my appearance of
maturity was in actuality a mask for a lack of maturity. I was mimicking what I thought people wanted
out of me. No doubt a part of all that
was real experience and real maturity, but the reality of it was it stunted me
in far more important ways. A real and
balanced sense of maturity is still brewing and developing in me. In all of us, I suppose.
Anyway, that got really far away from me,
and a lot deeper than I expected or wanted to flesh out here. I’ll return to it soon. I’ll promise I’ll let you in on what’s going
on soon.
Before I begin this post, there are a few
things you should probably know about me.
They may seem off-topic, but it is relevant to the Most Awkward Dinner
Date I Ever Went On.
I'm firmly in the liberal/progressive camp
when it comes to both my politics and how I live my personal life. I have been for most of my life. It matches my moral compass the most closely
and I couldn't conceive of living any other way. I vote either Green Party or New DemocraticParty, depending on the election, what's at stake and the candidates
involved. Most conservatives (at least
nowadays) would sneer at me for being a 'socialist' (little realizing, of
course we are ALL socialists, just to varying degrees). Now having said that, I believe that most
people who identify as conservative are, at their core, good people. While I don't necessarily agree with
conservatives on most topics, I believe in their sincerity of doing what they
think it right. I can respect that,
except when it comes to a few things.
Specifically when it comes to issues of race, gender or orientation.
Part of my journey as person is coming to
terms with and overcoming my own racism, sexism and homophobia. I am all these things. No, I'm not saying this to assuage my white
male liberal guilt. I'm merely stating
facts. Being racist, sexist or a
homophobe, or putting up with these things in my daily life won't get any of us
anywhere. Pushing other people down
merely gives me the illusion of being elevated above them. It doesn't actually make it so. If my neighbour doesn't have the same rights,
opportunities and harassment-free
environments I do, it affects me. I take
this shit seriously.
Having said all of that, there are times I
don't live up to my own morality. It
happens. Often someone makes a racist
comment or a gay joke and I pretend I didn't hear it because it's easier. Or I don't want to rock the boat. Or whatever.
I do what I can, but I'm not perfect and there are many times I've
lacked the courage to take a stand.
There have been times I had, there have been many more times I
haven't. Now that I'm a father, I do
voice my opinion more as an example for them to follow.
Soooo anyway,
about this date...
It is 1995.
I'm 19, fresh-faced and fancy free living on my own out west. I left home, the city and the province
abruptly a few weeks after my high school graduation at the age of 17 and it
would be about 3 years before I'd be back in Winnipeg.
That is a long and complicated story for another day. Anyway, I was working as a gas station clerk,
living in a cheap apartment above an appliance repair shop, partying almost
constantly. Things were okay... I was
living mostly for the moment, the way 19 year olds often do. Happy memories, but something I wouldn't want
to revisit.
I was beginning to really grow into my own
as far as sex and relationships go, which was a far cry from being an
introverted nerdish bookworm in high school.
I was experimenting a little with same-sex relationships, but while it
was fun, it really wasn't my cup of tea.
For the first time in my life, I was happy with how I looked. I looked like the love child of Matthew Sweet
and Gord Downie and dressed like Kurt Cobain on the MTV Unplugged concert a
year and a half earlier. There were
quite a few partners that came and went in that stretch of time.
Anyway, in the middle of all this chaos, I
was at a local bar one night with my cousin who was in town visiting at the
time. He happen to know a woman who was
sitting with a couple of friends at the table next to us. She was a native Winnipeger as well. We started chatting and hit it off almost
instantly. Her name was Enid (so dubbed because we danced to the
Barenaked Ladies song of the same name that night). We talked and laughed and danced and talked
and laughed some more. I noticed after a
while I was holding her hand without realizing it. She was absolutely beautiful. She looked like a 21 year old Nana Mouskouri
with reddish-blond hair. An absolute
stunner. Just my visual type.
The end of the night approached and she
invited me back to her place. I would
have run there if she told me to. We got
there, but her sister/roommate was up watching television. We went into her bedroom and made out for an
hour or so but she wasn't comfortable going any further. That was disappointing, but okay with me and
I ended up sleeping on the couch that night.
I left in the morning with the promise we'd see each other again.
And we did.
We went out for coffee for a couple of hours and chatted, mostly about
our time in Winnipeg
(it turns out she grew up in the same end of town I did, but went to the
'other' high school.) She was open about
the fact she found me really attractive, and liked my personality, but wanted
to wait a bit before getting physical. I
wasn't thrilled about waiting (I was 19, after all), but I was really attracted
to her as well, so I could deal with that.
We went back to my place, watched a movie, made out some more and she
went home. We made another date that
weekend. I decided on dinner at a local
Italian place that I heard was pretty good.
We talked on the phone every day until the
date. We chatted, but there was a bit of
unease beginning to creep in. She talked
about her ex-boyfriend. A lot. Especially about the sex they used to
have. I'm not a jealous person by
nature, and I wasn't jealous here (well, maybe a touch), but I was left kind of
annoyed by it. To me, it seemed a trifle
rude and it sounded like she was probing me a little, looking to see if I
sounded jealous or otherwise trying to get a reaction out of me. It was getting to be a real turn-off, but we
had such a strong connection before, I willing to let it slide for the time
being, and I'd just politely tell her to cool it if it kept coming up.
Anyway, it's date night and she walks in,
looking absolutely radiant. We take our
seats, have a glass of wine and continue chatting. Things are going generally pretty good, but
was still bringing up her ex-boyfriend every other sentence. Finally I had to ask her nicely if we could
stop talking about the ex so much. She
agreed, apologized and we talked about a few other things before the
conversation slipped back to the ex again.
I was about to say something again when she dropped this little gem:
"Oh yeah, my ex called last night - we
talked a bit and then we had phone sex... it was silly and I just did it 'cause
I was bored."
Okay, there was a little build up to this
that I didn't explicitly mention. I
don't exactly remember what it was, it was 17 years ago after all, so she
didn't exactly drop this bomb entirely unannounced.
But still...
really?
I sat in silence for a moment digesting
this little tidbit. I was irritated, but
it really didn't strike me yet what exactly she said - it was just so gauche
and inappropriate for a date I was really caught for something to say. I mean, if she's still doing that with an
ex-boyfriend... okay. It's not like
we're an item or anything... but why be so explicit? And couple that with her affirmation that she
is not going to do anything physical with me yet and I was at a bit of a
loss. I was trying to come up with
something that was diplomatic and expressed my annoyance. While that was going on, she literally
dropped this bomb out of the blue.
"I really like you Wanderer, and I
want to go out with you, but I'm not going to have sex with you."
If that happened today, I probably just
would have thanked her for her time and walked out on the spot. At the time, I had next to no formal dating
experience. I was still kind of thinking
she was winding me up and she would be laughing any second. It's not like I was overly aggressive or
anything - our make out sessions were pretty steamy, but she had her boundaries
and while I tested them a bit, I respected them. And I didn't feel I was too aloof either, at
least going by those same make out sessions.
We came as close to the border between what they would have called
'heavy petting' and sexual acts as I believe two people could go. And we were both in it with gusto.
I seem to remember myself asking "So what exactly are we right now? Dating?
Friends? I'm not sure and I'm not
sure what to think about what you're telling me. It seems to me like you want to have sex with
your ex while keeping me in your back pocket in case things don't pan out, AND
you want me to be cool with all of that.
I like you too, and I'm reaaally attracted to you Enid, but I don't do
that. You're with me or you aren't. If you're with me, great. If you're not, I can respect your
decision. But no half-assed 'sleep with
him/date me platonically stuff, okay?"
Wow, you're all saying to yourselves. That's pretty awkward. Yes it was.
But IT GETS WORSE. A whooooole lot worse.
She asked if we could finish our date and
she promised she would think about what I had to say and give me a real answer
about her intentions tomorrow. That was
fine with me, but I had a strong feeling things weren't going to work out
between us. And with the rest of our
date, that feeling cemented itself.
We talked more about this and that, and she
made some kind of compliment about me being mature for my age and not
immediately trying to get into her pants.
I shrugged and thanked her, and then she dropped the Hiroshima of bombshells on me.
"That's what I hate about blacks. If I'm out at a bar or something, they're
ALWAYS trying to get me into bed. There
was this nigger in high school, and I used to call him nigger all the time and
it used to drive him nuts! It was so
funny, and I got away with it too. All
they think about is sex. I can't stand
black guys!"
I'm abridging this tirade greatly, and I
can tell you that she dropped the n-bomb a lot more than that. You know how in movies, a character will say
something really inappropriate and you hear that record-scratching sound effect
and everyone in the room will collectively gasp and look at the character like
he's completely crazy. Well, this is how
I remember this incident. There were
nine other tables and their conversations went deafeningly silent. I could feel everyone’s eyes on me. My face turned beet red.
Look
at him, I imagine they’re whispering to each other,
clucking their tongues and shaking their heads.
He wants to put his dick in a
RACIST. For SHAAAAMME!!
There is no doubt that everyone heard
her. I desperately wanted to say
something, but I was so fundamentally shocked, all I could muster was “I have
to use the washroom.” I went and stared
at the mirror for a while. What the hell
do I say to something like that? Was she
serious? Was she trying to push me
away? What the fuck? I washed my hands and slipped out of the
restaurant and went home. Cowardly? Probably.
But I was baffled and reeling and had no real desire to go back and
confront that dining room, even though I knew I had done nothing wrong. I didn’t call her.
She called a couple of days later. She asked if it was the racist language she
used that I left, and I said it was that and her talking about sex with her
ex-boyfriend that kind of killed my desire for her. She said she was sorry, but she ‘had some
personal problems’ she was working out (she didn’t elaborate and I didn’t
ask). She asked if we could try again,
and I said no, that dating someone who holds such narrowly racist assertions
wouldn’t be possible. At that, I wished
her luck and hung up the phone. I was
still pretty upset, because although I didn’t paint a flattering picture of her
here, Enid had
a whole host of really good qualities.
She was intelligent, (usually) kind, fun, nerdy, cute, and had excellent
taste.
Oddly enough, she called me a few years
later out of the blue when I moved back to Winnipeg.
Don’t know how she got a hold of me, but she was back in the city
herself and we chatted for a while, mostly about jobs mutual people we know
etc. I was about ready to hang up, when
she asked if I wanted to hook up. No
dating, no anything, just sex. I’m
ashamed to say I was tempted, but turned her down as I was dating someone
else. Even if I was single, the drama
associated with her would probably(?) been enough to put me off. In the end, no matter how hot, racism is just
a gigantic turn-off.
So now I’m ‘in the dating scene’ again, and
I absolutely hate it, but I’m somewhat comforted by the fact that no matter how
awkward a date goes, it probably will never get that awkward.
How about all of you? What’s your most awkward dating experience?
In a funny way, here's to Enid, who if nothing else provided a good story to tell...
Someone once said that 'A person who is nice to you, but rude to the waiter, is not a nice person.' Um, yeah. That kind of describes how my date went on Friday. She wasn't rude per se, but she was plenty condescending, which in my books counts pretty much as the same thing.
We met a couple of weeks ago at a local pub/eatery/live music venue and got to chatting and decided on the follow up date to get to know each other a little better. We talked on the phone a few times, and I found her a little brusque, which wasn't a bad thing really, and after my ex-wife who would never get the point of how she was really feeling about things, it was a little bit refreshing. It was just a bit of an odd way of speaking to someone whom you were exploring the possibility of having a romantic relationship with.
Anyway, we're having dinner and we were in the process of ordering entrees when our waitress got a little mixed up. No problem, within a minute we sorted it out and she was on her way. This is minor stuff, not Fawlty Towers-esque shenanigans. My date leans into me and says in a loud whisper:
'What an airhead! How old is she, like 30? What 30 year old still waitresses?'
'Well, I don't know. I try not to judge someone until I've walked a mile in their shoes. Perhaps it's the only work she can get.'
'Oh... I guess.'
We talk some more, but we really aren't connecting. She is very physically attractive, no problems there, but her personality is becoming really off-putting. She asks why I don't have a car (I don't really need one, and I could use the money elsewhere), why I don't have a house instead of an apartment (long story, which is a polite way of saying none of your business) and why I didn't fight my 'bitch of an ex' for custody of the kids (again, not really first date material, but I felt that having them splitting time between two places would be developmentally harmful for them, they stay with mom, mom is primary caregiver, but kids see me whenever they want - it works best for THEM).
She asks why I didn't finish university, and I'm really starting to bristle, because I keep wanting to say NONE OF YOUR DAMN BUSINESS. Dinner can't come and go fast enough. I'm giving non-commital, almost bored answers (ran out of money) and she was gob-smacked.
'You mean,' she asked 'your parents didn't pay for your school?'
'Nope. In fact, I left home for the first time when I was 17. I paid for school by working and saving.'
'Wow, I can't believe it.'
'Believe it. My parents were not well off. They had no money for us to go to school. If we wanted to go to university, we had to get a scholarship, or roll up our sleeves and pay for it.'
'Wow. So no school?'
'No.'
'Did they buy you a car?'
'No.'
"I guess I'm lucky... my mom and dad bought my first car and paid for school. They have a down payment for my first house too... I guess I'm pretty lucky.'
'It's all relative...'
She cocked her head to one side with curiousity.
'I mean, yes, it would have been nice to finish school and know that I don't have to scrounge for the down payment for my house, but then I wouldn't have lived my life the way I've lived it to this point, which for better or worse I wouldn't have traded for the world. At the end of it all, life isn't about what you have, it really is what you make it.'
'Oh, I guess so...' as if she wasn't sure... oh well. Waitress comes back with entrees and we order two more drinks, hers some sort of martini and mine is a Newcastle Brown Ale (natch!). And then she looks at the waitress and says:
'Did you maybe want to write that down? You seemed to have trouble before...'
The waitress was taken aback a little. 'I assure you that your order will be correct'
'Well, just saying... I want to be sure, you know?' in a really condescending voice.
Urk. I'm turning red.
The waitress whips out her pad, makes a note and returns with the drinks. I'm embarrassed. We eat in silence.
'You're quiet eh?' she says to me at last.
'Dressing down the waitress like that was really uncalled for. She made a mistake earlier, and I don't think calling attention to it like that was good.'
'Waitressing isn't rocket science. If she can't get an order straight then she shouldn't be a waitress.'
'Wow. Okay then.'
We finish, pay up and leave. We were planning to take a stroll but the weather is absolutely terrible. I emphatically don't mind. I begin to thank her for the evening, when she interjects:
'So, take a cab back to your place?'
'I... huh?'
'We can't go to mine, I live with my dad.' I should point out she is 25 here, a full 10 years younger than me, so it's not that weird that she's still living with a parent.
'Well... uh... thanks for the company and the evening, but I'm not interested in seeing you again.'
'What? Why?!' she was genuinely upset.
'I don't think our date went well, there was no connection on my end, so once again, thanks for the evening, but I'm going home now.'
'Is this about the waitress?'
'Partly yes. I find your attitude toward other people that you consider to be beneath you off-putting. So once again thanks, but once again I am going home alone.'
'But... don't you want me? I want you!'
'You're very attractive, but the answer is no. I'm sorry.'
'Oh... okay then. Whatever I did, I'm sorry.'
I highly doubt that. But whatever. The world of dating again. Hooboy, do I not miss this. Sad thing is, this is far from the worst dinner date I've ever had. Remind me and I'll share that little gem some day.
*************************************************
It's no secret I'm a soccer fan and there was lots for me to chew on this week. England played Holland on Wednesday, and the Three Lions fielded a very young, inexperienced squad against the Netherlands. It was actually quite an entertaining game, and England played well for large chunks of it, despite falling behind 2-0 (including a stunningly brilliant goal by the Dutch Winger Arjen Robben). They clawed back to make it 2-2 in injury time before the Dutch potted the winner a minute later. First England loss in over a year, which sounds really strange, but true, but they were operating on a very experimental squad using a very experiemental 4-3-3 formation, and all this without a proper manager. For Euro 2012, we shall see.
And this morning was the Tyne-Wear Derby, pitting my beloved Newcastle United against their hated local rivals Sunderland. This is the big one. This is the match Geordies all over the world wait to see. This is Yankees-Red Sox. Toronto Maple Leafs-Montreal Canadiens. This is rivalry at its most intense. This derby divides friends, family and co-workers. Your best mate may be a Mackem (a person from Sunderland), but for 90 minutes you WILL hate his guts. At best intense shame and ridicule is at stake. At worst, hooligan violence will send people to either jail or hospital or both. I was up late last night and did not want to risk sleeping in, so I stayed up all night to watch the 6 am start. And Newcastle was... disappointing.
Actually both teams weren't at their best. Tons of fouls and yellow cards and free kicks. Ugh. Brutal, constipated football. Sunderland went up 1-0 on a suspect penalty call, but had a player sent off early in the second half for an elbow or punch (I didn't see it). Newcastle dominated, but were looking for even-up penalty calls instead of concentrating on the play. Then Hatem Ben Arfa was subbed on and lit up St. James' Park, but still no goal. Newcastle got a penalty shot of their own. Our star striker from Senegal Demba Ba took the shot and... Saved! Aaargh!! Then finally in the 90th minute, derby hero Shola Ameobi tied it. They got a point, but probably should have won it. No killer instinct this week (or indeed the last few weeks), and they aren't looking like a team that is chasing a Champions League spot.
A short history of the Tyne-Wear Derby
*************************************************
Nick and Gerry have settled into their new place, but Nick has been phoning me almost nightly since moving in with his soon-to-be stepdad. I've been taking him out a lot more, and we've really started to bond closer than we've ever had before. When it gets warmer out, I'll grab Gerry too and have both boys, but Nick needs me a little more right now.
He's turning into a really fine little boy. Saturday he wanted me to come out and play, so I obliged him. I took him to the park where we rolled around in the snow playing with his new Nerf dart gun. Afterward, he hugged me and told me I was the best dad ever. That is what gets me up in the morning, I tell ya.
*************************************************
My soccer coach/player called me last week and gingerly asked if I was coming out this spring. I look at my foot and tell him that I honestly don't know yet. I've done some sprints at the Y, but my foot was really sore afterward. I tell him I'll see and he sighs and says okay. I'm flattered. I settled into a central defender role after playing mostly in high school as a keeper. And I can certainly fill in as keeper when needed, but we have a Korean fellow who is phenomenal, it's a miracle he's just playing pick-up soccer with us rag-tag bunch.
Being a central defender means I'm pretty much only in 2/3 of the field and pretty much in the middle, except when chasing down a striker 1 on 1. It's a good position for an older guy who can put on a quick burst now and again. Except I'm not so sure I can put on the quick burst anymore. I used to have a flexible ankle to push off of when sprinting, but it's become a lot stiffer since the injury. I may have to come off early, but centre backs usually play the whole 90 minutes. I don't know. All I know is I'm going to try.
*************************************************
Check out Whichbook, a handy little website when you're stuck over what to read next. Set your parameters of what you'd like (funny or not so funny - weird or not weird - lots of sex or no sex, you're allowed 4 options) and it'll make recommendations based on your interests. From the 10 results I got, I've read 1 (Lullaby for Little Criminals by Heather O'Neill. My ex read that one and recommended it - as do I), and I picked Finbar's Hotel by various Irish authors.
I've been walking home from work for the past two weeks to lose the gut I picked up while in my cast. Between that and practically eliminating beer from my diet, I've dropped 20 pounds in the last 6 weeks. The walks are intense - nearly 10 kilometers in a little over 1 1/2 hours, which is my running goal by the end of the summer. Remind me, and I'll track my progress here.
Well, no offense all, but I'm pretty tired so I'm calling it a night. We'll talk soon
The black sheep. The troublemaker. The one relative that the other adults in the
family hate and the kids absolutely adore.
The adults hate the black sheep because
they’re shiftless layabouts that don’t have steady work, haven’t settled down
and started a family and/or are secretly jealous because they live the kind of
free, joie de vivre life that they
wished they could live. The kids love
them because they were adults that understood kids, would always have a smile and
a joke, or visit with an armload of exotic trinkets and tall tales of faraway
lands.
I’ve only met my Uncle Walt a couple of
times in my life and it was when he was in his late 70s and early 90s
respectively, so I didn’t get to see much of the mischief-maker that I heard so
much about, although he was still sharp as a tack. My mom swears we are both identical. I’m not so sure, but I can see what she was
getting at. We both share a love of
(harmless) practical jokes, dry wit and a penchant for sometimes making waves
in the somewhat stuffier, more professional enclaves of society.
He was born in England
around 1910 and spent much of his years as a young man travelling extensively
throughout Europe and North Africa. He mostly worked odd jobs, and came home when
he ran out of money and work. He rented an
upstairs flat from my great-grandmother (who was Uncle Walt’s polar opposite;
stern, reproachful, pragmatic and practical… stereotypically Scottish) when he
wasn’t wandering and drove her insane with his shenanigans (although she never
threw him out… I think deep down she loved his zaniness). Once he came home with a pet monkey that he
trained to steal food out of the kitchen and haul it back upstairs for
him. Everyone in the family swore that
my great grandma was going to kill that monkey (Charlie the monkey was his
name) sooner or later – and Charlie did disappear
one day, never to return… but nobody really suspected her of killing him.
Uncle Walt was a notorious rake. He was almost always penniless, but he was
always dressed to the nines and had a thin pencil moustache that he sported
until the day he died. He was always
entertaining young women, picking them up in pubs and music halls, taking them
out dancing or to burlesque shows. My
great grandma forbade Uncle Walt having women in his room but he found ways
around her which no one could ever figure out short of having them scale the
side of the house and come in through his second storey window. My Uncle Walt must’ve been charming as all
hell to convince his dates to do that, because enough of them did, and he was
often caught when their ‘passions’ would wake up great grandma or Charlie would
get riled up and startle them into either screaming and/or stomping furiously out
of the house. Uncle Walt told me this
the first time I was visiting when I was 13 (‘fucking’ was subbed for the more
ambiguous ‘necking’) and he would laugh until his face was red. ‘I felt bad,’
he said to me, ‘But you’ve got to see
the humour in it, lad!’
In the late 40s, my great grandma passed
away and Uncle Walt traveled again, returning now and again to see the family,
regale the kids (my mom now one of them) with tales of his travels, have a few
home-cooked meals, borrow a few pounds and be off again. The adults would grumble about how Uncle Walt
should get a ‘proper job’, settle down and stop acting like a damn kid while
the kids would swarm him and beg him to play and tell stories and continue to
be the Coolest Uncle Alive. He took the
upstairs flat again, the house now belonging to his brother and his wife. They were the first house on the block to own
a television and one night, while the whole block was over watching a scary
movie on television, Uncle Walt burst through the front door, with his overcoat
over his head, moaning that ‘he was going to get the children!’. About 15 kids (and most of the adults)
started shrieking bloody murder, while his sister-in-law chased him six blocks
down the street (with his overcoat still over his head, from the stories I
heard) vowing that she was going to chuck his things into the street and he
would never be welcome back – if she didn’t catch him and kill him first. Flowers and chocolate and a John
Belushi-esque smile (and a sincere apology) smoothed things over.
Uncle Walt disappeared again not too long
after that, and then returned a couple of years later. He was in his late-forties by then and
starting to slow down a bit. And the
proof was that he was now married.
That shocked just about anyone who knew
Walt, but not only that, his new wife was twenty-five years younger than
him. And not only that, his new wife was
black. In the 1950s.
It took a lot of courage for both of them
to be together. Her more especially, of
course, because she moved to a city where she didn’t know anyone, plus she was
a racial minority in an era of more open and derisive racism, plus she was
married to a white man. Aunt Irma has a
yard of guts. Uncle Walt lost a lost of
friends because of his wife, but I’m proud to say that our family stood by them
both. And Walt did settle down. Took a proper job. Bought a house and never wandered after
that. And they were married for 43 years
until Uncle Walt died in 2002.
I remember when I visited when I was 13
years old, and marveling at Uncle Walt and his stories, his humour and him in
general. He radiated a charm that only a
certain exclusive tiny percentage of people have – a charm that binds nearly
everyone that he talks to and holds them, until he chooses to let them go. Aunt Irma would just shake her head in mock
annoyance as he told me about his travels in Africa and his exploits on the continent,
but I sat in rapt attention as he told me story after obviously exaggerated
story. I remember looking up and seeing
my mom and my uncle Fred straining to listen to his stories as well.
But there was one thing that stuck with me
more than anything else about Uncle Walt.
We were in a restaurant having lunch.
Walt was still impeccably dressed, if a little outdated. His favourite suit was a deep devil-red suit
with a matching bow-tie. No one except
Uncle Walt would get away with wearing it, and yet he wore that suit like with
it on, he was the most handsome man in town.
And people believed it too.
Anyway, we were eating, and as a young man
of 13, I had started noticing girls, but was incredibly shy and tongue-tied
around them. Our waitress in particular
was an achingly, ridiculously beautiful woman of about 19 or 20, and I found
myself so paralyzed with shyness I couldn’t even look her in the eye, let alone
talk to her or order off the menu.
Everyone else kind of laughed, but Walt
leaned over and whispered to me: ‘Lad,
there’s no need to be so shy… women are people just like you’
And then Uncle Walt proceeded to flirt with
our young waitress. Not in a skuzzy,
dirty old man kind of way, but in a roguish gentlemanly manner of someone who
could still talk a bird down from the trees, but only because it pleased him to
do so now and again. And within about 10
minutes he had her giggling and smiling and blushing… and not in a patronizing
way (unless she was reeeeally good, and in the waitressing business, that’s a
possibility, but she was hanging around our table longer than she should have –
other patrons were shooting her daggers) but in a genuine way that she was
pleased and honoured that someone was paying her this kind of attention. Walt gave me a wink as if to say See?
If an 80 year old fart can do it, so can you! I was stunned. Still stunned, to be honest.
Well, my mom thoughtI was the spitting image of my Uncle Walt. We certainly share a few traits. We’re both have mischievous streaks, perhaps
a tad immature, a little on the shiftless side.
We both like roaming, although with the boys I don’t ramble anymore… not
until they’re older anyway. And in some
ways we are polar opposites. He was a
ladies’ man. I, while handsome enough,
am not. I do okay for myself, but I’ve
never been one to play the talk-seduction-bedroom-so long game, even though at
times in my life it has had its appeal.
I’m not dapper by any stretch of the imagination, but I do have a
laid-back working-class chic sense of style.
And while I’m an extrovert in a group of people I know, I am the exact
opposite in situations where I don’t know anyone. I got a piece of him, but there are times I
kind of wish I had more.
The point is that Walt, like all black
sheep, couldn’t give a toss what others thought of them. They lived life on their own terms, with
their own goals and wants: not the goals and wants the mores of respectable society
tell us we should want, but as shallow as he could be sometimes, Walt was true
to himself. And that was what drove
everyone so crazy about him, good and bad.