Housing misty memories

28377865_10156065685701411_8282356011998886042_nIn January, when mum moves out of the rented mews flat in London we’ve occupied since 1978 it feels like I’m saying goodbye to the centre of my life.

Even though I don’t live there I always felt like maybe I would go back. Up until now I always had.

In 1978 we sailed across the Atlantic from Montreal on a Russian ship and drove off at Tilsbury in the car we lived in for a while. Back then “we” was my baby sister, me, mum and my stepdad. Being a hippie kid I longed for a normal place with sit-com inspired must-haves like wall-to-wall carpet or a balcony that hadn’t been used as a dumpster, or a bathroom.

We didn’t get that.

We got a project.

But we moved in and that cold, run down, dodgy flat above the garages was home. Legend has it, in the early days we went on cycling tours to the country most weekends because staying home was too cold and we couldn’t afford coal.

The pub at the top of the mews was a live music venue sometimes biker bar and as a kid I had to navigate urinating men or step over the bodies of the comatose to get home. Hammersmith wan’t trendy and Shepherd’s Bush was more WH Smiths than Westfields.

It’s hardly Angela’s Ashes but it was a different landscape. One where Thatcher was yet to gain power and the shops shut in the afternoon.

As West London gentrified I went to Addison Primary School where I met Frankie who showed me which way was up from day one.

“Don’t ask people for an eraser, it’s a rubber.”

(For the record, if you are Canada-side, definitely do ask people for an eraser.)

I went off to Holland Park Secondary School where I learned how to do math smile cards and skin up. I went to Kingsway Princeton College and stuffed up my A Levels.

Meanwhile we opened up the attic and it became my and my sister’s bedrooms. Me and Frankie and another preteen friend Rachel got so excited about this new space we named it Leotaurus. With budding pretensions we cleverly amalgamated our star signs leaving my Aires sister well and truly out of it.

I may have once wanted wall-to-wall carpets but that soon just became walls. In the attic our walls were made from a big box of buttons that we had found on Portobello road strung together with fishing line. At 13 I added colorful geometric squiggles to the exposed whitewashed brick but they unfortunately just looked like multicolored sperm.

At 18 I moved out in search of normal walls to move in with a way-too-old-for-me musician and then moved back pretty sharpish when Wimbledon turned bad. Sometimes walls come with too much drama behind them.

Eventually the Mews became the centre and felt like the safest space. In retrospect it probably wasn’t because of all the motor oil stored in the garage. And my stepdad’s interesting homemade wiring. You could easily short out the entire house by putting the lights on in the wrong order. And then there’s the heavy nuclear trains piling past in the middle of the night shaking the whole house. Waking in the knowledge one derailment would be apocalyptic.

But it was the center for our little family and our found family. Like the generations of NSUK buddhists, then SGI-UK buddhists piling up the stairs trying to save the world. Every time the loudest bell in the world would scream whatever mental little dog we had at the time would throw themselves against the door it would be like opening the door to community. One time that even included a Japanese priest in full ceremonial robes followed by the even more discombobulating sight of my mum pretending to be a submissive woman. I can still remember all those people. All the ones we lost to 80’s AIDS scythe like Stewart, Joe, Graham, Steve, Kevin, Eddy, Gary. The list is an endless punching machine.

I walked out that door to go to Uni and moved back. I tried my hand at living in Toronto and moved back two months later broke, broken and humbled.

And it was standing on the cobbles in the mews at 23 I last saw Tony Deary. He gave me a long pep speech because I was off back to Derry to do my Masters. “You’ll be alright pet,” he said at the end. “You’re clever and you’ll get by.”

I watched him walk away with I Will Always Love You in my head because I’m dramatic.

Then he died suddenly a week later. Now that cheesy song reduces me to a puddle every goddam time.

Turns out a lot of this is about death.

It was home I last saw my stepdad before I moved back to Canada at 27. Not planned. I was like a pendulum swinging back and forth across the ocean and I just happened to lose momentum on that side.

When I bring the kids back I can’t believe they never saw him in this place. Their London home holds different images for them. The Street party watching the World Cup. Walking Banksy the Jack Russell. Stalking Troye Sivan with group of fans outside the K-West Hotel and Spa.

He’s not in that house for them.

But for me he’s there. On the balcony where his heavy, greasy overalls flew off the washing line onto the railway tracks out back and we rescued them with hooks made from rope and coat hangers. Or patiently explaining the intricacies of plumbing to me and my friends as he pulled sanitary products out of the sewer. Or gently recommending in the most low-key, laid back way that it might be better if I did not use a butter knife to pry toast out of the toaster.

But his domain was the left-hand garage while mum would do stained glass on the right. He rescued and rebuilt cars and drove to Glasgow like it was nothing because he grew up in a land where a six hour drive would only get you to another Ontario town, like Brampton.

When he died and I came back from Canada I had a vivid dream he sat down at the kitchen table and asked how I was doing. That same table where in life he would bring bits of engine and try to get us interested in the lack of corrosion. That same kitchen where he would make us eat mung beans and dandelion coffee after he went macrobiotic. That same chair he stayed back in the night me and mum and my sister drove down to Little Hampton to watch the sunrise because we couldn’t sleep.

“You all go hang upside down from a tree or whatever you need to do, I’ll be here.”

And he is still there. With all the memories I have housed there.

I guess it’s the same for everybody. We don’t even know whose memories we moved in on and the next in line won’t know mine are there. We walk through our houses sweeping past other people’s memories all day, every day.

I’m going to miss the mews.

Even Leotaurus because we lost Frankie this year too.

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Stalking Carrie and Mike… my brief time as mamarazzi with a supermarket tabloid

As former Ottawa Senator Mike Fisher retires I’m reminded of the time I stalked him around Ottawa and utterly failed to uncover anything on him or his girlfriend American Idol winner Carrie Underwood.

It was around Christmas in 2009 and I got a call from a tabloid in New York looking for a freelancer.

I took the call in the bathroom because that is the only relatively silent place in the house with young kids and I was looking at all the toothpaste smeared on the counter while the editor (a quick peruse of Twitter & Facebook revealed her to be a glittery dress wearer with a mighty crew of similar gals at her side) laid out rates and hockey tickets to follow Underwood around.

Miss Lucy would cheerfully tell people “Mummy went to the bathroom and came out with a job” which I could only dearly hope wouldn’t be misunderstood.

Sources said Underwood was going to be in Ottawa over the break and they wanted to do a Home for the Holidays piece. I imagine if I could have got hold of shots of them throwing snowballs at each other after building snowmen and hosting parties in matching jumpers that would have been applauded.

The editor called this “Investigative Journalism” which I’m sure will be news to Marketplace.

I was to “back report” on places they have been seen. Back Report means I had to go out to dinner at swanky restaurants and then “chat up” the servers and somehow become such fast friends with them that they would tell me everything Fisher and Underwood ate and text me next time they were in to eat that stuff again.

I did have a lot of meals out and I met a lot of  five foot three inch perky blondes named Kayla who would happily tell you everything about every celebrity they have ever seen.  But only up until your third question when it appears to dawn on them that they are engaged in some kind of deeply creepy conversation. Then the Kaylas back away and eye you with suspicion for the rest of your meal from behind the bar.

I also learned that there is a suburban cowboy bar in Kanata where the staff all wear Bonanza clothes and ride a mechanical bull every Wednesday Night.

This establishment was supposed to be frequented by Sens players but not, it turned out, Underwood.

I went to hockey games high up in the 300s complete with my mother in law’s bird watching binoculars and wrote stuff like:

7:23 p.m. CU leans forward in her seat to say something to the girl with the stripey top sitting next to her

7:27 CU gets up and does a little “I have to go to the bathroom” walk across the suite,

7:48 CU locks her gaze on mine across the arena with a diamond hard glare and begins screaming obscenities..okay not really

I did miss her entirely a few times despite the fact I walked in a kilometre wide circle scanning every seat. Apparently she kept moving to different spots.

I think at this point I crossed the decency line and became smutty tabloid type when I gave my eight year old a little notebook and pen. I had her walk around this big long corridor/landing thing with the mandate of getting an autograph and encouraging her to prompt some kind of comment from Underwood about getting married or enjoying herself in Ottawa.

Now Miss Lucy wasn’t known for her ability to keep a secret so I half expected to see her led back with a bunch of men in black happily pointing in my direction. Instead she came back and asked what exactly the number 111 looked like. I wrote it down and went back to skulking and honestly hoped I wouldn’t have to explain to police what I was doing when my eight year old disappeared.
She came back and informed me that a man with a striped tie and a big black suit was standing outside that suite. So that meant Underwood was still in the building.

Then as I was looking around Lucy kept tugging at my sleeve in a 1970s Disney Movie helpful imp way and when I (acting entirely according to script) failed to notice she said “Mummy, was she wearing skinny jeans and high boots and a checkered shirt?” I said yes and Lucy pointed to the side door Underwood had just left by.

Miss Lucy also got to go to her first bar. We walked into a place on Merivale that unreliable information in NY had directed me to check out. I had Miss Ruby stashed at a school friend’s house but Miss Lucy was enlisted.

The first thing Lucy said was “This place is creepy, I wanna go home.” It wasn’t even that bad, just the normal blacked out windows during the day bar during daytime set. She said “It smells like beer and … and people wishing for things that haven’t happened.”

We got a takeaway meal but not before Miss Lucy spilled her chocolate milk all over the floor.

This whole time New York would be peppering me with sightings on Twitter. I have no idea how anyone ever filled supermarket tabloids before the god of truth that is Twitter.

“Go to Loblaws, she was seen buying blue label bread, go to Chapters in Centrum, they were seen buying $500 worth of wedding magazines there, check out the rumour she was seen in a maternity store in Nepean.”

Unfortunately Carrie was down to earth and didn’t like going out or drinking or dancing in the Byward Market. Hence my attending the Rennaisance Church and various Christian bookstores.

Did you know there is a computer game called Dance Dance Revelation? Thought not.

The hottest lead was a Greco Lean ‘n’ Fit session which involved four gym leaders shouting at us with loud music that 40 year olds only ever hear in exercise situations. Apparently she had been seen there earlier.

Underwood managed to completely elude me that Christmas holiday and their combined clean living left me with no salacious details for the tabloids and a build up of lactic acid.

I did eventually get a face to face at a charity soirée and the two of them were as lovely as could be. I did look more like a housewife with a decades old digital camera than a tabloid hack so that may have been why.

So the former hockey player hangs up his skates and leaves the public eye I have to say Goodbye and thanks for all the Fish…er.

Fireflies illuminate childhood memories

IMG_7027My earliest memories of the Killaloe Community Craft Fair are from the olden days when hair was pinned in middle partings, fell straight or glinted from the frizzy bare chests of skinny men.

Also I’m pretty sure the sun was always glowing through long cheese cloth skirts as women swung their sun-baked, naked toddlers through the meadows.

On Fair days, we would all pile into the back of a low, wide car and bounce across the uneven fields with the back hatch wide open. We swung our legs in dusty high flares showing off our dirty ankles and bare feet. Our hair was never brushed and all T-shirts had banded arms. Back then we thought brown and orange was a fine colour combination and my favourite shirt was a ribbed mustard yellow turtleneck.

Hand painted signs leaned against gates and vendors’ trestle tables held scarves – so many scarves – and long earrings and possibly the first sighting of lentils in the Ottawa Valley at the food tent.

If I recall correctly, the stage was a platform built from plywood a few inches off the ground. We danced on the grass to live music and watched amateur puppet shows with adults who rejected the pomp of real grown ups like teachers and crossing guards and Darren from Bewitched.

These cool adults could show remarkable enthusiasm for simple games. They would play with us for hours and hours. But they could just as easily be distant, soft eyed and unreachable.

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No no, this is not creepy at all!

I have a jumbled collection of recollections back when the Fair was on Fern and Mary’s farm. Was it that year when I pitched face first off the pony ride and narrowly missed a rocky outcrop?

Or when I was with my baby sister in the car and it rolled down a few different hills before coming to a rest. Acting well after the fact, I crawled into the front seat and pulled on the old Citroen’s emergency brake. I fancied myself a bit of a capable Paper Moon-era Tatum O’Neal.

The Fair was started in 1976 by city-fleeing hippies. The “hippy” label doesn’t really do the movement justice and they were real individuals. Some were back-to-the-landers, some witty and acerbic intellectuals, some were fleeing the iron-fisted religion of their parents, others rejected the patriarchal system, and of course there was a smattering of draft-dodgers and deserters for authenticity.

These newcomers weren’t necessarily welcomed by Valley locals en masse. Each town had a diluted old world ethnic flavour like Germany for Eganville or Poland for Barry’s Bay.

For some reason, the the loosely Irish Killaloe had a little more tolerance for this latest influx to the Ottawa Valley. Or at least a willingness to let themselves be entertained by the sight of white collar graduates trying to build chicken coops, plant crops in rocky fields or try to light green wood on fire.

Late one summer, my mum, step-dad and baby sister drove that Citroen onto a Russian boat on the St Laurence River bound for England – floating away from my dad, the Valley and the summer fireflies.

I include missing the Killaloe Fair to my list of disappointments about 1978 London – along with the lack of fog or Kraft Dinner or Halloween.

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The estuary of the children’s parade

Meanwhile the Fair grew from its chicken wire start to a huge three-day festival with a giant stage and pyramid bar and sound booth on a new site. By the time I was 14, I acknowledged that I was definitely missing out. I spent my entire visit over the Christmas holidays listening to stories about the Fair. Apparently it was rad.

I switched my winter holidays to summer so I could sit on a hillside field in small-town Ontario – at at time when, back in London, the Pet Shop Boys were in the charts, Freddy Mercury was performing at Live Aid and Boris Becker presided at Wimbledon.

The Fair was where it was at.

I lost track of it while living in Northern Ireland and B.C. and I’m not sure when the weight of itself caused it to collapse.  But a series of events led to it’s demise. It could have been a fire, or financial irregularities or just the weight of responsibility … but the land lay silent 52 weeks a year instead of 51.

No more camping in the tall white pines, or falling down the steep slope of the natural amphitheatre, looking for familiar blankets or faces in the dark. No more drumming and dancing and parades of jesters. No more groups of teenagers trying to avoid their parents without realizing the dodging was mutual.

The field laid fallow until the determined offspring of the first influx stripped away the ballooned over-budget monstrosity back to basics.

We all had a soft spot for it but I don’t think it occurred to the first generation of hippy kids to revive it. We were too busy trying to pass for normal in society.

But our younger siblings and kids stepped up. They are the ones that are moving back from the cities to shore up the spirit and keep the community alive.

I have just returned from the Fair site where I spent the weekend helping clear some brush and mow. The scaled-back version on August 12 will just be one day this year. We have lost so many of those engaged, cool adults over the years. But some will still be dancing with their grandchildren.

This weekend I watched a small child sit on the tailgate of a minivan with the hatch wide open as it bounced over the bumpy field … and I know the spirit lives on.

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Listen to what the flour people say

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This is not a gluten free pancake…nor is it made of sodding cauliflower

As a starting point, let’s assume no one in their right mind would choose a gluten-free diet if they didn’t have to. Why would anyone go out of their way to avoid lovely pasta and opt instead for high sugar, high wanker-factor, carb-loaded, sawdust-filled products for seven times the price?

No one wants to see the servers eyes roll back in their head or make the Subway guy go and defrost a special brick just for you while exchanging knowing looks with his staff. No one would choose a flip-flop over a real pizza base.

Unless you can order something that is stealth gluten-free the only thing to do is to cook at home.

We are told we can do wonders with a cauliflower pizza crust but basically if you take anything, cardboard for instance, and dice it with cheese and garlic and roast it with olive oil you will have a passable crust.

The truth is, even when you make a cauliflower look a lot like a pizza the sheer stubborn essence and cloying cauliflowerness makes its brooding presence known by scattering tiny gratings into every kitchen crevice, hanging in the kitchen like a sulfurous cloud and generally going on to taste exactly like cauliflower.

But this isn’t 2010 and it has already been discovered that if you don’t mind paying over the odds from boutique grocery stores you can have flour that almost acts like real flour.

But there comes a time in every celiac/gf household when all the rice flour and one-for-one brands have run dry and you are left with the helpful bulk barn purchases of your father-in-law.

Rather than go and buy one-for-one I had a run at making pancakes and waffles with the various dregs in bags around the house. Here are the results:

Tapioca flour

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The hellish summoning that spawned from tapioca flour in the waffle iron produced an enduring matter that will outlive humanity

Almond flour

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It was an alarming discovery when setting about to make a almond flour pancake I accidentally discovered the Almighty’s code to manifest a sea urchin

Coconut flour

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I cannot bring myself to show you the travesty that was a coconut pancake. It looked like demented mashed potato and had no structure or self respect. Here’s a coconut in happier times instead

Soy flour

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Soy flour can look like a pancake on the outside but it’s inside remains a churning bubble bath of seeping soppy slime waiting for one bite to release it’s sickening centre

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